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By Brian Gubernick

Brian Gubernick, Co-Founder of Metrix Masterminds, has more than 15 years of industry experience. He’s held the role of investor, agent, team owner/leader, multi-state expansion team owner, brokerage operating partner, coach and trainer, and corporate executive. Brian started his real estate sales career by launching his sales team, Homehelper Consultants (HhC), in 2007.

Most entrepreneurs chase growth by doing more. More hours. More hustle. More tactics.

But there’s a simple truth about entrepreneurship no one talks about: Success doesn’t come from grinding harder, it comes from thinking better.

That’s why I keep coming back to the frameworks of Naval Ravikant. He’s one of the clearest strategic thinkers of our time, and these eight principles have shaped how I lead, build, and invest.

They aren’t hacks. They’re how we build businesses, teams, and lives that actually work.

Here’s are Naval principles I have adopted:

1. Play long-term games with long-term people. Quick wins attract short-sighted partners. However, everything good – trust, reputation, and creativity – compounds when you surround yourself with people who share your values.

Your reputation is leverage. Treat it like equity.

2. Productize yourself. If you’re trading time for money, you’re capped. Turn your unique knowledge into assets, such as content, tools, systems, and IP, that generate income without needing your presence.

Your brand is more than what you do; it’s how you think, so package that.

3. Learn to build, learn to sell. Every founder must create and capture value. If you only know how to build, you’ll stall. If you only know how to sell, you’ll burn out. Master both or learn enough to collaborate well.

4. Specific knowledge > general knowledge. Generic skills are easily replaced. Your edge comes from what looks like play to you but work to others. Lean into your lived experience, your strengths, and your curiosity.

5. Leverage is the key to wealth. Time and effort won’t scale, but systems, content, capital, and code will. The goal is to build assets that outlast your calendar. Create once, then scale infinitely. There are three forms of leverage to master:

• Labor: using other people’s time

• Capital: using other people’s money

• Code and media: content and tools that scale without you

That last category is especially powerful. A single podcast, video, or operating system can work 24/7. The smartest founders don’t hustle harder: they build assets that run without you.

6. Escape the status game. Comparison steals focus. Don’t play for applause. Play for results. Build in silence, win in private, and measure your impact by lives changed, not likes.

7. Happiness is a skill. You don’t earn peace by exiting. You build it by design. Protect your mind like your capital. Build presence into your schedule, not just your vision board.

8. Read, think, and tinker. Most people are too busy to think clearly. Block time for awareness, not just activity. Block time to think deeply. Read timeless ideas. Try things, not for scale, but for insight. Clarity compounds, and with it comes better decisions. Read timeless ideas. Test new tools. Journal. Think. Clarity compounds.

Here’s the challenge: Pick one of these eight and go deep for 30 days. Apply it relentlessly. Then come back and pick another.

This is how we build quietly and win loudly.

At Metrix, we don’t just talk about growth; we design it. And it starts by thinking better. If you’re ready to surround yourself with others playing the long game at the highest level, you’re in the right place.

Let’s scale your business with intention.

- Brian