I didn't have time to address this when I saw it last night, but it's a fair question even if it's dripping in sarcasm (all good). The short answer is you recruit and process players out at an increasingly better rate until you are there. You add difference makers from the portal. You have to be better evaluators and developers of talent, a little more cut throat, and eventually you are attracting the volume of players at the level you want. Alabama wasn't great under Saban because they landed high level recruits here and there. They were great because they never quit landing them and processed the one's who didn't make it out and NU doesn't get better pretending those players are the answer imo.
I appreciate how easy that sounds, but I probably have a little more insight into the recruiting process than most, and there is a lot of room to be better evaluators of talent than the competition. I probably see coaches from 50 schools roll through our practices during spring ball. For all the millions these programs spend in recruiting, they are doing less than they did when I played in the 90's. Big time programs literally show up and ask who certain players are, if there is anybody else they should be aware of, introduce themselves to the players, spend 5 minutes watching his hudl highlights with him, and offer. The only difference between now and then is that some of these kids attend more combine camps and have verifiable testing.
I've heard some of them tell players they are going to evaluate their practice and full game film, they don't. None of them. But, they all ask, "who else has offered you"? With the resources these programs have, I would be digging a lot deeper on prospects, & I would have an organizational psychologist interviewing them. I'm not going to throw out names on a public forum, but there are 4 star prospects I've seen who can't play ball, & others who have neon red flags. But, they pass the eye test, somebody put them on a list, & now coaches are trying to convince them they are pretty and deserve a rose.
All this to say, being better is not that difficult. You don't even need to be Pittsburg Steelers good at talent evaluation, you just need to be more diligent imo.