Podcast Summary: The Game with Alex Hormozi
Episode: Stop Using Industry Standards If You Want to Win | Ep. 1006
Date: February 18, 2026
Host: Alex Hormozi
Overview
In this episode, Alex Hormozi challenges entrepreneurs to reject industry standards and mediocrity in favor of setting their own ambitious benchmarks. Drawing from personal achievements—including a record-shattering book launch—Alex dissects the dangers of “industry standards,” the power of high personal expectations, and practical ways to set and enforce higher standards in your business. He draws on real-life business consultations, lessons from billionaire mentors, Jeff Bezos' final shareholder letter, and historical examples of uncompromising business leaders.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
The Problem with Industry Standards
- Industry Standards = Average: Alex expresses frustration at how often business owners use industry norms as an excuse for mediocre performance.
- “Do you wake up in the morning and just say, I want to be an average company?” (02:22)
- Industry standards reflect the median, and “the average business makes almost no money.”
- Negative Consequences: Using industry standards ensures you’ll never rise above the middle of the pack—financially or operationally.
Setting Your Own Standards
- Leaders as Standard Setters: The most important job of a leader is to uphold the highest standard in every department.
- “You are the standard setter. It is the highest and most important job in the company.” (04:24)
- Application Beyond Business: Standards should apply across the board: sales rates, customer service, personal health, relationships, and more.
The Relentless Drive for Higher Results
- Case Study—Hiring Sales Reps: Alex recounts challenging a portfolio company’s leader to speed up hiring 15 new sales reps.
- The original plan: hire 5 per month over 3 months to add $4M in profit.
- Alex asks, “Why can’t we do it in a month?” (11:20)
- After creative problem-solving, they realized it was possible, and did it, because they pushed their limits.
The Myth of Uniqueness & Excuses
- Experimenting vs. Excusing: Most people try a solution once or twice, and when it fails, declare something impossible.
- “It’s not that it didn’t work. It’s that you weren’t skilled enough to make it work. Very big difference.” (18:17)
- The attitude should be: if it doesn’t violate physics, it’s probably possible.
Industry Standards as Handicaps
- Mental Boundaries: Treat industry averages as handicaps your competitors willingly adopt.
- “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.” (21:16)
- Physics and Math, Not Custom: Use real limitations, not consensus or custom, to set your ambitions and operate.
Holding the Line & The Cost of Distinctiveness
- Jeff Bezos’ Final Shareholder Letter: Alex reads and comments on a passage emphasizing the necessity of continuous effort to remain distinctive and competitive.
- Notable Quote (Jeff Bezos via Alex, 28:20):
“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 wants you to be typical in a thousand ways. It pulls at you. Don’t let it happen. You have to pay a price for your distinctiveness, and it’s worth it.”
- Notable Quote (Jeff Bezos via Alex, 28:20):
- Energy & Cost: Exceptional performance requires more energy and, often, more resources.
Real-World Examples of Relentless Standards
- Steve Jobs: Famously demanded impossible product specs, forcing innovation.
- Elon Musk: Demands engineers simplify, questioning every “that’s just the way it’s done” answer.
- Alex’s Own Book Launch: Surpassed all conventional publishing records by refusing to accept the “normal” outcomes for book marketing.
The Value of Being Unreasonable
- Quality of Conviction: Differentiated, successful entrepreneurs possess unreasonable conviction, persistence, and often low agreeableness—they believe in their vision even against opposition.
- “In order to have an outsized return at anything, you have to bet against conventional wisdom.” (38:45)
- Difficult Problems as Opportunities: If a problem is hard, that’s where outsized gains live.
Practical Application
- Always ask:
- What would it take to do it differently, faster, bigger?
- What actual physical constraint stops you?
- For every challenge, multiply your attack vectors and iterations, rather than repeating failed methods.
- Never apologize for ambitious goals; pursue them with “unreasonable conviction.”
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
- On Averages and Ambition: “The average American is overweight, they’re in debt, they’re divorced, they’re depressed... The average business makes almost no money. Why would I use industry standards...at all?” (03:05)
- On Tolerating Mediocrity: “You get what you tolerate, you get what you accept and deem good enough.”
- On Leadership: “The person who should run every department or every division should be the person with the highest standards.” (05:15)
- On Excuses: “You’re not getting what you want because you’re not attacking the problems you have enough times in enough ways.” (17:41)
- On Bezos' Philosophy (reading Bezos’s last letter):
“It will take continuous effort, but we can and we must be better than that. You have to hold the fucking line…” (30:52) - On Unreasonable Goals: “The goals that I have and probably the goals that you have, never apologize for them. 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.” (43:34)
- On Conviction: “To achieve what other people can’t, you must reject the vast majority of what other people do.” (49:50)
Important Timestamps
- 00:01 — Intro & business background
- 02:22 — Industry standards as the enemy of success
- 04:24 — Importance of setting and enforcing company standards
- 11:20 — Real-life hiring case study and standard-pushing
- 18:17 — The importance of attacking problems with multiple strategies
- 21:16 — Industry standards as limiting beliefs/handicaps
- 28:20 — Jeff Bezos’s final shareholder letter excerpt
- 38:45 — The importance of being less reasonable and betting against consensus
- 43:34 — On unapologetically pursuing unreasonable goals
- 49:50 — Summary call-to-action: reject mediocrity, set your own standards
Tone & Style
Alex is direct, candid, and intense, mixing storytelling with practical, sometimes confrontational business advice. He uses strong language for emphasis, repeatedly challenging listeners to break mental boundaries and set new standards.
Key Takeaway
If you want extraordinary outcomes, you must reject ordinary standards. Set your expectations by what is truly possible—not by what is common. Relentlessly question, innovate, and enforce standards that put you in a league of your own. Don’t apologize for being unreasonable; the world is desperate to pull you toward average, and only with high standards and uncompromising energy will you produce exceptional results.
