Framework for creating offers so good that people feel stupid saying no. Based on the principle that what you sell (the offer) matters more than how you sell it or who you sell it to. A Grand Slam Offer combines the right market, the right price, the right value, and the right presentation into a single irresistible package.
The offer is the #1 lever in any business. You can have mediocre marketing, average sales skills, and a small audience -- but if your offer is a Grand Slam Offer, people will buy. Conversely, the best marketing in the world cannot save a bad offer. Before optimizing funnels, running more ads, or hiring more salespeople, fix the offer.
The foundation: A Grand Slam Offer delivers so much value at such an attractive price that the prospect would feel foolish declining. It achieves this by maximizing Dream Outcome and Perceived Likelihood of Achievement while minimizing Time Delay and Effort & Sacrifice. When all four levers are optimized, the offer becomes a category of one with no comparable alternative.
Goal: 10/10. When reviewing or creating offers, rate them 0-10 based on adherence to the Grand Slam Offer principles below. A 10/10 means the offer is genuinely irresistible -- high perceived value, reversed risk, ethical scarcity, compelling bonuses, and a name that demands attention. Lower scores indicate missing elements or misaligned components. Always provide the current score and specific improvements needed to reach 10/10.
Core concept: Value = (Dream Outcome x Perceived Likelihood of Achievement) / (Time Delay x Effort & Sacrifice). This is the formula that determines how valuable a prospect perceives your offer. Maximize the top (numerator) and minimize the bottom (denominator) to create massive perceived value.
Why it works: People don't buy products -- they buy outcomes. They weigh the dream result and their confidence in achieving it against how long it will take and how hard it will be. When the numerator vastly outweighs the denominator, the offer feels like a no-brainer regardless of price.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Reduce onboarding time to increase speed-to-value | "Get your first dashboard in 5 minutes, not 5 weeks" |
| Coaching | Done-for-you components reduce effort | "We build your funnel while you watch over our shoulder" |
| E-commerce | Show social proof to increase likelihood | "97% of customers see results in the first 30 days" |
| Agency | Guarantee results to reduce perceived risk | "If we don't get you 10 qualified leads, you don't pay" |
| Info product | Templates and tools reduce effort | "Just fill in the blanks -- no writing from scratch" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Never promise outcomes you cannot reasonably deliver. Every claim about speed, effort, or results must be substantiated by real data or clearly stated as aspirational.
See: references/value-equation.md for the four levers, optimization tactics, and scoring rubric.
Core concept: A Grand Slam Offer is not just a product -- it is a complete package that includes the core offer, bonuses, a guarantee, scarcity, urgency, and a compelling name. Each element reinforces the others, creating an offer that is differentiated, valuable, and impossible to compare to competitors.
Why it works: When you bundle multiple value elements into a single offer, you make price comparison impossible. Prospects cannot shop around because no one else offers the same combination. You become a category of one, which eliminates commoditization and price pressure.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Bundle training, setup, templates with software | "Platform + Setup Concierge + Template Library + Weekly Coaching" |
| Course | Add community, coaching, tools to course content | "Course + Private Community + Weekly Q&A + Swipe Files" |
| Agency | Include strategy, execution, reporting, optimization | "Full-Stack Growth Package: Strategy + Execution + Reporting" |
| E-commerce | Bundle complementary products and services | "Starter Kit + Video Tutorials + 90-Day Refill Plan" |
| Consulting | Package frameworks, assessments, and support | "Diagnostic + Roadmap + 90-Day Implementation Support" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Assign honest dollar values to each component. Never inflate values to create fake gaps between "value" and price. Each dollar value should be justifiable and defensible.
See: references/grand-slam-offers.md for the full offer assembly process and problem-solution mapping.
Core concept: Before building your offer, find a starving crowd -- a market with massive pain, purchasing power, easy targeting, and growth. The best offer in the world fails if aimed at the wrong market. You want people who desperately need what you sell and can afford to pay for it.
Why it works: Selling to a starving crowd means you do not have to convince people they have a problem. They already know. They are already looking for a solution. Your only job is to present a compelling offer. This dramatically reduces the cost of customer acquisition and increases conversion rates.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Target a specific vertical with acute pain | "CRM for real estate agents who lose deals to follow-up failures" |
| Coaching | Narrow to a high-income audience with urgent needs | "Executive coaching for VPs who just got promoted and feel overwhelmed" |
| E-commerce | Focus on underserved niche with strong community | "Adaptive fitness equipment for wheelchair athletes" |
| Agency | Specialize in an industry you can dominate | "SEO agency exclusively for dental practices" |
| Info product | Solve a narrow, painful, urgent problem | "How doctors can negotiate their first hospital contract" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Target based on genuine need and fit, not vulnerability. Avoid targeting people in crisis who cannot make rational decisions (e.g., recently bereaved, in medical emergencies).
See: references/starving-crowd.md for market selection criteria and the niche scorecard.
Core concept: Charge based on the value you deliver, not the cost of what you provide. The goal is a 10:1 value-to-price ratio -- your offer should be perceived as delivering at least 10x the price. Premium pricing signals quality, attracts better customers, and funds better delivery.
Why it works: Low prices attract price-sensitive customers who churn fastest, complain most, and refer least. High prices attract committed customers who get better results (because they invest more effort), refer more, and stay longer. Premium pricing also gives you the margin to deliver an exceptional experience, creating a virtuous cycle.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Tie pricing to outcomes, not features | "$500/mo for pipeline management that closes 3x more deals" |
| Coaching | Price against the value of the transformation | "$25,000 program that helps consultants add $200K/year" |
| E-commerce | Premium bundle with done-for-you experience | "$297 complete skincare system (vs. $50 individual products)" |
| Agency | Performance-based or value-based fee structure | "We charge $5K/mo and guarantee $50K in new revenue" |
| Info product | Price against the alternative (time, failures, opportunity cost) | "$2,000 course vs. 3 years of trial-and-error and $50K in mistakes" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Value claims must be substantiated. If you claim 10x ROI, have data, case studies, or a clear logical basis. Never price based on inflated or fabricated value.
See: references/pricing-strategy.md for value-based pricing frameworks and anchoring techniques.
Core concept: Bonuses are additional components added to the core offer to address remaining objections, increase perceived value, and make the offer feel like an overwhelming deal. Each bonus should solve a specific problem and have an independently justifiable dollar value.
Why it works: Bonuses shift the mental math in the prospect's favor. When the total value of bonuses alone exceeds the price of the offer, the core product feels "free." Strategic bonus stacking also addresses objections preemptively -- each bonus removes a reason not to buy.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Include training, templates, priority support | "Bonus: 50 proven email templates ($500 value)" |
| Coaching | Add tools, assessments, community access | "Bonus: Private Slack community for accountability ($2,000/yr value)" |
| E-commerce | Bundle accessories, guides, extended warranty | "Bonus: 90-day supply of replacement filters ($45 value)" |
| Agency | Include strategy documents, competitive analysis | "Bonus: Full competitive SEO audit ($3,000 value)" |
| Info product | Stack swipe files, worksheets, case studies | "Bonus: 100-page swipe file of winning ads ($997 value)" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Every dollar value assigned to a bonus must be defensible. If a bonus is a PDF you created in an hour, do not claim it is worth $5,000. Price it at what someone would actually pay for it on its own.
See: references/bonuses-stacking.md for bonus design frameworks and stacking strategies.
Core concept: Guarantees transfer risk from the buyer to the seller. The prospect's biggest fear is not losing money -- it is making a bad decision. A strong guarantee removes this fear by ensuring the prospect cannot lose, which makes saying "yes" psychologically safe.
Why it works: Every purchase involves perceived risk: financial risk, time risk, reputation risk, and identity risk. Guarantees neutralize these fears. Counterintuitively, stronger guarantees reduce refund rates because they signal confidence and attract more committed buyers.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Free trial + money-back guarantee | "Try free for 30 days, then 60-day money-back guarantee" |
| Coaching | Conditional + performance-based | "Complete all 12 modules. If you don't land 3 new clients, we refund 100%" |
| E-commerce | Unconditional + satisfaction guarantee | "100% Satisfaction Guarantee: love it or return it, no questions" |
| Agency | Performance-based | "We guarantee 50 qualified leads in 90 days or we work free until you get them" |
| Info product | Conditional with action requirement | "Complete the course and implement. If no results, full refund." |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Honor every guarantee without friction or fine print traps. A guarantee that is hard to claim is worse than no guarantee -- it destroys trust permanently.
See: references/guarantees.md for the five guarantee types, naming strategies, and stacking approaches.
Core concept: Scarcity limits the quantity of an offer (how many). Urgency limits the time (how long). Both create a reason to act now instead of later. When applied ethically, they are not manipulation -- they are a service that helps people make decisions they already want to make.
Why it works: Without a reason to act now, prospects default to "I'll think about it" -- which functionally means no. Scarcity and urgency provide the final push for people who already want the offer but are procrastinating. Loss aversion ensures the fear of missing out outweighs the inertia of inaction.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Limited beta access, grandfathered pricing | "Founding member pricing: locked in for life, only 100 spots" |
| Coaching | Cohort enrollment windows | "Next cohort starts March 1. Only 20 seats per cohort." |
| E-commerce | Limited edition, seasonal releases | "Spring Collection: only 500 units produced" |
| Agency | Client capacity limits | "We only take 5 new clients per quarter to ensure quality" |
| Info product | Fast-action bonuses, enrollment deadlines | "Enroll by Friday and get the bonus Implementation Sprint" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: Every scarcity and urgency claim must be 100% true. If you say 20 spots, there are 20 spots. If you say the price goes up Friday, it goes up Friday. Fake scarcity is the fastest way to destroy a brand.
See: references/scarcity-urgency.md for ethical scarcity patterns and evergreen urgency techniques.
Core concept: The name of your offer is the first thing prospects see and the last thing they remember. A great name communicates the target audience, the outcome, the timeframe, and the format -- all in a few words. Use the MAGIC formula: Make a Magnetic reason why, Announce your Avatar, Give them a Goal, Indicate a time frame, Complete with a container word.
Why it works: A well-named offer does the selling for you. It pre-qualifies the right audience, sets expectations, and creates curiosity. A poorly named offer requires explanation, which means you have already lost attention. The name is also the single most testable element of any offer.
Key insights:
Product applications:
| Context | Application | Example |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS | Feature the outcome and speed | "Pipeline Accelerator: Close 3x More Deals in 90 Days" |
| Coaching | Specify avatar, goal, and timeframe | "The 6-Figure Freelancer Blueprint: From $5K to $15K Months in 120 Days" |
| E-commerce | Use seasonal/magnetic reason why | "Summer Body Starter Kit: 30-Day Transformation System" |
| Agency | Lead with the guarantee and result | "The 50-Lead Guarantee: Qualified Appointments in 60 Days" |
| Info product | Combine avatar + goal + container | "The SaaS Launch Masterclass: Your First 100 Paying Customers" |
Copy patterns:
Ethical boundary: The name must accurately represent the offer. Do not name an offer "6-Figure Blueprint" if the average customer does not reach six figures. Aspirational names are fine; deceptive names are not.
See: references/naming-offers.md for the MAGIC formula breakdown, 20+ examples, and naming dos and don'ts.
Follow these 10 steps in order to build a Grand Slam Offer from scratch:
| Mistake | Why It Fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Selling a commodity | Commodities compete on price; you lose | Bundle unique value to become a category of one |
| Pricing based on cost | Leaves massive value on the table and signals low quality | Price based on the value of the Dream Outcome (10:1 rule) |
| No guarantee | Prospect bears all the risk and hesitates | Add a guarantee that reverses risk -- stronger guarantees reduce refunds |
| Vague bonuses | "Access to community" means nothing without specifics | Name each bonus, describe its value, assign a dollar amount |
| Fake scarcity | Destroys trust the moment customers catch on | Only use scarcity that is 100% real and verifiable |
| Generic naming | "Business Growth Program" could be anything | Use the MAGIC formula to create a specific, memorable name |
| Targeting everyone | "For anyone who wants to grow" attracts no one | Narrow your avatar until it feels uncomfortable, then go narrower |
Use this table to audit any existing offer:
| Question | If No | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Does the offer deliver at least 10x the price in perceived value? | Offer feels overpriced | Add value through bonuses or increase the Dream Outcome |
| Is the market a starving crowd (pain + money + targetable + growing)? | Hard to sell regardless of offer | Switch markets or narrow further |
| Does the guarantee reverse the prospect's risk? | Prospect hesitates due to fear | Add a guarantee that makes saying yes feel safe |
| Are there at least 3 named bonuses with dollar values? | Offer feels thin | Create bonuses that address specific objections |
| Is there a real reason to act now? | Prospects say "I'll think about it" | Add ethical scarcity or urgency with a real deadline |
| Could a competitor offer the exact same thing? | You're a commodity; price war begins | Bundle elements that make the offer impossible to compare |
| Does the name communicate who it's for and what they'll get? | Prospects don't self-select; marketing is less efficient | Rename using the MAGIC formula |
This skill is based on Alex Hormozi's offer creation framework. For the complete methodology, expanded case studies, and additional business growth strategies:
Alex Hormozi is an entrepreneur, investor, and author who has built and scaled multiple businesses generating over $200 million in revenue. He is the founder of Acquisition.com, a portfolio of companies that does over $200 million per year. Hormozi is known for his practical, no-nonsense approach to business growth, focusing on offer creation, lead generation, and enterprise value. $100M Offers has become one of the most widely recommended business books among entrepreneurs and marketers for its actionable framework on creating irresistible offers.