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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.
This episode of The Game w/Alex Hormozi features Alex conducting live business consultations with entrepreneurs through his "Hermosy Hotline." The session covers diverse challenges faced by growing businesses, from real estate agents seeking to scale luxury home sales to medical professionals expanding specialized treatment clinics. (00:00)
Alex Hormozi is an entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, and content creator focused on helping businesses scale from $100M to $1B in net worth. He hosts "The Game w/Alex Hormozi" podcast and runs Acquisition.com, providing business scaling advice to ambitious entrepreneurs.
Crystal, a real estate agent in Hawaii, generated $10 million in sales from just 24 Facebook live videos - approximately $13,000 per live session. (01:31) Alex emphasized that starting with imperfect action and maintaining consistency will naturally lead to improvement over time. Rather than trying to perfect every detail upfront, the key is committing to regular execution and allowing the process to teach you what works. The math alone justified the effort: doing five live house tours per week could potentially quadruple her business to $133,000 monthly revenue.
For Anne, a medical doctor with 150,000 YouTube subscribers generating $200k monthly revenue, Alex recommended focusing on improving existing content rather than creating more volume. (16:10) He advised using tools like 1of10.com for analyzing successful packaging and scripting both verbal and visual elements of videos. The principle applies when you already have a working system - optimize what's working before expanding volume.
McKenzie's custom apparel business faced a critical decision between serving college organizations (averaging $1,500 orders) versus construction companies (averaging $50,000 orders). (27:08) Alex emphasized that choosing your customer is the most important business decision, stating he would have made it the first chapter of his offers book. The 100x difference in order value justified the risk of switching target markets, demonstrating how customer selection can determine whether you hit $250k or $20 million annually.
Alex consistently emphasized the importance of revenue retention across multiple consultations. For McKenzie's business transition to construction clients, he specifically stated the need to validate that new customers reorder regularly. (36:19) Strong revenue retention indicates product-market fit and creates compounding growth effects. Without it, businesses become trapped in an expensive customer acquisition cycle without building lasting value.
When McKenzie considered building separate websites for different verticals, Alex strongly discouraged spreading focus across multiple customer segments. (37:14) Each new vertical requires learning different acquisition methods, sales processes, and operational nuances. The advice was to commit fully to one high-value segment rather than diluting efforts across many. This principle applies broadly - depth of focus typically yields better results than breadth of activity.