Note: This skill is independent analysis and commentary, not a reproduction of the original text. It synthesizes the book's core ideas with modern startup practice, surfaces where frameworks are outdated or incomplete, and integrates perspectives from adjacent disciplines. For the full argument and context, read the original book.
$100M Offers
"Make offers so good people feel stupid saying NO" - Alex Hormozi
The Core Insight
"You don't have a sales problem or a marketing problem. You have an offer problem."
If qualified leads aren't buying, it's not your traffic - it's what you're offering them.
Decision Tree
Are you getting qualified leads?
├─ NO → Use 100m-leads
└─ YES → Are leads converting?
├─ NO → You have an offer problem (this skill)
└─ YES → Are you charging premium?
├─ NO → Stack value, raise prices
└─ YES → Scale ad spend
Building an offer?
├─ Pre-validation → Use mom-test FIRST
├─ Validated market → Use this skill
├─ Pricing question only → See monetizing-innovation
└─ Positioning unclear → See obviously-awesome
Step 0: Pick a Starving Crowd
Before any offer work: a great offer in a dead market fails. A mediocre offer in a ravenous market can still win.
The core principle: You want a market that is already hungry - people actively searching for a solution and willing to pay for it. Market selection is the multiplier on everything that follows.
3 criteria to test any market:
| Criterion | Question to ask | Red flag |
|---|
| Pain | Do they have an urgent, specific problem? | Vague dissatisfaction, not a burning need |
| Purchasing power | Can they actually pay for a solution? | Market with desire but no budget |
| Targetability | Can you reach them efficiently? | Audience that is scattered or hard to identify |
All three must be true. Two out of three is not enough.
How to pick:
- List markets where you have access or credibility.
- Run each through the 3-criteria test above.
- Pick the one with the highest pain score and a clear place to find them.
A growing market also covers execution mistakes. A shrinking market punishes even excellent offers.
Rule: Niche selection is a prerequisite, not a step inside offer-building. Don't start the value equation until you know exactly who you are selling to and why they are desperate to buy.
The Value Equation
Dream Outcome × Perceived Likelihood
Value = ─────────────────────────────────────
Time Delay × Effort & Sacrifice
Four levers. Pull any of them; both directions work.
| Lever | Direction | How |
|---|
| Dream Outcome | ↑ Bigger | Make the outcome more compelling, specific, emotional |
| Perceived Likelihood | ↑ Higher | Add proof, guarantees, testimonials, credentials |
| Time Delay | ↓ Faster | Show results sooner, deliver quicker |
| Effort & Sacrifice | ↓ Easier | Remove steps, do it for them, automate |
Rule: If you can't increase the top, decrease the bottom.
What Makes a Grand Slam Offer
A Grand Slam Offer is incomparable to competitors because it combines:
- Attractive promotion - The hook
- Unmatchable value proposition - The stack
- Premium price - Price implies value
- Unbeatable guarantee - Removes risk
If anyone can compare your offer to a competitor's, you don't have a Grand Slam Offer yet.
The 6-Step Process
| Step | Action | Output |
|---|
| 1 | Define dream outcome | Specific result + timeframe + emotional benefit |
| 2 | List ALL obstacles | 15+ minimum, across 4 categories |
| 3 | Reverse obstacles to "How to..." solutions | Solution statement per obstacle |
| 4 | Design delivery vehicles | Format, frequency, intensity per solution |
| 5 | Trim and stack (value-cost matrix) | 6-10 strong components |
| 6 | Add enhancements | Guarantees, scarcity, urgency, bonuses |
Detail in frameworks.md.
Step 1: Dream Outcome Format
[Specific result] in [timeframe] so that [emotional benefit/status change]
| Bad | Good |
|---|
| Lose weight | Lose 20 lbs in 8 weeks so you can wear that dress at your reunion |
| Make more money | Add $30K/mo in 90 days so you can quit your day job |
| Get more leads | Book 10 sales calls per week without cold calling |
Step 2: 4 Obstacle Categories
| Category | What It Blocks | Example |
|---|
| Knowledge Gaps | What they don't KNOW | "I don't know what to eat" |
| Skill Deficiencies | What they can't DO | "I can't cook healthy meals" |
| Environmental Barriers | External factors | "My family won't eat this food" |
| Psychological Blocks | Mindset issues | "I always quit after 2 weeks" |
Hormozi's wording for environmental is "External" - same concept.
Step 5: Value-Cost Decision Matrix
Score each component on Value to customer (1-10) and Cost to deliver (1-10). High-value, low-cost components stay in the core offer; mid-value components move to bonuses; low-value or high-cost components get cut. Target 6-10 strong components total.
Full value-cost matrix and scoring: see frameworks.md.
The Stacking Principle
"A single offer is less valuable than the same offer broken into its component parts and stacked as bonuses."
Bad Presentation
"$2,000 weight loss program"
Good Presentation
- Personal nutrition orientation ($500 value)
- Recorded grocery store tour ($200 value)
- Weekly meal plans ($600 value)
- Accountability buddy system ($400 value)
- Restaurant eating system ($300 value)
- Travel workout plans ($250 value)
- 20-pound guarantee (PRICELESS)
- Total Value: $2,250+
- Your Investment: $599
Same product. Substantially higher perceived value.
Pricing Psychology
Charge More, Not Less
| High Price | Low Price |
|---|
| Signals high value | Signals low value |
| Forces you to deliver high value | Lets you cut corners |
| Premium customers complain less | Cheap customers most demanding |
Price Anchoring (Always Show Three Numbers)
- Total Value: $X (sum of all components)
- Your Investment: $Y (the price)
- You Save: $Z = $X - $Y
The bigger the gap between value and investment, the more "no-brainer" the offer feels.
Value-to-Price Rule
Hormozi's directional guidance is to make total stated value substantially higher than the price - he tends to use 10x or "incomparable" framings rather than a precise multiplier. Aim for stacked value that makes the price feel small in comparison. If your offer's stated value is only ~2x the price, it's not yet a Grand Slam Offer.
Critical Warning: Validate Market First
Hormozi's framework assumes you have product-market fit. The book doesn't tell you this.
If you build a Grand Slam Offer for a market that doesn't want your thing, the offer will fail no matter how good.
Before building the offer:
- Have 5-10 customer interview transcripts (use mom-test)
- Validate dream outcome with actual customer language
- Confirm target market has budget
- Survey data with specific responses
The framework is for VALIDATED markets. If you're pre-validation, use mom-test first.
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|
| Vague solutions ("Coaching") | Specific delivery ("Weekly 30-min strategy calls + custom action plans") |
| Including everything | Trim aggressively. 6-10 strong > 20 mediocre |
| Building on assumptions | Use mom-test customer language |
| Underpricing | If incomparable, premium is mandatory |
| Generic names | Specific transformation names sell |
Success Signals
You have a Grand Slam Offer when:
- Prospects stop comparing you to competitors (you're incomparable)
- Conversion rates improve materially (Hormozi typically reports 2-3x lift; specific numbers vary by business)
- You can raise prices and customers still say yes
- People feel stupid saying no
Rules of Thumb
- Solve every obstacle. Not most. Every. One.
- Premium price = premium product. People judge value by price.
- Trim ruthlessly. Cut anything below 8/10 value.
- Stack, don't simplify. Break the offer into named components.
- Validate market first. Don't build for a fantasy.
- Names sell. Generic = invisible. Specific = irresistible.
- Guarantees remove risk. Bigger guarantee = bigger price you can charge.
- Show the math. Total value, price, savings. Always.
When This Doesn't Apply
| Context | Why |
|---|
| Pre-validation | Get product-market fit first (use mom-test) |
| Commodity products | Hard to differentiate sugar or coffee beans |
| Low-ticket impulse buys | Below ~$50, simpler offers work better |
| Regulated industries | Compliance may limit stacking and guarantees |
| Pure SaaS subscriptions | Stacking applies less; focus on outcomes per seat |
The Order
- Find dream outcome (in their words from mom-test interviews)
- List 15+ obstacles (4 categories)
- Reverse each into "How to..." solution
- Design delivery for each
- Score value vs cost
- Trim and stack
- Name with offer-naming formula
- Add guarantees / scarcity / urgency
- Present with value-price-savings math
The Test
When prospects see your offer, they should feel:
- "This solves every problem I have"
- "There's no way this is only $X"
- "I'd be stupid to say no"
If they don't, the offer needs more work.
Supporting Files
- frameworks.md - Detailed step-by-step processes, delivery vehicle dimensions, naming formula (MAGIC), enhancements (guarantees, scarcity, urgency, bonuses)
- cases.md - Hormozi's gym case study with verification notes, before/after examples
- examples.md - Bundle naming patterns, one-page offer template, real offer examples
- integration.md - How offers connect to mom-test (input) and 100m-leads (output); conflicts with monetizing-innovation pricing approaches