
The Game with Alex Hormozi You’re Not Behind: How To Become Dangerous At Anything You Do | Ep 981
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Dec 23, 2025 Dive into how learning transforms behavior as the host defines intelligence by the speed of iteration. Discover the impact of focused practice and the importance of chunking skills into manageable pieces. Alex shares his experience with faster iterations beating inherent advantages and emphasizes measuring success with clear metrics. He advocates for marking top performers' actions and iterating on your own experiences. Embrace the challenge and redefine luck as a missed learning opportunity to unleash your potential.
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Learning Is Same Condition, New Behavior
- Learning is defined as producing a new behavior in the same situation, not just acquiring information.
- Intelligence is the speed (rate) at which you change behavior across iterations or compress iterations into a shorter time span.
Break Skills Into Observable Chunks
- Deconstruct skills into sub-skills and chunk them until you reach observable behaviors you can practice.
- Focus on specific, measurable constituent parts rather than vague bucket terms like "business" or "good at X."
Specify Success And Track It
- Define success with concrete behaviors and metrics for each sub-skill so you know when you're improving.
- Track performance because "if you don't track, you don't care" and measurement enables improvement.
