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The Game with Alex Hormozi
The Game with Alex Hormozi•January 27, 2026

How to Sell High Ticket Offers to the Right Customers | Ep 996

Alex Hormozi breaks down how to effectively price and sell high-ticket offers by targeting wealthy customers who are willing to pay more for value, explaining why businesses should focus on serving the top 10% of customers who have significantly more spending power.
Solo Entrepreneurs
Business News Analysis
Corporate Strategy
Bootstrapping
Branding
Alex Hormozi
Leila Hormozi
Acquisition.com

Summary Sections

  • Podcast Summary
  • Speakers
  • Key Takeaways
  • Statistics & Facts
  • Compelling StoriesPremium
  • Thought-Provoking QuotesPremium
  • Strategies & FrameworksPremium
  • Similar StrategiesPlus
  • Additional ContextPremium
  • Key Takeaways TablePlus
  • Critical AnalysisPlus
  • Books & Articles MentionedPlus
  • Products, Tools & Software MentionedPlus
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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.

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Podcast Summary

Alex Hormozi delivers a hard-hitting analysis of wealth distribution in America and how understanding this can revolutionize your business pricing strategy. The episode breaks down the shocking reality that the top 1% of Americans control $32 out of every $100 in wealth, while the bottom 50% share just $2. (02:43) Hormozi explains how the rich truly do get richer through mathematical compounding and different belief systems, and most importantly, provides a practical roadmap for accessing this wealth through strategic pricing. (03:58) The core message is transformative: stop competing for scraps with the masses and start positioning your business to serve those who actually have money to spend.

  • Main theme: Understanding wealth distribution to create pricing strategies that target high-net-worth individuals rather than competing for limited dollars among the bottom 90% of earners

Speakers

Alex Hormozi

Alex Hormozi is an entrepreneur, investor, and author who runs a portfolio of companies at Acquisition.com that generates over $250 million per year. He recently completed a book launch that generated $106 million in sales in a weekend and broke a Guinness World Record for the fastest-selling non-fiction book of all time. Hormozi is known for his expertise in business scaling, customer acquisition, and pricing strategies.

Key Takeaways

Start with Wealth Distribution Reality

The fundamental shift in understanding business success begins with accepting the mathematics of wealth distribution. (00:48) The top 10% of Americans earn 40% of all income, but when looking at net worth, the disparity becomes even more extreme. The bottom 50% of Americans control only $2 out of every $100 in wealth, while the top 1% controls $32. This isn't a philosophical statement about inequality—it's a business reality that should inform every pricing and customer targeting decision. Most entrepreneurs fail because they're competing intensely for the $2 that half of America shares, rather than positioning themselves to capture even a small fraction of the $32 held by the top 1%.

Apply the 5-10x Pricing Rule

When creating pricing tiers, Hormozi's rule is to multiply your current price by 5-10x for each new tier, expecting only 20% of customers to take the higher option. (10:51) This isn't arbitrary—it reflects the actual spending power differences between wealth segments. For example, if you have 8 customers at $10/month and 2 at $50/month, you've doubled your revenue by serving just 2 customers differently. The key insight is that this 20% who can afford the higher tier often represents the same profit as the other 80% combined, but requires proportionally less operational overhead.

Price Signal Your Target Market

Your pricing serves as a qualification mechanism that tells potential customers whether your service is designed for them. (37:34) Hormozi explains that when he sees a B2B service priced at $1,500/month, he immediately knows it's not for his company size—the business owner isn't advanced enough to handle enterprise-level clients. Conversely, pricing at $20,000-50,000/month signals capability to deliver at scale. This works both ways: low prices repel high-value customers who equate price with quality, while high prices naturally filter out those who can't afford premium service.

Understand Close Rate Indicators

Your close rate directly indicates whether you're underpriced. (34:53) If you're closing 60-80% of prospects, you likely have a 2-4x price increase sitting on the table. Hormozi provides a diagnostic framework: 80% close rate means 3-4x pricing opportunity, 60-80% suggests 2-3x, 50-60% indicates 1.5-2x potential, while 30-40% means you're appropriately priced. The counterintuitive insight is that dropping from 80% to 35% close rate while quadrupling price results in 120% more revenue with significantly higher profit margins.

Expect and Embrace More Rejections

The sweet spot of making money isn't getting the most yeses—it's making the most money, and that never comes with the most yeses. (22:34) When you price appropriately for wealthy customers, you should expect 90-95% of people to say no, because 90-95% of people aren't in your target wealth segment. This is mathematically correct and psychologically challenging. The breakthrough comes when you realize that the 5-10% who say yes at premium prices often generate more profit than the 80% who would say yes at discount prices.

Statistics & Facts

  1. The top 10% of Americans earn 40% of all income in the United States, while the bottom 50% control only $2 out of every $100 in total wealth. (00:48) Context: Hormozi uses this to illustrate why most businesses fail by competing for the limited spending power of the majority rather than targeting those with actual wealth.
  2. The top 1% of Americans control $32 out of every $100 in total wealth, which is more than the bottom 90% combined. (03:15) Context: This statistic forms the foundation of Hormozi's argument for why businesses should price and position themselves to capture wealthy customers.
  3. Total US household net worth is $163 trillion. (01:17) Context: Hormozi uses this massive number to demonstrate the scale of wealth that exists and how entrepreneurs can access it through proper positioning and pricing strategies.

Compelling Stories

Available with a Premium subscription

Thought-Provoking Quotes

Available with a Premium subscription

Strategies & Frameworks

Available with a Premium subscription

Similar Strategies

Available with a Plus subscription

Additional Context

Available with a Premium subscription

Key Takeaways Table

Available with a Plus subscription

Critical Analysis

Available with a Plus subscription

Books & Articles Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

Products, Tools & Software Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

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