What Makes The Perfect Business (5 Things) — Transcript

Alex Hormozi reveals 5 key advantages that make businesses easier to grow and more profitable, focusing on retention, scalability, and competitive moats.

Key Takeaways

  • Revenue retention (stickiness) is crucial for business growth and profitability.
  • Reducing voluntary churn and focusing on the first six months of customer retention dramatically improves business value.
  • Businesses with recurring revenue and high retention outperform one-time sale models.
  • Operational simplicity and high gross margins contribute to better net margins and scalability.
  • Building a unique competitive moat is essential for long-term success and pricing power.

Summary

  • Alex Hormozi shares five critical advantages that define the perfect business, based on his experience generating over $250 million in revenue.
  • The first and most important advantage is 'stickiness,' emphasizing revenue retention and minimizing churn to ensure recurring revenue.
  • Logo retention and revenue retention are explained, with structural and voluntary churn as key concepts affecting customer retention.
  • Data shows the highest churn occurs in the first month, with significant drop-offs at months three and six; businesses should focus on retaining customers through these periods.
  • Examples of non-sticky businesses (education, roofing, car sales) versus sticky businesses (term life insurance, alarm systems) illustrate the concept.
  • Comparing two companies with different retention strategies highlights the value of retaining customers for sustainable growth.
  • Hormozi outlines a 10-stage roadmap to scale a business from zero to over $100 million, emphasizing operational efficiency and margin improvement.
  • High gross margins typically lead to higher EBITDA margins, with examples from pharmaceuticals and supplements industries.
  • The importance of low operational complexity and network effects is discussed, with schooling as an example of effective network effect.
  • The final advantage is uniqueness, or having a competitive moat that protects pricing power and market position.

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00:00
Speaker A
If I wanted to start the perfect business, these are the things that I would focus on. So, think of these like the five advantages that make any business easier to grow and way more profitable. And this is what's helped me build a portfolio of companies that generated over $250 million in revenue last year alone.
00:09
Speaker A
build a portfolio of companies that generated over $250 million in revenue last year alone.
00:13
Speaker A
And so, for each one, I'll describe what it is, I'll give you examples, and I'll show you industries that excel in them and industries that suck. There are very few businesses that have all five, and even having one of these makes the business that you have better than others. And so, just think of this video as like an S-tier ranking for opportunity vehicle.
00:22
Speaker A
business that you have better than others. And so, just think of this video as like an S-tier ranking for opportunity vehicle. So, if you've ever heard or thought, "Man, like I feel like I've got a you know, level 10 skill set
00:31
Speaker A
So, if you've ever heard or thought, "Man, like I feel like I've got a, you know, level 10 skill set and a level two opportunity," then this video is for you. So, let's get started with number one. Sticky. It's the most important thing. If you do not have what's called revenue retention, you have nothing. Revenue retention just means how much revenue from last year you retain to the next year. That's all it is. If you don't have that, you will always be in the sales business.
00:43
Speaker A
you retain to the next year. That's all it is. If you don't have that, you will always be in the sales business. So, John Paul DeJoria, who started Paul Mitchell, he started Patron, he says this quote that I always remember. He
00:51
Speaker A
So, John Paul DeJoria, who started Paul Mitchell, he started Patron, he says this quote that I always remember. He says, "You want to be in the resale business, not in the sales business." And so, there's two types of retention that people discuss. One is logo retention, which is if you had 100 customers in January, how many do you have now? And then, the second is the revenue retention piece, which is if you made $100 from those customers in aggregate in January, how much do you make from that same cohort or group of customers today?
01:00
Speaker A
have now? And then, the second is the revenue retention piece, which is if you made $100 from those customers in aggregate in January, how much do you make from that same cohort or group of customers today? And so, logo retention,
01:12
Speaker A
And so, logo retention, just to be clear, you almost never have 100% logo retention. Like, you can't get more than 100%. You only have a certain amount of customers, and it only decays over time. And so, some reasons for that is that there's something called structural churn. So, someone moves away, they die, they're, you know, their business dies, there's a, you know, they fire the employee if you do a payroll thing who used the subscription or the service. And this is called involuntary churn. It's because it's just structural to how businesses operate, right?
01:22
Speaker A
structural churn. So, someone moves away, they die, they're, you know, their business dies, there's a, you know, they fire the employee if you do a payroll thing who used the subscription or the service. And this is called involuntary
01:33
Speaker A
On the other hand, there's something called voluntary churn. And this is the one you really want to avoid. That's when people leave because they just think you suck, right? And so, those are kind of like from a logo retention perspective, how many of the number of people are still here? The revenue retention side, you absolutely can have over 100% net revenue retention. And so, that means that even if you lose some of those customers, the ones who stay increase how much they spend enough to make up for the ones you lost.
01:41
Speaker A
right? And so, those are kind of like from a logo retention perspective, how many of the number of people are still here? The revenue retention side, you absolutely can have over 100% net revenue retention. And so, that means
01:54
Speaker A
And so, the easiest way to do this is have a clear way for cheaper customers to spend more with you. And if you're a service, keep doing the thing they need you to do, which part of it is making sure that that person that you sell actually needs it in the first place. And this is why qualifying customers is so important. But, for example, if I have a $9 month membership and a $99 month membership, like school, if someone comes in at $9 and then goes up to 99, then I get an 11x in terms of value from that customer.
02:04
Speaker A
with you. And if you're a service, keep doing the thing they need you to do, which part of it is making sure that that person that you sell actually needs it in the first place. And this is why
02:13
Speaker A
And so, even if 20% of customers leave from the nine, if I get even 10% of customers to take an 11x, I have more than 100% revenue retention, and that means that when a customer enters the business, that means that the business will continue to grow whether we do nothing at all over time. And that becomes a very valuable company.
02:27
Speaker A
customer. And so, even if 20% of customers leave from the nine, if I get even 10% of customers to take an 11x, I have more than 100% revenue retention, and that means that when a customer enters the business, that means that the
02:39
Speaker A
Now, let me give you some interesting data on school that manages hundreds of thousands of memberships that you can use for any recurring business. Number one is that the first amount of churn that's the greatest is month one. So, if you ever have to focus, focus first on your first 30 days.
02:51
Speaker A
use for any recurring business. Number one is that the first amount of churn that's the greatest is month one. So, if you ever have to focus, focus first on your first 30 days.
02:59
Speaker A
It across all categories was over 20% plus churn in that first month, all right? The next big kind of drop-off point in churn is about 10%, and that happens at about month three.
03:11
Speaker A
The third and kind of final spot where you have a big drop in in churn is month six. And so, the big takeaway here is do whatever you can to get people to month six. So, in your mind you might be like,
03:21
Speaker A
The third and kind of final spot where you have a big drop in churn is month six. And so, the big takeaway here is do whatever you can to get people to month six. So, in your mind you might be like, "How am I going to keep them forever?" It's like you really just got to get people to that sixth month, which really means make sure the first 30 days are awesome, and then have a clearer way to get them past that third month, and then you basically walk your way to month six, and at that point churn drops to almost 2% a month.
03:30
Speaker A
you basically walk your way to month six, and at that point churn drops to almost 2% a month.
03:35
Speaker A
And that's across all categories. All right, so this is just structural to how people consume and value memberships or recurring subscriptions of any kind. And so, please take this as like this is where I'm going to focus all of my attention to get people that 2% churn, which means we just got to get them to month six.
03:46
Speaker A
attention to get people that 2% churn, which means we just got to get them to month six.
03:51
Speaker A
So, let me give you examples of businesses that are not sticky. So, education on its own is not a sticky thing. That's why you graduate when you go to school. Like, you're not going to go and retake the same math class over and over again. Um, roofing, car sales, these are businesses that do not have a lot of stickiness to them. They're one-time shots, right?
04:01
Speaker A
and over again. Um roofing, car sales, these are businesses that do not have a lot of stickiness to them. They're one-time shots, right? On the other hand, a good example of sticky businesses is term life insurance. You sign up for life insurance and you
04:14
Speaker A
On the other hand, a good example of sticky businesses is term life insurance. You sign up for life insurance and you pretty much just pay until you die, right? Uh, alarm systems, like you don't really think, "Oh, I'm going to shop my alarm system." You have it, as long as it works, you're good to go. Internet, phone providers, banking.
04:24
Speaker A
and to use that kind of education, a different version of that for like school, for example, is if you have something that's based on community, and something that's based on consumables, meaning people consume it month over month over month, then it means that
04:34
Speaker A
Um, and to use that kind of education, a different version of that for like school, for example, is if you have something that's based on community, and something that's based on consumables, meaning people consume it month over month over month, then it means that they're going to want to pay month over month over month. And so, if I could only have one thing for of these five, it would be this, right?
04:44
Speaker A
sells 100 customers year one, and then loses 100 customers year one. Year two, uh they sell 200 customers cuz they get better at marketing and sales, and then they lose 200 customers. And then year three, they sell 300 new customers, and
04:56
Speaker A
And so, think about it like this. Let's imagine company A and company B. So, company one sells 100 customers year one, and then loses 100 customers year one. Year two, they sell 200 customers because they get better at marketing and sales, and then they lose 200 customers. And then year three, they sell 300 new customers, and then they lose 300 new customers, all right?
05:08
Speaker A
original 100, so now they have 200 active customers, which means they actually have the same revenue. Year three, they sell another 100 customers, they still have the first two, and they have 300 customers in total, meaning both of these businesses in each of
05:22
Speaker A
Now, company B, same time period, sells 100 customers, and then loses zero. Year two, they sell 100 customers again. They don't scale their sales and marketing at all. But now they have the original 100, so now they have 200 active customers, which means they actually have the same revenue. Year three, they sell another 100 customers, they still have the first two, and they have 300 customers in total, meaning both of these businesses in each of these years is doing the same revenue. Of these, which would you pick? Company A or company B? Obviously company B.
05:33
Speaker A
On a personal level, the idea that you could just have no new customers at any given point, and then every year after that you still have your 300 customers who pay you over and over and over again, that helps you sleep at night
05:43
Speaker A
And so, I'll give you two reasons. One that's personal and one that's math. On a personal level, the idea that you could just have no new customers at any given point, and then every year after that you still have your 300 customers who pay you over and over and over again, that helps you sleep at night great.
05:56
Speaker A
customers as company B. All that additional cost is taken out of the profit of the business. But, on top of that, getting 600 customers versus 300, and especially 300 one year versus 100, the cost of getting that additional
06:09
Speaker A
Now, from a math perspective, getting 300 new customers in a year is very expensive. So, look at how many total customers this business needed to acquire over that period of time. So, they had to acquire twice as many customers as company B. All that additional cost is taken out of the profit of the business.
06:20
Speaker A
years. The cash flow of the business, the profitability of the business will be significantly higher, and as an owner, way more fun to own. And this is just like me talking to my younger self, building a business that does this
06:31
Speaker A
But, on top of that, getting 600 customers versus 300, and especially 300 one year versus 100, the cost of getting that additional customer is not going to be just 1x more. Oftentimes it's two or three times more. So, it's really almost like getting 900 customers from a cost perspective compared to that 300 that you had to get and sp
06:43
Speaker A
you see compounding unlock and you see revenue lock in, you really never consider other vehicles because you can literally just excel sheet out your wealth knowing exactly how big you're going to be in the future because you know the customers you have today are
06:56
Speaker A
going to be there tomorrow. Real quick, I'm going to show you the exact 10-stage roadmap from zero to 100 million plus that less than 1% of companies finish.
07:04
Speaker A
I've now done multiple times, and so I can say with a lot of confidence that these are the stages as head count increases that you need to get through.
07:11
Speaker A
And I broke each of these down by eight different functions of the business, what the constraint feels like, like what are the symptoms of it when you're going through it, and then what steps we actually took to graduate. And we've
07:20
Speaker A
done this across software, physical products, uh service businesses, brick and mortar, all of this, and it works.
07:27
Speaker A
And it's my gift to you, it's absolutely free. And so, the link's in the description, but you just go acquisition.com/roadmap.
07:32
Speaker A
Just enter your info and it'll spit it right back to you all free. Now, the second thing that I see is like a a big advantage, you really never consider other vehicles because you can literally just excel sheet out your wealth knowing
07:42
Speaker A
exactly how big you're going to be in the future because you know the customers you have today are going to be there tomorrow. Now, the second thing that I see is like a a big advantage is expensive. So, what does that mean? In a
07:53
Speaker A
perfect world, you'd want something that costs a penny that you could sell for a buck, right? High gross margins means that you can pay people better, your cash conversion cycle is typically faster, you can reinvest that cash in
08:02
Speaker A
more growth, and this typically has higher EBITDA margins. So, if you have high gross margin, you'll typically have higher net margins. And so, for example, if I had a hundred million dollar business with 10% margins versus a 20
08:13
Speaker A
million dollar business with 50% margins, you'd make the same money at the end. Now, you get five times the incremental EBITDA per dollar made, and that's certainly nice. It's less work for more money. Now, this was the topic
08:26
Speaker A
of my money models book that I spent a lot of time on, and the goal was to see how you can combine things to speed up the money cycle and increase gross margins and cash flow in the business.
08:36
Speaker A
So, let me give you some examples of businesses that have low gross margins. So, grocery stores, right? They're notoriously gross small gross margins.
08:42
Speaker A
Farming, restaurants, and you'll notice that all these are kind of grouped around one thing is because food is one of the most elastic products, so take note to that. But fundamentally, it's really like things that are commodities, which is why the first chapter that I
08:53
Speaker A
have in the Offers book is how to decommoditize yourself so that you can increase your gross margins, so you can ultimately get the cash you need to grow. Now, on the flip side, examples of good businesses that have great gross
09:01
Speaker A
margins, media. I mean, think about it. A podcast read that you do when you've got a thousand people listening or a million people listening takes the same effort, and all of the extra that you can charge is just profit, right? Uh
09:13
Speaker A
information, that's one. Education itself, um community access, these are things that have high gross margins.
09:19
Speaker A
Data software pharmaceuticals right? It costs them a penny to make a pill and they sell it for a buck. Um lotions and potions, it doesn't cost a lot to create, you know, a supplement, you can sell it for a lot. All of these things
09:30
Speaker A
are businesses that have high gross margins. Now, quick disclaimer, many of you wonder what you should pick or whether you're in the right boat. And as a reminder, this doesn't mean you watch this video and then like jump ship in
09:39
Speaker A
your business. Um but you should at least see the levers that you have available to you to improve the the value of the business you have right now. And to be clear, all of these are continuums, not binaries.
09:48
Speaker A
It's not is it sticky or not sticky, it's how sticky is it. It's not like, oh, this has, you know, zero gross margins or 100% gross margins, it's how how big is the gross margin? And all the way down. So that brings me to the third
09:58
Speaker A
one, which is expansion. I want something that is growing, right? That's the best It's the easiest way to grow is to go into something that's already growing, so if you just do a normal amount, you still grow by default. And
10:08
Speaker A
so, I'm thinking about this more as an industry growing rather than the business itself growing. The business growth would often come down to marketing and distribution, and I can do that, so that's not something that I care as much about. This is a skill
10:20
Speaker A
advantage to us as entrepreneurs picking the right markets, because once you know how to generate demand, then you don't need to always have a tailwind behind you, you just need to not be in a a headwind, fundamentally, right? Make
10:31
Speaker A
sure you're just not fighting an uphill battle. I speak about this in the Offers book. And the main reason is this, even if you know how to market and sell, going into or staying in a space that's shrinking is an uphill battle. And this
10:42
Speaker A
is why I use the example of newspapers. Most people are like, I don't really read the newspaper, it every single year goes down. If you're like, hey, I want to get into formal education, probably not the time to do it because it's going
10:50
Speaker A
it's shrinking by 6% a year. All right? Uh tobacco, shrinking. Alcohol, shrinking, right? Retail, like brick and mortar where you're selling stuff, not to say you can't make money in it, it's just harder, right? Uh administrative roles, clerical, data entry, these are
11:04
Speaker A
things that normal in how the world works. Now, the flip side is, what are examples of industries that are growing?
11:09
Speaker A
Energy, going through the roof. AI, through the roof. Healthcare, through the roof. Cybersecurity, through the roof. E-commerce, through the roof.
11:19
Speaker A
Alternative education, through the roof. And this is what fundamentally the bet that I made on school was about. The CAGR, so compound annual growth rate for alternative education is over 20% annually, right? People are tired of of traditional education, and this is why
11:32
Speaker A
platforms like YouTube are proliferating like crazy. People want to learn specific niche skills that are useful to them. Which brings me to, drumroll, please, number four big advantage that you want to have, air. You want something that has operational scale or
11:44
Speaker A
low operational complexity and low capex. So, let me define each of those. So, low operational complexity means the number of variables that you need to actively manage to expand production.
11:55
Speaker A
So, if I make a podcast, like I said earlier, and then I sell an ad read inside of that podcast, someone gives me money, I read it, and then I hit post.
12:02
Speaker A
That's pretty much it. There's nothing else. And that scales all the way up, right? And so, that's low operational complexity. Now, if I manage a hundred restaurants of a chain, I have thousands of employees, I have suppliers, I have
12:15
Speaker A
inventory that goes bad, I have build-outs, I have leases, I have parking, I have permitting, and there are many more pieces that I need to actively manage in order to expand production even a small incremental unit. The other side is capex, which is
12:28
Speaker A
just a fancy way of saying capital expenditure, meaning how much money you got to spend to get the business to keep growing. Now, there's a little asterisk on this cuz I'm going to explain why it can be a good thing um when I bring up
12:37
Speaker A
my very last point. So, wait and and pay attention to the end because it's going to be very important for number five.
12:42
Speaker A
Now, the reason that this is valuable as a founder is you typically would need less capital, which means you can dilute less for your ownership, for equity, uh for cash to continue expanding. Which means you can expand faster without
12:54
Speaker A
needing money from the outside. So, Warren Buffett talks about this because he wants businesses that generate lots of cash, not ones that generate it and then have to consistently reinvest that cash in order to maintain competitiveness in the business. And so,
13:05
Speaker A
this is the important caveat. If you raise capital to grow faster, you could have all the correct economics, you just want to grow faster. That is a strategy, it's an advanced one, um but if you're trying to capture market share and
13:17
Speaker A
capturing market share has actual advantages beyond the economics of scale, like we'll make it up in volume, it's rarely true, but if it actually is true, then there is reason to go get market share, actually have some sort of
13:27
Speaker A
network effect. That makes sense. In my experience, it's very rare, right? School is a great example of actually it doing it right.
13:35
Speaker A
Additional users to school do not cost very much. But getting everyone on school is worth doing because there are strong network effects. And so it's worth us putting more cash in now rather than taking distributions. Said differently, taking that cash and
13:51
Speaker A
putting it into the business yields tremendous ROIC, which means return on invested capital. And if you have great ROIC, then you become a magnet for money. So this is just a little pro tip.
14:01
Speaker A
You should never have any difficulty raising money if you are in a business that's like that because if you do, it means that you need to make the deal better. Let's say you have a restaurant chain and you want to grow it. And I to
14:12
Speaker A
be fair, I think it's a very tough thing to do. But if you wanted to grow it and if you're like, man, I can't get people to, you know, invest in my franchise or want to buy franchise locations, like
14:19
Speaker A
how do I have a better, you know, marketing strategy? For sure, there's things you could do to market and sell better. But if you come to somebody and say, "Hey, you know, it costs 100 grand to open my thing, it'll take 3 years in
14:28
Speaker A
order for you to get your money back." That's kind of like a mediocre-ish offer. If you say it's going to cost 100 grand to do my thing and then you're going to make $300,000 back on average in the first year, that's going to be a
14:38
Speaker A
significantly more enticing offer. And so for most people who want to use outside capital in order to scale, the reason they can't raise it is not because they don't lack some big skills, because the core economics of the thing
14:50
Speaker A
they're trying to scale just aren't that good. And so the fifth and final is unique. So you want a competitive moat, something that no one else can build.
14:57
Speaker A
Now part of what can raise the bar and create a larger moat is the number of people who can afford to enter the market. So if you have a market that has virtually no barriers to entry, you'll have a lot of competition. And this can
15:07
Speaker A
be a huge driving factor. So for example, social media marketing agencies, the bar is virtually nothing.
15:13
Speaker A
It can be sticky, it can be high gross margin, it is kind of an expanding thing, people always want more customers. It can be air from a capex perspective, but from an operational drag perspective, it's not as good. Now, with AI, it can
15:26
Speaker A
actually become really interesting. But, the main issue is so many people can do it, and that's what makes it so competitive, and that's ultimately what drives down the price cuz it's very difficult to differentiate. Now, let me explain what I was saying earlier about
15:40
Speaker A
capex as a way to have a moat. So, if you are competing against every human being who has hands to dig holes, if you buy a shovel, you'll be significantly better than people who don't have a shovel, and that'll cost you a little
15:53
Speaker A
bit of money. That'll make you more efficient. And so, in a way, you can actually use capital that you do to invest up front into building things that make it less competitive for you and more competitive for other people to
16:02
Speaker A
try and enter your marketplace. This is why like building a power plant is probably very profitable. It also costs a lot of money, right? [laughter] And so, um these are things that you can do to any business. If you find can have a
16:14
Speaker A
return on invested capital for things like technology, for things like equipment, um those become moats that make it more difficult for other people to enter, which means that you'll have more pricing power. And so, once you start to see some success, I like
16:25
Speaker A
getting into businesses that cost some capital to expand because it just means that I have fewer people that I have to compete with. Now, up to this point, I've only talked about capital as a kind of moat. Now, to be clear, it's not
16:35
Speaker A
indefensible, but it's better than nothing. But, the best kind of moats are the things that you know how to do, but no one else can do. So, for example, Nvidia chips. This is something that costs a ton of money and has incredibly
16:45
Speaker A
specialized skills. So, as a result, they're one of the seven most valuable companies in the world, right? Pretty wild. Uh nuclear energy costs a lot of money and is something that's super proprietary, not a lot of people know
16:56
Speaker A
how to do. If you didn't have the capital, then it would be recipes, processes, patents. These are trade secrets, your special sauce. And just as a side note, you're like, "Well, what differentiates, uh you know, like a trade secret from a patent?" Well,
17:07
Speaker A
patent just requires three things. It's got to be new, it's got to be non-obvious, and it's got to be useful.
17:12
Speaker A
Those are from the patent office. All right, so if you're thinking about, "What are the things in my business that are brand new that I only do, that are not obvious, and that are useful. Those things are patentable, right? Kind of
17:20
Speaker A
cool. Now, you have to defend patents, which is a whole another story, but that's a way of creating a moat. Now, one of my favorite ways of creating a moat is creating a brand. You can make anything that's a commodity unique by
17:31
Speaker A
adding a brand to it. So, for example, Revlon is kind of like a mass-market brand for beauty stuff. You can get it at CVS, whatever. And you might think, "Oh, that's a that's a cheap brand." Now, the point though is that even if
17:43
Speaker A
Revlon is cheap, it's still a little bit more expensive than white-label generic. So, CVS might have some CVS brand makeup, right? Revlon's going to be a little bit more expensive than that.
17:55
Speaker A
But, they literally will come off the exact same manufacturing belt, and they'll stamp on Revlon, and they'll stamp on CVS, and they'll ship them there. And that premium converts a higher percentage of people at a higher price, and increases the stickiness. And
18:06
Speaker A
so, a brand is one of my favorite ways of taking something that's otherwise a very normal service, and making a moat, or making something unique about it. So, let me give you a different example that that manages some of these, all right?
18:16
Speaker A
So, Coke requires capital to enter new markets, but it gets great returns on capital, so people are happy to provide it, or it can provide capital to itself, and get returns on its own capital. And it has patents for the flavor of Coke,
18:28
Speaker A
and the brand itself. And so, these are things And if we're looking at this, right? When people start drinking Coke, they usually keep drinking it for a long time. It costs a few pennies to make a can of Coke in terms of the liquid
18:38
Speaker A
inside of it, but they can sell for a lot more than that. Now, is it expanding as a marketplace? I think Coke's pretty global, and I guess the only expansion is just more human drinking stuff. So, I guess there's probably right now still
18:49
Speaker A
some expansion that's happening. From an operational scale perspective, this is one where it's a little harder. Now, is it easier than scaling an accounting firm globally? Absolutely. Is it harder than scaling software globally? Yes. And so, it's kind of like in the middle on
19:02
Speaker A
this one. And then, unique, what it does to create that uniqueness so so Shasta Cola doesn't take over the market, right? Is that it has the brand, and it has its recipe. And so, those are the ways that it creates something that is
19:14
Speaker A
harder to usurp, which is why Warren Buffett's been a long-time investor in the business, and it just continues to grow and print money. And so that's what you want. Now you're not going to have something that has all of these. It's
19:25
Speaker A
very very hard to do that. There are trade-offs, but the perfect business would include many or all of these. And if your business includes none, that's okay, work at retention first, and then backfill the rest. But if you're in an
19:37
Speaker A
industry that has no retention, then switching to one that does, if you're early in your career, may not be the dumbest decision. And so if I were starting it all over again, this is what I would look for in a business that I'd
19:46
Speaker A
want to start, ideally something that people keep buying, something that is expensive relative to what it cost me.
19:51
Speaker A
It's in a market that's not going down at the very least, there's less operational complexity in order to scale, and it's unique to me, or at least I know a way to make it unique to my customer. Real quick, I'm going to
20:02
Speaker A
show you the exact 10-stage road map from zero to 100 million plus that less than 1% of companies finish. I've now done multiple times, and so I can say with a lot of confidence that these are the stages, as head count increases,
20:14
Speaker A
that you need to get through, and I broke each of these down by eight different functions of the business, what the constraint feels like, like what are the symptoms of it when you're going through it, and then what steps we
20:23
Speaker A
actually took to graduate. And we've done this across software, physical products, service businesses, brick and mortar, all of this, and it works. And it's my gift to you, it's absolutely free, and so the link's in the description, but
20:35
Speaker A
you just go acquisition.com/roadmap, just enter your info, and it'll spit it right back to you, all free.
Topics:business growthrevenue retentioncustomer churnstickinesscompetitive moatscalabilitybusiness strategyAlex Hormozirecurring revenuebusiness profitability

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most important factor in building the perfect business according to Alex Hormozi?

The most important factor is 'stickiness,' which refers to revenue retention and minimizing churn to ensure recurring revenue and sustainable growth.

How does customer churn affect business growth?

Customer churn, especially voluntary churn, reduces the number of active customers and revenue. Focusing on reducing churn in the first six months is critical to improving retention and growing revenue.

What industries are examples of sticky businesses?

Examples of sticky businesses include term life insurance and alarm systems, where customers tend to maintain subscriptions or payments over long periods.

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