Here’s the $100M Leads summary in one sentence: most businesses don’t die from a bad product — they die from not having enough people to sell to. That’s the single problem Alex Hormozi sets out to solve. Get more strangers to want what you sell, reliably, on purpose.
It’s the follow-up to $100M Offers. Once you’ve built something people actually want, this book answers the next question: how do you get it in front of enough of them, over and over, without leaving it to luck?
Most people think a “lead” is a name and an email address. Hormozi disagrees. A list you bought or scraped is worthless if nobody on it cares. What you want is an engaged lead — someone who’s shown real interest. Replied. Clicked. Raised a hand.
So the goal was never “get leads.” It’s get engaged leads, then turn them into customers. Everything else in the book is just the how. Keep that distinction in your head and half the marketing noise out there stops mattering.
This is the part worth taping to the wall. There are only four ways to get an engaged lead:
That’s the whole grid. People who know you versus strangers. One at a time versus all at once. Every clever growth tactic you’ve ever seen is a flavor of one of these four. Founders get overwhelmed by marketing because they think there are a hundred channels. There are four. Pick one and go deep before you go wide.
A big chunk of the book is about how to make a stranger raise their hand in the first place. Hormozi’s answer is the lead magnet — a small, genuinely useful thing you give away free that solves a narrow slice of the problem your product solves completely. A workout brand hands over a free meal plan. A bookkeeper gives away a simple tax-deadline checklist. The free thing builds trust and, just as important, it self-selects the people who actually have the problem you fix. Give first, and give more than feels comfortable. The ask comes later.
The back half scales past your own two hands. Hormozi calls them lead getters — other people who go find leads on your behalf: customer referrals, employees, agencies, and affiliates. You run the Core Four yourself until it works, then you hand it off so it keeps working without you in the room. That’s the leap from “I have a hustle” to “I have a business.” It’s the same engine behind Oversubscribed — build enough demand that buyers line up before you open the doors.
The most quoted idea in the book, and the most useful. Pick one of the Core Four and take 100 primary actions a day for 100 days straight — 100 outreach messages, content that reaches 100 people, or a set daily amount spent on ads. Most people quit around day nine. The Rule of 100 exists to drag you past the stretch where it feels like nothing’s working, because that stretch is exactly where everyone else gives up. It’s less a marketing tactic than a cure for impatience.
When you want more leads, Hormozi says there are only three moves: do more of what’s already working, do it better, or add something new. The order matters. Most people jump straight to “new” — a fresh platform, a fresh funnel, a fresh shiny tactic — and end up doing five things badly instead of one thing well. Exhaust “more” and “better” first. New is the last resort, not the first reflex.
Founders, freelancers, and creators who have something to sell and not enough people to sell it to. If your offer is solid and your calendar is empty, this is the book. If you haven’t nailed the offer yet, read $100M Offers first — leads can’t save a thing nobody wants.
Want the personal-brand angle, becoming someone leads come to instead of chasing them? Pair it with Key Person of Influence. And for the wider reading list, our best books to build wealth roundup puts this one in context.
Direct, dense with tactics, and unusually free of filler. It won’t comfort you — it’ll hand you a checklist and tell you to go do the reps. That’s the appeal.
Pick a single channel from the Core Four and send ten messages, or post one thing, today. Not a campaign. Ten messages. The whole point of the book is that you already know enough to start — you’ve just been waiting for permission.
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