We Interviewed Alex Hormozi

his advice for creators

Hey.

We had the pleasure of interviewing Alex Hormozi on The Karat Podcast.

It was one of the most value-packed episodes we’ve ever filmed, so in today’s newsletter we’re breaking down some of the highlights.

In today’s newsletter:

  • Alex’s advice for creators

  • Quick link highlight: Meta might be forced to sell IG

  • Creator Studio: Personal branding with Katie Xu

Advice from Alex Hormozi

In case you have no idea who Alex Hormozi is, he:

  • Is likely the first creator billionaire

  • Scaled and exited seven companies

  • Founded 3 others that surpassed $120M in cumulative sales

  • Made $10M+ last year from content alone

This podcast episode was jam-packed with value—it’s a must listen.

Here’s a highlight of just some of what he shared:

5 Paths to Monetization (on a Spectrum of Control)

Alex believes creator monetization exists on a spectrum of control, with five distinct paths:

1. Sponsorships (Lowest Control)

  • Brands pay you to mention their products.

  • You’re basically an advertiser reading their copy.

  • Easiest to implement, but limited upside.

2. Affiliate/Performance Deals (More Control)

  • Instead of flat fees, you earn based on performance.

  • Requires more tracking but offers higher potential returns.

  • Alex says “winners always work on performance” — you should know your audience’s value better than the brand.

3. Strategic Partnerships (Middle Ground)

  • Example: Alex’s deal with Skool

  • You invest time, reputation, AND capital.

  • The sweet spot is where you marry an established company with product-market fit and your distribution.

4. White Label/Drop Shipping (Higher Control)

  • You don’t manufacture but put your branding on existing products.

  • More control over customer experience.

  • Still limited by the quality of the underlying product.

5. Building Products from Scratch (Highest Control)

  • Creating your own products/services entirely.

  • Maximum enterprise value potential.

  • Requires the most work and expertise.

Alex’s Take: The further you move up this, the more enterprise value you create. Most creators stay in paths 1-2, but the biggest wealth creation happens in paths 3-5.

Why Most Creators Choose the Wrong Products

For creators who decide to launch products—why does it often go awry? Alex says creators make one of three critical errors.

The Audience-Product Mismatch

  • Example: Frugality-focused creators trying to sell premium products to an audience trained not to spend.

  • Alex used Graham Stephan as an example. He built an audience of people who don’t want to spend money—he can’t be surprised when people don’t want to spend money.

The Retention Problem

  • Most creators try to invent new products rather than improving established ones with strong retention.

  • Alex said, “Don’t try to solve churn (the % of customers who stop doing business with a company). Find products people already don’t churn out of, then make your own.”

  • Examples of high-retention businesses include banking, insurance, internet service, and cell phones (of course, these aren’t creator-focused, but it gives you an idea of what this means).

The Commodity Trap

  • Many creators choose commoditized products (like coffee) where it’s nearly impossible to create lasting differentiation.

  • Alex says its “very hard to have Alpha from a brand perspective” on products that are traded as a commodity. You need a strong way to stand out.

Creator to Entrepreneur Evolution

For creators wanting to build real business value, Alex gave 3 big pieces of advice:

Know Your True Constraints

  • "If your goal is to make money, then learn the money game."

  • Many successful content creators hit a ceiling because they focus on improving content (going from 97/100 to 98/100) rather than monetization (going from 0/100 to 50/100).

Choose on of Three Ways to Build a Business

  1. Do what’s already working (underrated approach)

  2. Have a strong advantage in customer acquisition OR delivery

  3. Have such a strong advantage in one area that it overcomes deficits in others

Partner with Established Companies

  • "The perfect nirvana situation is an unbelievable product compounding on its own from word of mouth for 12-24 months in a market similar to your audience that can 10x in a year."

    • Alex’s partnership with Skool is a great example of this.

  • You're essentially "pulling the future forward" by 4 years by adding your distribution.

The Business Structure That Makes Sense for You

Alex says not every creator should build the same type of business.

Here are the 3 types he identified and his insights on when to choose each one:

For Media Businesses:

  • Study Dave Ramsey's model. His show has multiple hosts and a call-in format, creating "endless variety."

  • Alex says all existing media businesses are simply taking an old business model and doing it in a new media.

  • The key elements that make shows last: rotating hosts, new subjects, and format variety. (Caleb Hammer is another example of this.)

For Product Businesses:

  • Focus on solving for "revenue retention." You need customers that stay.

  • Choose products that naturally have low churn rather than fighting to reduce churn.

  • Find products that align with your audience values (Example: Graham Stephan’s audience would have responded better to money-saving tools than his premium coffee company.)

For Strategic Partnerships:

  • Look for businesses that "could grow without you, but with you grow much faster."

  • Don't try to learn an entire industry. Partner with experts who already have the operational knowledge.

  • Prime (Logan Paul's drink) is a perfect example. They didn't build the product from scratch but invested in and promoted an existing company.

😬 Meta could be forced to sell Instagram.

🍃 Supplement company looking for UGC creator at $10k/mo.

👀 How IG trial Reels actually work.

This Week in Creator Studio

This week in Creator Studio (our free Discord community) we’re interviewing Katie Xu.

She’s an expert at turning average people into the world’s favorite creators through strategic personal branding.

Join us Thursday at 1 PM PST (4 PM EST) to learn all things building a creator brand, finding your niche, and more. ⤵️

See ya next week,

Karat