“Damn, there is so much great knowledge out there. Did you know that “BOOKS” are full of smart?? No, I mean like life changing, I-wish-I-knew-that-years-ago type stuff.
I know that I was waaaayyy late to the game figuring it out. And I know that a lot of you are too busy to read as much as you ‘should’. And that is why you need me.
I still remember how it started for me. It started in June of 2008. After 11 years …..Click to continue
June 16, 2026

June 16, 2026
Why Your "Networking Strategy" Is Actually Just Expensive Small Talk
Alex Hormozi's framework for building relationships that actually generate business instead of just collecting business cards
The Strategic Relationship Framework
Hormozi's approach to relationships is ruthlessly strategic. He doesn't network—he builds strategic relationships with specific people who can help him achieve specific goals. Every relationship has a purpose. Every interaction moves toward a specific outcome. This sounds cold and transactional until you realize it's actually more respectful than pretending to care about someone's weekend while secretly hoping they'll send you referrals. For real estate professionals, strategic relationships fall into a few categories: referral sources (people who can send you clients), strategic partners (people who serve the same clients and can collaborate), mentors (people who have achieved what you want to achieve), and clients (people who need your services and might become repeat or referral sources). Every person you invest time with should fall into one of these categories. If they don't, you're socializing, not networking. This doesn't mean you can't have friends or casual acquaintances. It means your business networking time should be spent strategically on relationships that can actually generate business results. That random networking mixer where you meet forty people you'll never talk to again? That's not strategic. A one-on-one coffee with a financial advisor who serves your target client and could send you referrals? That's strategic. Hormozi recommends a simple framework: identify the twenty-five people who could most impact your business if you had strong relationships with them. These might be top-producing agents in your market, influential financial advisors, successful business owners who know your target clients, or past clients who loved working with you. Then systematically build deep relationships with those twenty-five people instead of shallow relationships with hundreds.The Depth Over Breadth Principle
Most real estate professionals operate on a "more is better" networking philosophy. More events, more connections, more business cards, more LinkedIn contacts. Hormozi operates on the opposite principle: depth over breadth. He'd rather have five incredibly strong relationships that generate consistent business than five hundred casual connections that generate nothing. Think about the math. If you have one strategic partner—say, a financial advisor—who sends you two qualified referrals per month, that's twenty-four deals per year from one relationship. Now compare that to attending twenty-four networking events where you meet one hundred people at each event. You've met twenty-four hundred people, collected twenty-four hundred business cards, and probably generated zero deals. Which is the better use of time? For loan officers, this might mean building deep relationships with five to ten top real estate agents who consistently send you business, rather than trying to be connected with every agent in town. For agents, it might mean cultivating strong relationships with a few key referral sources—financial advisors, divorce attorneys, estate planners—who regularly send you ideal clients. The depth approach requires different behaviors than typical networking. Instead of trying to meet everyone at an event, you focus on having one meaningful conversation. Instead of collecting business cards, you schedule specific follow-up meetings. Instead of staying surface-level, you learn about their business, their challenges, their goals, and figure out how you can genuinely help them succeed.The Give-First Strategy That Actually Works
Hormozi talks about the importance of "giving value first" in relationships, but not in the cheesy "law of attraction" way most networking gurus preach. His approach is strategic: identify what someone needs, provide it without expecting immediate return, and build relationship equity that pays dividends over time. This is completely different from showing up at networking events hoping people will send you business because you're friendly. For real estate professionals, giving value first might mean sending a strategic partner three qualified referrals before ever asking for one in return. It might mean creating a market report specifically valuable to financial advisors and sharing it with them monthly. It might mean introducing two people who could help each other succeed, with no benefit to you except relationship equity. The key is making your value-giving strategic and relevant. Don't just send random articles or generic "thinking of you" messages. Provide specific value that helps them achieve their goals. If you're building a relationship with a financial advisor, send them clients who need financial planning. If you're cultivating an estate attorney, send them people who need estate planning. Make yourself valuable by solving their problems, not by asking them to solve yours. Hormozi built his business network by being the person who could solve problems for influential people. He didn't ask for favors—he did favors, built relationship equity, and eventually those relationships became mutually beneficial. Most real estate professionals do the opposite: they meet someone and immediately start asking for referrals without ever providing value first.The Follow-Up System Nobody Implements
Hormozi says the fortune is in the follow-up, but most people's follow-up system is "I'll try to remember to reach out sometime." That's not a system, that's hope. Real follow-up is systematic, consistent, and adds value every time. It's the difference between someone remembering you exist and someone actively wanting to send you business. For strategic relationships, Hormozi recommends a structured follow-up cadence. After initial meeting, send a personalized follow-up within twenty-four hours. Schedule a specific next interaction before ending the current one. Add them to a system that ensures regular touchpoints—monthly at minimum for top-tier relationships. Make every touchpoint valuable, not just "checking in." In real estate, this might look like: meet a potential referral partner, send a personalized follow-up email with something specifically valuable to them, schedule a coffee meeting in two weeks, add them to your monthly value-add email list, send them a referral within thirty days, check in monthly with something useful. Six months later, you have a real relationship built on mutual value, not just a business card collecting dust. Most agents and loan officers fail at follow-up because they don't have a system. They rely on memory, which fails. They wait until they need something, which is too late. They make contact generic and forgettable rather than personalized and valuable. Then they wonder why their "network" never generates business.The Measurement Framework for Relationship ROI
Hormozi measures everything, including relationships. He knows which relationships generate business, which are developing, and which are dead weight. Most real estate professionals have no idea which relationships actually produce results versus which ones just consume time. This leads to spending equal time on all relationships regardless of ROI, which is insane. Create a simple tracking system for strategic relationships. Track who you've invested time with, what value you've provided, what value you've received, and what business has resulted. Review this quarterly. You'll quickly see which relationships are worth deepening and which are worth dropping. This feels cold, but it's actually just smart business. For example, you might discover that the financial advisor you have coffee with monthly has sent you twelve clients this year, while the attorney you also meet with monthly has sent you zero. Maybe it's time to increase frequency with the financial advisor and decrease frequency with the attorney. Or figure out what's blocking the attorney relationship from being productive. Either way, you're making decisions based on data, not feelings. Hormozi also tracks "relationship velocity"—how quickly relationships move from initial contact to business generation. Some relationships take years to develop. Others generate business within weeks. Knowing this helps you set appropriate expectations and invest time accordingly. If a relationship has been "developing" for two years with zero business results, it's probably not a strategic relationship—it's a friendship you're mislabeling as networking.The Networking Event Decision Matrix
So should you ever attend networking events? Hormozi's framework: only if you can identify specific strategic relationships you're trying to build and those people will be there. Don't attend events hoping to meet someone useful. Attend events because you've identified that three specific people you want relationships with will be there, and you have a plan to create value for them. This completely changes how you approach networking events. Instead of working the room trying to meet everyone, you have specific targets and specific goals. You research them beforehand. You prepare specific value you can offer. You have a clear follow-up plan. You treat it like a business development meeting, not a social hour. Most networking events fail this test. Random mixers where you don't know who will attend? Probably not worth your time. Industry conferences where you've identified five key people you want to connect with and have researched how you can help them? Potentially valuable. The event itself isn't what matters—your strategy for the event is what matters. Hormozi built his network by being ruthlessly strategic about who he invested time with and why. Most real estate professionals build their network by attending whatever event has an open bar and hoping something good happens. The results speak for themselves. Stop networking and start building strategic relationships. Stop collecting business cards and start creating mutual value. Stop hoping your network will generate business and start systematically building relationships with people who can. Your calendar and your bank account will thank you.June 15, 2026

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