
11mo ago
What separates successful people from those who try for years and never really get anywhere? Most people think it's IQ, talent, or some mix of strategy and luck. But after studying people like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson, the only thing that actually makes them different is speed. See, I believe that most people are on a path to be really freaking rich. The challenge is is that most of them are going so slow that they'll never get there in their lifetime. And the most successful people have learned how to make that same progress way faster. The good news is all the millionaires and billionaires I know follow the same seven steps to make progress faster. It's how I made my first million by 27 and how I do over $100 million in revenue in my 40s. But don't worry, speed doesn't mean working harder and it doesn't require you to already have money either. So, if you want to progress faster than anyone, these are the seven steps to do it. Starting with step number one, burn the boats. Most people struggle with making
Achieving wealth and success quickly and efficiently.
Use namedropping of big-name success stories (like Elon Musk) to add credibility to specific strategies relevant to talent management. Show Alex's own experience with high-profile talent.
“What separates successful people from those who try for years.”
Formula · The formula is: (1) Paint a picture of the desired outcome (faster success/wealth). (2) Present a numbered list of actionable steps. (3) Sprinkle in relatable examples and frameworks to make the steps seem achievable. (4) Maintain a high-energy, fast-paced delivery to reinforce the 'speed' concept. (5) Include a strong CTA to a paid program that offers further shortcuts to success.
Open with the "how_to | motivational | clickbait | authority" beat. No intro card, no logo, no greeting.
Brickell · Roll camera before you arrive at Brickell Ave at golden hour or Biscayne Blvd south of 5th. The reveal IS the hook.
Establish outdoor city with your hero prop. Wide on the 16mm so the GT3 RS sells the scale.
Brickell · Keep the prop count to 1. More props = more cuts = lower retention.
Use direct to camera rant to deliver the rewatch moment. One idea, one take.
Brickell · Cut on the reaction, not the line. If it's a price reveal, hold the number on screen for 1.5s.
Show the consequence. Bystander head-turn, valet face, on-screen receipt — whatever makes the payoff feel real.
Brickell · Casa Tua and Komodo valets are cinematic. E11even paddock for nightlife crowd. Hard Rock paddock during F1 weekend = prebuilt audience.
Claude will write 3 hook + angle combos in your voice you can queue as today's film.
Implicit beats explicit. Let the caption + pinned comment ask. End on the asset, not your face.
Brickell · Tag @imalexgunnar in the caption. Pin the objection comment within 60s of posting.
Formula · The formula is: (1) Paint a picture of the desired outcome (faster success/wealth). (2) Present a numbered list of actionable steps. (3) Sprinkle in relatable examples and frameworks to make the steps seem achievable. (4) Maintain a high-energy, fast-paced delivery to reinforce the 'speed' concept. (5) Include a strong CTA to a paid program that offers further shortcuts to success.