The Game with Alex Hormozi
Episode: Do Anything Exceptionally Well (even if you were starting out) | Ep. 1002
Date: February 10, 2026
Host: Alex Hormozi
Episode Overview
In this high-energy episode, Alex Hormozi breaks down how he's become #1 across multiple industries—and how anyone can apply the same mindset and process to achieve exceptional results (even from scratch). The heart of the episode is a passionate rejection of "industry standards," arguing that average expectations lead to average (or poor) results. Drawing on personal stories, big wins (such as a world record-setting book launch), and mentorship from billionaires, Hormozi urges listeners to set and maintain outsized standards, to attack problems from every angle, and to never let conventional wisdom dictate what's possible.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. Rejecting Industry Standards: Why Averages are Dangerous
[00:00–07:58]
- Hormozi opens with a story about meeting the leadership of a half-billion dollar company who were defensive about their "industry standard" processes.
- Quote: “Do you wake up in the morning and just say, ‘I want to be an average company?’... Who gives a shit, right?” – Alex Hormozi [02:00]
- He argues that industry standards are nothing more than average results, and the word “average” is an indictment, not a goal.
- Industry averages in business (and life) are often disastrous: “The average American is overweight, they're in debt, they're divorced, they're depressed. And so the average business makes almost no money.”
- Quote: “If you want to be average, use industry averages. And most industry average businesses suck, right?” – Alex Hormozi [05:43]
2. The Role of Standards in Exceptional Performance
[08:00–12:30]
- Hormozi insists that a business’s leader must be the “standard setter”; that’s the “highest and most important job.”
- Quote: “You are the standard setter. It is the highest and most important job in the company and it is why some companies prevail and some companies fail.” – Alex Hormozi [06:35]
- He expands the concept of standards to every aspect of life and business: margins, timelines, pricing, hiring, even personal relationships and health.
- Cites examples of leaders like Steve Jobs and Elon Musk, whose “unreasonable” standards drove exceptional results.
3. “Profit is Unnatural”: The Constant Pressure of Normalcy
[12:31–17:20]
- Shares a pivotal lesson from a billionaire mentor: “Profit is unnatural.”
- The point: Success isn’t natural; most people, when they have money, will tend to spend it. There's a constant pressure for companies to regress to the mean unless someone is relentlessly holding the line.
- Illustrates this with a portfolio company facing sales hiring constraints. The standard plan was to hire five reps a month. Hormozi pushes: Why not all 15 in a month?
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Through creative thinking and higher standards, they found a way, resulting in $4 million extra profit.
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Quote: “Just saying, like, why does it need to take that long? Why can’t we… Like, if we were doing a billion in sales in this business, we wouldn’t say we need to hire five guys a month. No way. We’d be like, we need to start with 50 and maybe add 50 every other week, right?... It’s just this minimum standard of something that you decide is enough or acceptable. And the crazy part about it is: we’re the ones who decide this, and then we’re upset that we got the fruit of our very low standards.” – Alex Hormozi [15:20]
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4. Solving Problems: Attack Vectors & Relentless Experimentation
[17:21–24:00]
- The measure of outstanding standards is the number of creative “attack vectors” you’re willing to try to solve a problem.
- Don’t just try the same solution repeatedly; instead, attempt multiple iterations, approaches, and outside-the-box ideas.
- Quote: “You’re not getting what you want because you’re not attacking the problems you have enough times in enough ways.” – Alex Hormozi [19:32]
- Most people try something once or twice and then claim it doesn’t work, when the reality is they haven’t actually developed the skill or tried enough variants.
- “It’s not that it didn’t work. It’s that you weren’t skilled enough to make it work. Very big difference.” – [20:08]
5. Rules for Exceptionalism: Physics, Not Industry Norms
[24:01–33:56]
- Unless a physical law prevents something, you should challenge all mental and industry “limits.”
- Quote: “Industry standards are a handicap that you let your competitors use and think they're doing well. That is the gift that we get as soon as you get out of this belief.” – Alex Hormozi [24:33]
- Challenge: “Why can’t it be faster? What physical law is preventing us?”
- The only real constraints are physics and math. Everything else is a self-imposed limitations—or one accepted by unambitious competitors.
6. Jeff Bezos on Differentiation and Survival
[33:57–37:28]
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Hormozi reads and discusses a passage from Jeff Bezos’ final Amazon shareholder letter, which emphasizes the necessity of continuous effort to remain distinct.
- Notable Excerpt (Jeff Bezos):
“Differentiation is survival, and the universe wants you to be typical. … In what ways does the world pull at you in an attempt to make you normal? How much work does it take to maintain your distinctiveness, to keep alive the thing or things that make you special? … The world will always try to make Amazon more typical, to bring us into equilibrium with our environment. It will take continuous effort, but we can and we must be better than that.” – Jeff Bezos, read by Alex Hormozi [35:31]
- Notable Excerpt (Jeff Bezos):
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The “cost of distinctiveness” is continuous energy and effort.
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Hormozi: “You have to hold the fucking line.”
7. Personal Application & the Case for Unreasonableness
[37:29–End]
- Hormozi reinforces that being “unreasonable” is a feature, not a bug, of exceptional entrepreneurs.
- “If you want to be the best, use physics and math and then work backwards.”
- Shares how, during his record-setting book launch, most people said his goals weren’t realistic. He succeeded because he didn’t accept precedent or consensus.
- Quote: “Can you imagine the amount of people who are like, ‘I don’t know if that's realistic, man. Like, hey, that's a really big number. Like, have you really thought? I mean, like, but what if it doesn't happen?’ I had someone ask me that… and I said, we dare greatly. That's the point.” – Alex Hormozi [41:02]
- Never apologize for “unreasonable” goals. Don’t “be reasonable”—the world will always ask you to be.
- Entrepreneurship requires believing (and proving) that industry constraints are not your constraints.
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
- On Standards:
- “You are the standard setter. It is the highest and most important job in the company.” [06:35]
- On Industry Standards:
- “Industry standards are a handicap that you let your competitors use and think they're doing well.” [24:33]
- On Problem Solving:
- “You’re not getting what you want because you’re not attacking the problems you have enough times in enough ways.” [19:32]
- “It’s not that it didn’t work. It’s that you weren’t skilled enough to make it work.” [20:08]
- On Distinctiveness (Bezos):
- “Differentiation is survival, and the universe wants you to be typical.” [35:31, quoting Jeff Bezos]
- On Goal Setting:
- “Never apologize for [unreasonable goals]. It's normal for them to be unreasonable. But you don't need to be reasonable. The world wants you to be reasonable. It's like, you need to be unreasonable, need to stick your feet in the mud, and there's a certain amount of stubbornness that's required.” [42:03]
Timestamps for Important Segments
- [00:00–07:58]: Why “Industry Standard” is a Red Flag
- [08:00–12:30]: Standards, Leadership, and High Expectations
- [12:31–17:20]: “Profit is Unnatural”—Stories of Raising Standards
- [17:21–24:00]: Attack Vector Problem Solving
- [24:01–33:56]: Rules for Exceptional Outcomes
- [33:57–37:28]: Jeff Bezos' Letter on Differentiation
- [37:29–End]: Personal Application—Embrace the Unreasonable
Conclusion
In this milestone episode, Alex Hormozi emphatically dismantles the idea of benchmarking success by industry averages, calling listeners to instead set and enforce their own exceptional standards. Through personal stories, hard-won lessons, and business examples, he demonstrates that uncommon results require uncommon standards, relentless problem solving, and a refusal to accept mediocrity. The episode concludes with a rallying call: Be unreasonable, pursue the extraordinary, and “hold the fucking line.”
