Marketing Secrets with Russell Brunson - The Spy Quiz That Drove Millions of Leads with Andrew Bustamante | #Marketing - Ep. 87
Episode Date: November 12, 2025I kept seeing this guy everywhere online. Then I opened my Instagram DMs and found a message from 2021: “I’m the first ex-CIA officer to launch an information product… everything I’ve learned ...came from you.” A year later he went viral using the exact earned-media playbook from Traffic Secrets, stacked podcast appearances, and sent all that attention to one link that fed his funnel. In this episode I sit down with Andrew Bustamante to unpack how he went from CIA to info business, why his name started triggering the algorithm, and how a single quiz became the engine that turned curiosity into qualified buyers. Key Highlights: ◼️The earned-media ladder that took him from small shows to the biggest podcasts and sent every viewer to one conversion link ◼️How a CIA-inspired spy quiz filters for personality, pinpoints a weakness, and turns attention into buyers ◼️The zero-ad viral strategy he ran on repeat and when to layer paid traffic on top of it ◼️CIA tradecraft mapped to marketing: adopt vocabulary, build commonality first, then shift beliefs, plus the nine-month conversion model ◼️Inside his value ladder: tripwire, smart order bumps, a daily intelligence brief, community, and high-ticket experiences that move readers into video buyers Most people chase views, but people like Andrew simply demand views by being so interesting and informative! He proves you can turn story, psychology, and smart funnels into a system that compounds without brute-force ad spend. If you run content, a podcast circuit, or a personal brand, study this one. Build a single path for attention. Use a diagnostic that creates desire to fix a revealed weakness. Move customers up with offers that prepare them for the next medium and the next level. That is how you turn interviews into income and strangers into true fans. This episode of The Russell Brunson Show will self-destruct in 3…2…1… ◼️If you’ve got a product, offer, service… or idea… I’ll show you how to sell it (the RIGHT way) Register for my next event → https://sellingonline.com/podcast ◼️Still don’t have a funnel? ClickFunnels gives you the exact tools (and templates) to launch TODAY → https://clickfunnels.com/podcast Want to learn more from Andrew? Find your Spy Superpower: https://yt.everydayspy.com/47oTFXR Read Andrew’s CIA book ‘Shadow Cell’: https://geni.us/ShadowCellBook Follow Andy on YouTube: https://youtube.com/@Andrew-Bustamante Explore Spy School: https://everydayspy.com/ Support Andy's sponsor Axolt Brain: https://axoltbrain.com/andy Listen to the podcast: https://youtube.com/@EverydaySpyPodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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At Desjardin, we speak business.
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Because at Desjardin business, we speak the same language you do.
Business.
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And contact Desjardin today.
We'd love to talk, business.
Do you have a funnel, but it's not converting?
The problem 99.9% of the time is that your funnel is good, but you suck at selling.
If you want to learn how to sell so your funnels will actually convert, then get a ticket
to my next selling online event by going to sellingonline.com slash podcast.
That's selling online.com slash podcast.
This is the Russell Brunson show.
Hey, what's up, everybody? This is Russell. Welcome back to the show.
Today I've got something and someone very special and interesting.
I'm excited to have on the show.
it's somebody who I've had a chance to I actually it's kind of a funny story I
saw you online all over the place I kept seeing your face in your face in your face
and had no idea there was any connection at all until Jeremy messaged me and you
and then he said yeah oh yeah it's got read your books you should you should you know
connect with him and I opened up Instagram actually you care if I share this I opened up
Instagram to message you and there was a message from August 19th 2021 that you had
sent me and you read that message yeah already it says
So, so 2021. So it says, Russell, I'm the first ever ex-CIA officer to launch an information
product via digital marketing. I am nowhere near as successful yet as I will be. But of all
my successes to date has come from what I've learned, what I've learned from you. I'm sure you
don't read these messages, but I hope that somehow this message finds its way to you. You're still
changing lives today like you have ever since you started. And my family, four, thanks you.
P.S. There's anything I can ever do to support you or amplify your message. Just let me know how.
Andrew Bousamante. So I saw that. I was like, I felt so bad that I didn't message you back
then first off, but, um, but then I was like, man, I'm so interested to hear so much about your
story. This podcast would be fun because, uh, for my listeners who don't know yet, you know, he's
ex-CIA. He's got a bunch really cool things. We're going to deep into, we're talking about some
psychology and some, some, uh, some brain stuff. But also, um, I want to talk about his actual
business. I'm assuming you don't get a talk about my business, which is so frustrating, man,
because nobody, nobody understands how much of a passion it is for me. Yeah. It's the,
it's the, it's the current mission. Yeah. And it's the driver behind getting your message out and everything
else. And so we're going to talk about some of his stuff and then also going behind the scenes
to talk about his business and his funnels and everything. So I'm going to interrupt you.
I have to interrupt you because because it was one year after I sent you that. That was August of 21,
right? Was it August or April 21? It was August 19, 2021.
One year after that is when I went viral for the first time. Really? And the whole strategy
that I implemented to go viral is documented right here in your traffic secrets. The whole,
everything you talked about with earned media, everything that you talked about with capturing like a
message and getting other people to amplify you and guesting on other podcasts. Like that's just
if anybody actually tries to dissect my strategy, which isn't that hard to dissect if you look at it
online. It's really just major platform to major platform to major platform, millions of views at a time
on other people's podcasts with a single link that drives them to my funnel. And it was just once
it, once it worked, I just replicate it and start running. And it gets easier and easier every time
because once you go viral for one content creator,
every other content creator wants you.
And then the algorithm starts to reward your name.
So like my actual name,
if, I mean, your name is like this
and it's been like this for a long time,
but like, you've got hundreds of thousands of searches
for your name per month.
And that's a selling point on its own.
And you had to pay for that.
You didn't have to, any of those kind of things.
To this day still, my company has zero dollars in ads.
Really?
Well, maybe I'll convince you today to buy some ads.
I'm hoping you will pitch me something
because I don't know, ads are like,
ads are like the future for me what should we sell them guys what we got for we'll we'll figure out
something um that's so cool so how did you um the transition from cia to info business like how
i'm curious how that happened what like when you had the idea or did you leave first and then come into
this world or vice versa how did it all work so it's really funny because i didn't realize this until
much later after leaving cia but cia is an information business that's what c i the central
intelligence agency their job is to steal secrets that are of value to a cut
customer and the customer are U.S. policymakers. And if that customer doesn't want the secret,
there's a secondary market because we sell our secrets to foreign governments too. So primary and
secondary markets. This is okay. Really? That's how it works. That's insane. That's how it's how
if we don't have secrets, guess where we get our secrets from. Buy it back from them.
We buy it back from somebody else. That's why Israel and the United States are so close. Because
if we don't have information on something, we just buy it from Israel. That's why we have the
Five Eyes partners in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the UK. If we don't have insight into,
you name it, we'll just buy it from somebody else. And it's not the same as a commercial
transaction. It's different. We buy things by buying, by selling training or selling merchandise or
borrowing units. That's why we have American troops that sometimes sit in foreign countries.
They're trading for some information they need. That's insane. Yeah. So that's the larger global
marketplace. And it's not that different from the actual commercial marketplace. So the CIA
goal to just literally to gather information to be able to broker trade sell, that's the core focus
of it? No, the core focus is American national security. Honestly, the core focus is actually something
called American primacy, maintaining the United States' role as the single, ultimate, only superpower
in the world. That is CIA's mission, is to do that, is to complement that through the collection
of secrets from foreign sources. Anything that we do in an effort to maintain American
primacy is essentially justified by the actions that we take, which is why people don't always agree
with our actions. But at the end of the day, if you can, if you can justify the ends with the
means, and if the ends are American primacy, then it kind of meets our bailiwick.
Interesting. That's why it's so confusing for people like me to understand politics as well.
And we watch Rogan or watch whatever the podcast and stuff. And it's like, this doesn't make
sense. Why are they doing that? And it's like, we have no idea the games are being played behind
the scenes to actually make the things happen. Right. So when I, I, I, I, it took,
It took me time to realize that CIA was an information trading place, right, an information
marketplace.
When you're inside CIA, you very much get fed the lines.
Like, you're the best of the best, you're the elite, you're the tip of the spear, you're
making a difference, you're changing the future, you're shaping history, the list goes on
and on.
So you believe all this stuff and you believe that you matter and you believe that you're important.
But as you grow in rank and you grow in responsibility and you actually start to take on operations
that are like legitimately dangerous, you come back and you ask yourself some hard questions.
Like, why the fuck am I doing this? Pardon my French. Why am I doing this? What's the point
if at the end of the day my kids lose their dad? My wife loses her husband. My mom loses her
son. My mom didn't spend her whole life raising me so that I could throw it away in pursuit of
rice negotiations with Thailand. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. So I had to get some space.
So when I left CIA, I was still undercover. There wasn't really a process for leaving CIA.
when I left in 2014, nobody really had quit that place.
Usually you retire and then you come back as a contractor like the next week.
How long have you been in CIA for?
I was undercover for seven years for a total government career of like 13 years.
But when I left, I needed to find work because I needed to, I had a one-year-old son.
My wife was also CIA along with me.
And I had convinced her to leave also because of what I had seen happening to both of us.
So we had to rebuild a life, but we were still technically and legal.
and legally under a cover identity with the U.S. federal government.
So the federal government was in charge of our resume.
The federal government was in charge of what we couldn't say.
So every time we needed to talk to somebody or like submit a job application,
we had to go back to CIA to get approval.
They had to actually be the ones that submitted stuff.
It was a nightmare.
You still do with that now?
Like do they check your podcasts up?
Like what are you saying?
That we don't have to deal with the,
with relying on them for everything, but they check on everything.
Now, CIA knows who I am.
Like, I'm in trouble.
Oh, yeah.
Potentially.
I mean, you're not in trouble.
Until I asked the right question.
They knew who you were when I sent you that Instagram message.
They're watching.
They're always watching.
So, uh, nervous now.
But yeah, no, that's, that's the connection.
The connection is just, it took me, it took me a few years in the corporate sector.
And I kind of, unfortunately, cheated my way into a job after I left CIA.
It was the only way to get a job.
But I cheated my way into the corporate sector.
And in the corporate sector, I got the time and the space to realize.
to realize two things, to realize, one, that CIA was an information business, and then two,
to realize that the skills I had learned at CIA were applicable in the real world.
I always thought they were only applicable at CIA. Whenever somebody quits a job, I think that
we all think of quitting a job, kind of like we think of quitting a relationship, where I don't
like you, so I'm going to date someone who's 180 degrees different than you.
Delete all of our pictures on Facebook and Instagram. Yeah, right? That's what we do. My wife, when
my wife had a seven-year relationship before she was with me and after that relationship was over she burned all the pictures right well now the 45-year-old version of my wife is kind of like I burned some important pictures yeah just because it had this guy right the same thing is true with careers so we quit careers we'd do something 180 degrees different so when I left CIA I assumed whatever I did next was going to be completely different I never I was never expecting that so much of CIA would overlap with everyday life and that's what kind of brought me to the idea of how do I how do I how
How do I sell what I learned at CIA to people who are trying to make a better life for themselves?
And that was what put me on the collision course with you and expert secrets.
Did you see other people doing it first?
Like, oh, I see someone doing this and doing this or like, or did the I just come in your
head like I could sell this?
You know what I mean?
So we were previously talking about Agora Publishing, which is a financial information newsletter,
right?
If I'm a financial information company.
And I saw it happening on the financial front.
I saw, even when I was at CIA, I had friends who were day traders.
trying to make money, trying to make money on the stock market and currency exchanges and whatever
else. Well, I learned while I was in the corporate sector, I was like, there are people out
there selling information about how to sell stocks and how to do trades. So clearly there's a
mechanism for selling an intangible product, for selling just information. And as I started
looking down that road, I came in contact with a parallel competitor to Agora and one of their
kind of chief quantitative analysis consultants. And that guy, that quant, was an avid reader,
like incredible, incredible dude. His name is Josh. And he was the one that was like, have you
heard of Russell Brunson? Really? Yeah. Russell Brunson is like leading the charge on this idea of
how to market information products. And I was like, well, let's see, let's see how that works.
And as I dug into your content, and this is 2019, as I dug into your content in 2019,
I started feeling like I was back in the farm. The farmers were CIA trains us.
so much of the concepts that you teach, which you attribute to Kennedy and people before you,
so much of what has been refined in the marketing space is the same psychological principles
used to steal secrets from foreigners. So I realized I had a lot of what you were already talking
about. What I hadn't done is put the right vocabulary and the right action around it to make it
scalable. Yeah. Interesting. We actually, I'm working on a VSL right now. We got back from a Gore
And I wanted to make an agor style Vsel.
And so, uh, which if you see in Gore's videos, they, like, they go back and they find
these big ideas or these big concepts to lead with to pull people in and eventually
with, you know, comes back to like buy their newsletter. Um, and so the, the, the, um, basically
the entire Vsel's about, uh, Sigmund Freud who, you know, the father of the subconscious and
unconscious and learning that. And then his nephew Bernays who found out about it.
And he gets hired by the government in World War I to convince the world that we need to be in
this war. So he uses all of Freud.
propaganda on the American people and shifts the entire nation in months to convince
them that we need to go to this war.
And so the government paid him.
And then after the war was done, then he got hired by these companies.
And so the whole Vs tells like telling the story of Freud to Bernays, to Dan Kennedy,
to me, to like, but the whole thing, but it's, yeah, it's the same, the same principles
that, um, that again, Bernays, who's, you know, he wrote a book called propaganda.
He was the father of propaganda and he was doing it initially in the governments and then
in corporate business.
So it's like the same principle, same psychology.
I never thought about that that's what they were actually doing like in the CIA and like deeper levels of of the government's fascinating what CIA has learned over time and keep in mind CIA wasn't the first intelligence organization CIA just learned what it learned from the British MI6 units that we helped during World War II right after World War II the OSS the Office of Strategic Services was created from the OSS came the CIA in the 1960s and 70s so it as as important
as impressive as it might seem because of movies and media, it's young. And what it learned,
it learned from the Brits and what the Brits refined, the Brits largely refined from the Russians,
right? The North Koreans learned what they learned from the Chinese. The Chinese learned what
they learned from the British because China was an ally to the United States and the UK during
World War II. It's a big incestuous pool that's basically based in medical, psychological
studies. It's not it's not witchcraft. It's actually based in science. The difference now is
when a scientific research discovery by UCLA or MIT or University of Chicago, when it comes out,
the government now can fund its own research. And when somebody funds the research, they control
its distribution. So when a major breakthrough comes out from the University of Chicago that's funded
by the U.S. federal government, they can literally just take it off the market. And now we have
intellectual property that nobody else has
in the world of tradecraft. So when you got
in the CIA, is there like a
training course, a seminar, an event,
a process to teach you all these things?
Or is it more, you learned it throughout
the time on the job? You know what I mean? How does it all work?
Yeah, we have a school. Actually, if you
look up CIA University, it's
almost all CIA email addresses come from CIA you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So it's a formal university
that we have inside CIA that's only available
to CIA officers. Dang you.
I was all about to, like, I don't like college or
school, but I was like, I would actually start. That would be so school. And we go through when you,
when you come on board with CIA, you go through a lot of, you go through a pretty robust interview
process, you go through a testing process. And then you start day one is actually something called
in processing, just like college. And it's the most boring two weeks of your life. Because it's
health insurance, medical insurance, how you apply for health insurance benefits undercover,
your cover identity, your secondary cover identity for your administrative cover,
whenever you're inside because inside CIA you have an administrative cover and then outside of
CIA you have a cover provider and then you yourself are your real person and you have to learn
how to manage these two identities all the time so all this really so cool but it's all sticky and
administrative and it's just it's not not as cool to sound it sounds like you're double seven yeah no
you're like no no no i'm like 007 secretary that's what i that's what i am at first but then after
that you go through about three months of on the job training and on the job training is literally like
any other job you've ever had where you go office to office and they teach you about here's how
you submit a file and here's what these different positions mean and here's what a director is
and here's what a deputy director is and here's what a group chief is and you know you're stamping
and collating and filing shit that's that's what you're doing but then after your ojt if you make
it through three months where where different people say yes this person's ready for training yes
this person meets the minimum criteria to work in the building then they send you to
what is known as the farm or the field trade craft course f tc and that is a multi-month completely
isolated experience you're on a retired military base that's fully classified it's got its own
its own economy its own community its own infrastructure and you live like in a different place
for many many months and that's where you literally go to school until noon learning a skill
and then from noon until about 10 p.m you're out in the real world practicing
the skill. It's a process called just in time learning. And it's as literal as it sounds. Like in the
morning, they teach you how to shoot. In the morning, they teach you how to lie in the afternoon,
you go lie in front of a lie detector. In the morning, they teach you how to, you know, carry a secret,
do a dead drop, do a covert signal, whatever. And then in the afternoon, you go and you do it
actually in the field. Under observation, it's wired all the time. It's got every, every person there
that isn't you is a trained instructor observing you. And it's, it's very intimate. Do you have a high ticket
program that sells a version of that would be insane come out for like a week and like we're
going to shoot one day we're going to beat light detectors the next like anyway I've wanted to
develop it for a long time and now I know what we're going to talk about off camera I'd buy that so
it'd be amazing I don't know Neil Strauss but he um he uh you know he's written so many amazing
books but he had one on um like emerg I think called emergency so like if the whole world
falls apart we're going to do and he took his mastermind out and he was talking to guys
because we did the thing together with him.
And I was meeting his guys, uh, and they'd done that like three months earlier.
And he's like, yeah, they took it, they took us out.
And they like put a, uh, cover of the head took them in a little city zip tied him
and left him somewhere.
And it's like they had to figure out how to like break the zip tie, get out.
And there were people trying to capture them is all role play in the city like downtown LA or
something. And he was telling us the whole thing.
I was like, that would be so much fun.
And like, uh, to kind of have a chance to live that part of it a little bit where you
don't have to where I get a shot, but you still, I feel like you're running from
people who are going to shoot you, you know.
Well, and what's nice is we like, we like,
have the tools that you can shoot somebody. Oh, yeah. You can shoot somebody just not with like a lethal
round. Yeah. And we did something similar. I actually did host a, I did a kind of a test event
called Urban Escape and Evasion where I hooded people and, you know, we, we put them under
arrest and we pulled them out of their beds in the middle of the night and put them outside and then
put them in all these stress poses and then actually interrogated them with a trained interrogator under
the flashlight and everything. Waterboarded them. I mean, I have waterboarded somebody and it's on
YouTube and he he asked for it. He's a pretty big podcaster and he asked for it. And then after
it was over, he didn't ask for it anymore. He's like, we're good. It's not great to be that
guy. But, you know, some people get a phone call when they're like, hey, well, you come over and
have dinner and watch a movie. I'm the guy that's like, hey, well, you come over and waterboard me
and shoot me with a rubber bullet. And I'm like, oh, sure. Our friendship isn't going to get closer,
but I'll come do my best. We'll do it. Is that crazy that people like me would actually pay you to
do that for anyway. So it's fun. The life changing benefit is
real. What my company
everyday spy is really
just me trying to give people
2% of what CIA
gave me. CIA really did change
my life. They validated the way
I thought about myself in positive ways,
not in negative ways, because prior to
CIA, I had all sorts of negative
head trash about myself and
about how I thought and how I
saw the world and like I used to think that I was
just like a flawed person.
A flawed person that was pretty good at school.
And then I go to CIA and they're like, you're not, you're
flawed you just see the way it really is and you can see why it is the way it is because when you
understand human motivations and when you understand human emotions and when you understand human survival
instinct when you understand it naturally you don't fit in you don't fit in because everybody else out
there believes the lie and you see something else and it was just putting vocabulary and
putting science around what i was seeing that helped me to understand what was happening because
just like you were saying earlier the the propaganda
of yesterday is still the propaganda of today and will be the propaganda of tomorrow,
which means the marketing of yesterday is still the marketing of today and will be the marketing of
tomorrow. Yeah. So cool. All right, let's talk about your business a little bit. Um,
so what I've seen and again, I haven't gone deep into your funnels yet. Uh, I was going to wait
until after this to do the, to the quiz. Uh, Ben on my team took the quiz though. And, uh, so on a lot
of podcasts and interviews, I see the initial call to action is for them to go take the spy quiz to find
know what kind of spy they are. Is that the, is that, is that, I'm curious that's something new.
Or is that one of the first things that hit when you were, when you were putting content,
being interviewed, all kind of stuff. How did, when did that come into it? So the spy quiz idea
came not long after I sent you that message actually in 2021. It was the very first, dude,
oh my gosh, I can't like this is this is how business works sometimes. The very first
version of the spy quiz was just completed within 24 hours before I had my first viral
interview, right? So all of my like little, it was, man, I was, I was so small. I had friends of
friends helping me actually like code things into click funnels 1.0. And I was like, oh my gosh,
it was such a nightmare. And I was like, I got to get it done. I got to get it done. Because I have
this one big interview tomorrow. And if it works, we need to capture these leads. And we need to put
them into a funnel that works. And we need to find a way. So anyways, so it all really came about in
2021 or 2022, excuse me. But the idea was born in 2021. And the idea was. And the idea was,
was really how do you the whole the whole challenge with traditional marketing is this problem
solution framework right because you like you teach and i'm i'm i'm going to geek out dude and you just
tell me if i'm going too far geek okay you've got the people who are problem unaware people the
people who are problem unaware people who are problem aware and problem unaware solution aware
solution aware how do you what i was discovering is that i was interesting spies are interesting
They're not problems and they're not coming up.
I have a problem that I need a spy to solve for me.
Nobody thinks that and we're and nobody thinks of CIA stuff as a solution to anything.
I when my company first started was actually called everyday espionage,
but then I learned that the word espionage is too unpredictable.
There are people who don't know that word at all and then there are people who
don't know what that word actually means and then there are people uncomfortable
yeah who just immediately assume that espionage is evil or bad or negative.
So then we changed it from everyday espionage to everyday spy and just that term
turn completely changed the attitude because spies are cool and spies are popular and spies are something
everybody wants to be but nobody wants to commit espionage right interesting so so from this i was like
okay the big problem here is we're getting leads but we're not getting qualified leads because everybody's
signing up to learn about everyday spy just because it's interesting but nobody's nobody's entering our sales
funnel and we're watching it because of click funnels 1.0 we're literally watching them land on the first page and drop off
before the second page. They're not even looking at it. So then I came up with this idea of a quiz,
and I wanted to make the quiz based off of the psychological exam at CIA, because that psych exam
was the first big thing for me that was life-changing. When I got my psychological battery
results back, funny story, a little personal, so I'm glad that we're close enough that this
is going to be uncomfortable for you. Perfect. So you go through this like half-day psychological
battery and during this battery there's a question one question that came up out of the hundreds of
questions that said do you identify as a sexual deviant and i looked at that question and i'm like
this is my application to cia and everybody would have the same what do i say what do i say
do i say yes or do i say no and in my mind i'm like it's better to be overly honest than to run the
risk of lying especially knowing that there's a there's a lie detector at the end of this thing so i
just click on yes yep sexual deviant here i go submit
there's there's the end of my career after that the psych eval is turned in it gets automatically
collated whatever else it gets scored and then you go talk to an actual psychiatrist who evaluates
you personally off of your psych evaluation test and you're sitting about this far away and he was
this old crotchety like bolded gray-haired guy with like a beard and big Freud glasses and he was like
i noticed that you marked yes on sexual deviancy just like this is awkward here we go this is the end of my career
before it's even starting.
And he's like, can you please explain to me what, what you're looking at your dad or
your grandpa?
Like, how do I explain this to my dad?
This is horrible.
This is horrible.
So then I explained to him like, well, I've always wanted to have a threesome.
And I really do like the idea of like, you know, girls rubbing oil on themselves and, you know,
all this other stuff that's, that's, that I think in my 24 year or my 27 year old former
military, trying to do my best to get into CIA stuff. I'm like, this must be sexual
deviancy. And he just looks at me and he's like, son, that's not deviant sexual behavior.
There's levels and it goes way weird. That's called being a man. And I was just kind of like,
and all of a sudden I see this old guy and I'm like, I know what you watch on porn hub.
So, so that, but that psychological evaluation was so powerful for me. So I was like,
how do I create something like this for everyday people to take?
for free as, as a high quality lead generator, right? And then the other thing that was so valuable
is that inside that psych evaluation, it's a filter also. It's there to filter out people who are
actual sexual deviants. It's there to filter out people who actually can't handle the job.
So I was like, how do I create mine to also be a filter so I get qualified leads instead of just
interested leads? So that's when I came up with this idea of basically paralleling a personality
test into the quiz. So my quiz is a big echo chamber that uses personality testing tools
inside of a veiled spy quiz that then can assess people's personality. And all I do for the
results is tell them essentially this is your personality and these are the strengths and weaknesses
of your personality according to a CIA style clandestine test. So whoever Ben is. Ben, what kind
were you? Ben is the mastermind. And was it accurate or not accurate? I do not really know.
He's not sure.
He's second-guessed himself.
But that's solved all of the problems.
How many different profiles are there?
There's five different profiles inside the quiz.
And we have a very high success rate, not only in terms of accurately identifying the person.
Because a lot of times when people come back and say, I'm not sure if it was real or not, I don't know if I trust it.
They realized that they misanswered some of the questions.
So remember how we were talking about the challenges of email off camera?
One of the challenges of email is that people use these throwaway email addresses.
That's what we called them at CIA.
An email address that you create only to send junk mail to.
We have that problem with our company, too.
People sign up with the junk mail address.
How do we get them to give us their real email address?
Well, they take the quiz the first time on their junk mail address.
And then they're like, well, I kind of threw the quiz a little bit.
So let me take it again with a different email address.
So now all of a sudden, we'll get three or four email addresses and get to the real email address.
Well, they'll answer the questions the real way and then get their real results.
They get the perfect, interesting.
highly qualified lead that's just they just made 48 micro commitments on their way to giving us their
email address that's a person that converts and then we converted about 70% to our front end okay um
what's the price coming the front end okay so take the quiz 11 dollar front end um
i want to go back um okay so uh so in the timeline you're about to go viral you don't know this yet
you create the quiz where's the link to the quiz people can take it we'll put it
Everydayspy.com forward slash quiz.
Okay. Everydayspy.com forward slash quiz.
You take the quiz, find out what kind of spy type you are
because we're recruiting special spies.
You're in the right category.
You're gonna get hog tight and dropped off in LA.
They should choose correctly.
So you get the quiz out there.
And then whose podcast was then what was the reason
when viral? Something you said or something happened
or just the person or what was the-
So the first podcast to go viral was with,
was with Lex Friedman on August of 2022,
right after the Russian invasion of,
Ukraine. And I think there were probably two or three reasons that that went viral. First, it was,
yeah, timing was big. Ukraine was on everybody's mind. Lex was very pro-Ukraine. I was very pro-practical.
And I was just kind of like, let me tell you what's going to happen here. The West and the U.S.
are going to give up on Ukraine. Like, it's going to lose popularity. The funding is going to dry up.
We're going to have presidential elections. Russia is just going to keep on pressing. Like,
this is just the way Russia works. And of course, Lex was adamantly opposed to that.
and I was just kind of holding my ground.
Yeah, a little debate back and forth.
And people liked the debate.
I guess a lot of people who go on Lex's podcast
don't often debate Lex.
He's a brilliant guy.
And I wasn't trying to debate him
as much as I was just like,
I appreciate your point of view,
but this is what my experience at CIA tells me.
That has gone on to have almost 20 million views.
It's the number one Lex Freeman podcast still to this day.
And I mean, that on its own created millions of leads for us.
Were you able during that to push the quiz
or just or did people that was the that was the first time the quiz was launched and you said it just
during the interview you dropped it no i didn't even get to say it because there's just like people
started googling you afterwards and found it and then the link is in the description it's one of the
first links in description the spy quiz and and it just took off from there that's so cool um
then after that then you start going and you're just hitting tons of pot so i'm curious because
obviously in traffic seekers i talk about this and a lot of people read the book and a lot of people
still don't do any it's always blows my mind um the the the the
break it between somebody to read something and actually does something like it's so so interesting
and i get a lot of people like well that's cool but i'm not you russell i can't get on
podcasts or shows like that and here's how you how i mean obviously you get one or two hits it gets
easier and easier but how are you out there was you just messaging them people messaging you both that
how are you getting on the shows so i want to i want to go from before viral to after viral because
before viral i mean you're if somebody with 5 000 followers talks to you they're like
you say yes that's 5 000 people that's 5 000 people right so i said yes to all
I was all over the podcast circuit for low-level small podcasts, audio only, audio and video,
100% remote, like all the crappy stuff nobody wants to create.
But again, going back to your stuff, I was like, I got to create the crappy stuff because
one day it won't be crappy and people will want to go all the way back and see my crappy stuff.
So if you go to my, I currently have, I think, 650,000 subscribers on YouTube, if you go back
and put my videos in order of oldest, you're going to see all my crap.
stuff right like it's it's got to be there yeah so so cool so i did the same thing so i was all over
small podcasts i think i got one decent size podcast of like 250 000 people it was like a conspiracy
podcast that was in lago florida a guy called danny jones great podcaster he's grown since then too
but danny jones had me on his show with like 250 000 subscribers and then a a protege of danny
a guy named julian dorry invited me to come on to his show in new jersey which was like
like 100,000 people less than Danny Jones at the time. And somehow between those two,
making clips and making shorts and making reels, they had some really successful reels with me.
And that's how Lex found me. And then everything Lex touches goes big. And then from Lex,
it became Modern Wisdom. It became Sean Ryan. It became Jim or Tom Billu. It just kept going
up, right? All Steve Bartlett. And now I have like a rolodex of people. You made this comment
once about selling your phone because of the people who are on your phone yeah it's
unbelievable the people who are on my phone it's unbelievable the people i get to just chat with
and text messages i get i get questions from people about what's happening in the world and i'm like
my wife made fun of me the other day um steve bartlett steve if you're watching if you're
if you're watching steve keep watching because russell's awesome can i tell you steve bartlett's
the same thing he messed me on instagram years ago before he blew up and i didn't i didn't see it because i have
people anyway and so then he starts blowing up so i was
go to message him and there's a message from him. He's like, hey, man, I love your stuff. I love to have
on the show. And I messes him back and no reply. I'm like, dang it. I miss my, I guess I started
checking my DMs more often. Anyway, so. No, but, but Steve Bartlett was, was texting me the other
day and I was talking to my wife and I was talking to my wife. And his, his, his, his, his DM came up.
and it's like, oh, Steve Bartlett, just message you. And I swip to the left to keep researching for my wife.
And she just looks at me and she was like, you just swipe that guy. You just swipe Steve Bartlett off your
screen. And I was like, well, I'm trying to find whatever. I'm trying to find the right.
pair of shoes for you or whatever maybe you're the most important person my life he's number two but
you're number one oh i should have said that that would have that would have been way smarter
brownie points um man so cool um okay so now someone comes in so their senior content go through the
quiz funnel and then so the first offers 11 dollars walk me through then the process now you're
turning them into buyers like what does it look like beyond that part of it so i'm gonna i'm gonna
answer your question but i want to go back to one thing just to plant the bookmark in case it's
valuable to you later. The problem solution thing was a real issue for us. So what we had to do
was create a problem in the results of their spy quiz. So what we did is when we made the spy quiz,
and we knew it was based in science, we knew it was based in personality testing. We also know
that all personality testing actually delivers two results. All personality testing really delivers
your strengths and your weaknesses. So I came up with the idea, what if we introduce the weakness
for free as part of the squeeze.
So, hey, you're going to get your strengths,
but we're also going to tell you your weakness.
And then we give two different options,
two different buttons they can click,
something that says,
it boost my strength or improve my weakness.
And then we can track literal clicks,
and we can track funnel behavior
in both of those two different deviations.
What we saw was all the activity.
Everybody got their test results.
Everybody saw their strengths and weaknesses.
In hindsight, I am learning.
When they see their strengths,
they're like, yeah, obviously.
Of course, I'm amazing.
But when they see their weakness, they're like, yeah.
Now there's pain.
Like, now there's pain, yes.
And then they click on that and then they go into that and then boom.
Like five X to one in terms of sales behavior, click behavior,
read through behavior, follow up.
Like, it's just incredible.
So we've really leaned into the fact that when people, especially high achieving people,
when they're faced, when they're confronted, that their weakness isn't secret.
If I can find your weakness in 12 questions, if I can find your weakness in a three-minute
quiz what does that mean about all the people who are actually close to you what about is that
meaning about your boss and your girlfriend and your kids like they all see it too no yeah right so then
that's that that pain is what drove people forward and then it was just about giving them training
giving them educational resources through everyday spy that improves their weakness and what we found
is we can massively increase people's weakness we can we can get them past the things that they
think are holding them back by giving them spy skills which then they come back and they keep
consuming because now they're like well if you can do that with my weakness what can you do with
my strength and it takes off from there as well interesting so the 11 dollar offer is it based on
is there one for each different core weakness right there's there's one for each different
personality results because what we what we found is that there's predominantly five results
that people fit into and then based on those results they have different strengths they have
different weaknesses and then we know even in order of what's the most popular we know mastermind
is the most popular we know analyst is the second most popular results
people who are very analytical. And we have it all the way down for all five. So after the $11
offer, the $11 offer is basically a package of three or four special reports that are that are
tailored to your strengths and your weaknesses. And then as people go through the funnel the next step
after that, they start getting actual spy training that's still in written format with a video
option because go back to expert secrets. If they bought something to read, they will buy something else
to read. But we need them to get to the place where they start consuming video because our highest
automated products are video-based products. So we need to start training the audience. And that's a lot of
what we do inside our funnels and a lot of what we do inside our training programs is really
preparing our customer base to buy the next higher level of service, but be familiar with the way that
we deliver that service, whether we deliver it through live online webinars or whether we deliver it
through books, through instructional videos, through something else.
So we kind of have to see that earlier in the Ascension ladder so that it's not unfamiliar
when the time comes to purchase.
Yeah.
So cool.
So what does the rest of the value ladder ascension look like after the original?
Yeah.
After you go through the $11 offer, of course, we have two bumps.
Both of those bumps are $27 bumps, very high conversion rates on both of our $27 bumps.
This is the first podcast he's talking about bumps, I bet.
This is exciting.
Oh, dude, bumps are the magical.
It's like free money every day.
It's free money every day.
And what's wild is you can actually, like, I remember we always had one bump.
And then I was like, let's add a second bump.
Make twice as much free money.
Let's just see what happens.
And then it really does.
And the conversion rates are so like clockwork, right?
25 to 45% conversion on the bumps constantly, even with two.
And the bumps are twice the price of the front end.
Anyways, it's magic.
It is magic.
It is magic.
And then after people kind of go through that front end and they go into our mid-tier,
our mid-tier is a daily intelligent.
that's what's called the daily Intel brief. And it mimics the daily presidential brief
because the president gets a brief from CIA every day. So now we have essentially a training
newsletter that costs $35. A month, a year? One time. One time, $35 payment to get 365
newsletters that are trained every single day is a training point. Here's what you do and here's,
and here's how you go out and use it each day. That daily intel brief is also a marketing letter.
It's super rich content with just a simple PS line at the bottom.
It's a soft sell like, hey, if you like this, you're going to love this other thing.
So that's our mid tier.
That goes from there to our back end.
Our back end is a monthly membership, $97 a month.
So a big step from 35 one time to 97 a month to get people into our skunk works program at the base level.
And inside that skunk works program, you get monthly calls, you get access to a whole slew of our best stuff.
you get custom training platforms there are trust custom training programs that are just for the skunk
works group and you get access to our safe house our safe house is our personal app and once you're
inside the safe house you're meeting other people who are also skunk works members and people who are
skunk works operators which is the second tier and skunk works elite which is the third tier and then
there's a whole community of people who are cheering you on all over the world so cool and then do
have anything beyond that any and then everything gets very custom and tailored beyond that so we do have we
live events that we sometimes host for anywhere from 997 to 397 in terms of price point we
have a surveillance training program we have a live trade craft training program we have an
urban escape invasion program we have a three-day crucible we have a three-day uh ghost tactics
program these are all 499 4997 up so 5 000 and up and then we have we get tons of uh
of leads for corporate stuff too to come in and train corporate executives to come in and do tv stuff
I actually just got an email this morning.
They want me to come like Discovery Channel has a show or Hulu has a show that they're running in L.A.
And they're like, we need you to come in teach a bunch of celebrities body language in like 10 days.
Can you do it?
Here's what we're willing to pay you.
And I'm like, sure, let's go teach a bunch of celebrities how to read body language and how not to touch their face.
Oh, crap.
Last week we've been all watching clips and sending them back and forth to each other.
So this morning I sent Brandon the clip about touching your face.
I know like self-caughts and don't touch your face.
I don't know what you do.
So it's always interesting, like, talking to someone who knows body language really well.
It's like the first time I'm at Tony Robbins.
And like, he's analyzing you.
And like, you can like read your soul.
And like, and like, I'm just like, whole time like, what's he thinking?
I'm so scared.
And so the same thing.
And it's just like, man, he knows if I look uncomfortable, if I awkward, what's happening.
Anyway.
I actually shared a stage with Tony two weeks ago in Orlando.
So he, he and I had keynotes on opposite days for this big dental sales conference.
And it was the first time I had a chance to meet.
Tony Robbins. And it was really cool because it was exactly like you described. Only he knew
I was doing it to him too. And while they scan each other. He's like a giant and I'm just like a
normal size human. So as we're standing there next to each other and like his hand is wrapped around
my whole forearm. Because yet those are not just as he tall. He's huge. Like his head's like the size
of four of our heads. Like his hands are yeah. So it's it's not like not just a tall person. He's a
huge person. Yeah. He's a huge, huge man. And you can tell that he's used to using that like in his favor. So as I'm
sitting there in this awkward moment where I'm like, Tony, you did a good job. And he's like,
yeah. And I'm really, I'm sad. I missed yours. And blah, blah, blah, blah. And I'm just sitting there.
I can, I can see what you don't want people to see. And he's looking for things in me. And I'm like,
I'm an open book, brother. You can see what it. I've got a perm. Whatever, whatever you want to say.
That's so funny. The battle of wits begins you guys walk in together. But it was also like the old
cartoon with the big dog and the little dog. Yeah. I couldn't help it feel like that.
I was like, this is a, this is a part of your magic is everybody who stands next to you already
feel small. Yeah. Yeah, Tony's an interesting character because of that, like, he's just
so much presence. And like, it's, I've been in rooms before he'll walk in and like, you don't
see him, but you'll feel like something shift. And you're just like, oh, all right, something's
different. You know, like his presence walked into a room. It's true. And then as, and I'm curious
if you sense this too. As a result of that, his posture changes the energy in the room.
So when he walks in with his hands in his pocket and his shoulders like hunched forward,
everybody like relaxes.
And then when he gets excited
and he pulls the shoulders back
and he gets his arms big
and everybody sits up
everyone wants a mirror matching
all times even though they don't know
it consciously and there's like
please don't touch me
that's what they're all thinking
just please don't pick on me
don't notice me
don't hit me don't eat me
but first time my wife
and I went to invent Tony
had it's up front in his thing
and he's like doing interventions
with people grabbing him
and then like spending an hour
going deep into their soul
and clutz is like
like we need to go to hide
they just go in the back
like if he calls on me
I'm running I'm not gonna be part of this
I'm like, oh, Tony, please don't call it us.
That's funny.
So I know you are an open introvert.
Is Colette also an introvert?
My wife, if you do the test, she's like 50, 50.
So she's right on the line.
Yeah.
And so when she's in a group, she'll be more extrovert if she feels comfortable.
In the entrepreneur world, she struggles because she doesn't,
she doesn't understand the business at all.
So she gets more introverted in this world, which I have to be more extroverted in this world.
But then like we flip roles, like we go to church.
And it's the opposite where she knows everybody.
She's thinking, I'm in the corner just like,
like, you know, reading my book, hopefully nobody notices me.
So it's like we take all the personas on the opposite side.
Yeah.
That's funny.
Yeah, that the official term for that is cusp.
Oh, cusp, yeah.
And you can be cusp, introvert and extrovert.
We, uh, the primary intelligence or the primary personality test at CIA is called
the Myers-Briggs type indicator, MBTI.
You don't obsess the personality profiles, right?
I have a company that just does it.
So I love my- Oh, really?
Yes.
So my, so Myers-Briggs is the one that's used by the federal government.
It's the one that's used by the intelligence services of the world.
Interesting.
because it's operationally useful and it's quantitatively comparable. So MBTI is what my spy quiz is based
off of and MBTI. I know that there are lots of other options, but when it comes to what, what do elite
services actually rely on? They rely on that. Do they use any of the other ones? They use disc,
anagram, strings, and those kind of things? They do. They use them in like leadership, secondary
leadership courses. So for example, if you, if you, CIA is just a giant business. So every,
Every year, 200 to 400 new operators come on board and they all get MBTI assessed.
So we know the personality, the MBTI personality type of every officer at CIA.
As they grow and they become, you know, a division chief or a group chief or a branch chief,
these lower level of leaderships, then they might go through a disk profile or an aneogram
or something else as they kind of ascend.
But the most important element is the MBTI because that's the thing that every
Every leader above in CIA wants to know the MBTI of their officers.
Before you assess somebody for an operation, the first question you ask, what's their
Myers-Briggs?
Yeah.
It's funny because we do the hiring same way now.
We used to hire based on resumes and we get crap people because people had resumes versus,
yeah, like we know the profile of the of the role and then we do the test and then we just
pulled the right profile and then interview those people.
It's changed everything.
That is CIA's model.
Exactly.
Oh, like I'm doing CI stuff all the time.
Exactly.
Exactly, right? Isn't that awesome? Isn't that awesome? So CIA isn't, it's a microcosmo society. You've got analysts. You've got linguists. You've got salespeople because that's what a field officer, a case officer is essentially a salesperson. You're just selling treason, which is a hard sell. It's a hard sell of that. I sell treason. That should be a t-shirt. That should be a t-shirt. But so but you have and then you have like linguists and you have everything from like logisticians and you have couriers. You have all these skill sets. And literally every one of,
of them ties back to an MBTI of success and you just slot the MBTI in with all of these all of the
new applicants that come in yeah i want to ride fit based on my myers and cia take the spy quiz and
you'll find out one of five okay i'll find out where i'll let you know after i take it okay i want to
move i actually have some real questions i want to ask you other than geeking out on the business
stuff which i'm excited by but um i want to ask these questions because obviously you know my world
but like i'm uh like what i'm really good at is one to many selling right and the reason why is i can't
one of many songs, you know, we can't just have a conversation. I figure out your disk profile
and I can sell you based on exactly you are. And I do think the tech is close. That's why we built
the personality profiling company is just to get a huge database of profiles so I can feed it into
funnels. So when you opt into a funnel, I can be like, oh, he's an INFJ. Rewrite the headline for someone
that said, you know, like, so that's where I'm going with my whole, anyway, my world. But
prior to that, we can't do that, right? Like, if I'm in a room speaking to a thousand people or
10,000 people to sell them something or I have a webinar with 5,000 people that I don't know who they are or
whatever like I've got to I've got to figure out the the profile of the audience as a whole right
and then figuring out like what are the false beliefs that they have as a whole and like and all these
kind of things and from that we reverse engineer build a presentation it's going to try to attack
as many things as we can rewrite false beliefs in a 90 minute presentation that hopefully it's as many
people as humanly possible right I think that's that's the world that I've been in for last 20 years
with one to many selling and again this last week we watched by a dozen or more
more of your interviews. It's been fun. And so there are parts that some things you said in other
ways that were interesting. Um, because like you guys are doing that, but you're doing it on
like a target, like a person, like you're trying to figure out the exactly who that person is.
Um, I love to know more about just when you guys are doing that folks in a target, like some of
the things, the things you're trying to understand about them believing, uh, because it all ties
back to beliefs, right? Like the things we have to get them to understand about them
so we can figure out the beliefs we need them to have to be able to,
to persuade or to move yeah it's funny that you mentioned this because this is this is one place
where i deviate from your expert secrets when i first read expert secrets and i saw your
your kind of your webinar profile and all of your great sketches about the the epiphany bridge and
you know the uh the opportunity shift there there were elements of that i was like this is gold
opportunity shift gold the epiphany bridge i was like that's that's not been my experience
because in cia when we're in the field we don't want to change someone's core belief
beliefs. The more you try to change someone's core beliefs, the more you push them away,
the more you force them into a situation where they have to choose you or themselves. And
people will always choose themselves. It's inherent in their, in their psyche. It's a survival
instinct. I have to put myself before anybody else. So rather than build a bridge that kind of
makes them ask the questions that are uncomfortable for themselves, we try to build a bridge
of commonality. And then after they join you on the, on the commonality, after they make the
commitment to come with you because you're like them, then they're more receptive to changes that
they need to make for themselves. So in the field, you do that by essentially you assess a person,
their personality, yes, but their values, their beliefs, their vocabulary, their body language,
their verbal language, their intonation. You, you do this in real time or something you were
prepping before you. And both, because you get a profile for a person. You get a dossier in advance.
So you kind of get some rough, rough edges of what the person might look like.
And then when you're actually with them in person, because dossiers can be wrong.
When you're with them in person, you get a better sense of who they are.
And as you learn who they are, what you actually want to do is you want to echo back their beliefs, echo back their values.
You don't have to say something that isn't true, but you want them to feel safe being who they already think they are in that moment.
So when we host our webinars, when we talk to people online, whenever I'm selling, I am very much trying to create
an echo of who they already believe they are so that they feel safe with me.
And then once you have that, once you have that kind of anchor into them, now there's
an avenue, there's a bridge for you to present them uncomfortable truths because they see
so many truths that are already there. And if you really want to lead, because CIA knows
that the best secrets don't exist with treasonous people. The best secrets live with patriots.
They live with loyalists. They live with people who.
are faithfully dedicated to the cause.
Well, how do you get a patriot to become a traitor consistently
and in a predictable period of time?
You know how long it takes to turn a patriot into a trader?
No.
Nine months.
Nine months.
Nine months of meeting with them once to twice a week
over the course of nine months
and you'll get them to turn coat against their country.
That's a person who's built a whole career,
a person who's built their whole life,
trusting their country and their country trusting them
to the point where now they carry the president,
secrets. They carry nuclear codes. They carry scientific secrets. And they're willing to trade those
for something else because they trust you with the secrets that they've been trusted with.
Right. So we try to use that same model, not as a replacement to your Epiphany Bridge, but is like
a precursor, a precursor to it. That's really interesting. I know there's a guy in Australia's
a great speaker. And he, when he speaks an event, he said the first thing he tries to do is he brings
in universals, everyone believes true.
So he's like, hey, this day's Friday.
It's like, hey, happy beer on this Friday afternoon.
Everyone's like, yeah, it's Friday.
Like, yeah, it's crazy how sunny it is outside.
And he's like, all these universal things that are true for everybody is like,
the more of the universals we get, then we're all like have perfect rapport before we give
me transition to other things.
He's trying to get everybody to fill that same way.
So it sounds very similar, like how you're doing on your, your presentation.
It's true.
And one of the things that I also try to do is I try to give people vocabulary, my vocabulary,
right?
I don't want your vocabulary.
I want you to understand my vocabulary, and universal truths are a piece of that.
But what we do is we draw this parallel, just like I'm doing with you, right?
When you were talking about your wife is in between introvert and extrovert, I was like, we call that cusp.
Well, now you and I are on the same page with this term cusp.
But subconsciously, it's my term.
So if you use my term, subconsciously, you are already aligning yourself with me.
Well, now when you're talking about one to many selling, whether it's through an automated funnel,
because it's written on a piece of paper, or whether it's a piece of paper, or whether
it's a video or whether it's a podcast, people are subconsciously aligning themselves with
you, which in the human brain, because human beings are a tribal creature, we're a pack
animal, we're always subjecting ourselves or pushing ourselves to be somewhere on the hierarchical
ladder. So every time you accept somebody else's will, every time you accept somebody else's
instruction, every time you accept somebody else's vocabulary, you are putting yourself lower on the
subordinate line, which means where they take you next, you're more likely to go.
So with one to many selling, we do a lot of, here, I'm going to give you some vocabulary.
I want to make sure that you're understanding what I'm saying so that I don't lose you,
and I want to make sure that you have a whole new vocabulary for success in the future.
So let's talk about these words.
And you do it in these books all the time, which is why you have such faithful followers.
But it's also when you talk about those people who read but don't apply, the people who read
but don't apply haven't adopted your vocabulary.
If they can't even adopt your vocabulary, there's no way they're
going to adopt your steps, your actions. But the people who adopt your vocabulary are 100% in.
It's interesting. In extra secret, seeker talk about status a lot, you know, like status decreased,
increase. When we're talking about is that it's like you have that, your interesting vocabulary gives
them a status decrease, which gives you an increase. But then it's also like, uh, it's fascinating.
And then as you're moving, they want to move toward, if you do it correctly, then they want to move
towards you and with you versus like just separate and like, I don't like this anymore. And some do,
some do separate and that's fine too. Yeah. And it's fascinating. And it's,
it's hard you want to make it as hard you want to make it as easy as possible for them to
subordinate themselves and as hard as possible for them to leave because once you've kind of fallen
that's why that's why grade school works the whole reason middle school and high school
work at all is because grade school works because we all subordinate ourselves to school starts
school starts school starts teacher tells us when lunch ends
teacher tells us the assignment even mom and dad subject themselves to the teacher
what's the first thing they ask you when you get home from school do you have any homework well who the
hell who gave us homework the teacher so mom and dad are subjected themselves to the teacher so all
the sudden we learn don't question the teacher and the teacher just gets replaced by the boss and the
supervisor and the college professor and and we never realize that we're just reliving grade school
all the time well we don't need to change the way that we work or we don't need to change the way
that other people work we just need to be the new the new teacher because they're already
subordinate to a teacher yeah interesting um
there's something you talked about when your podcast was interesting about developmental periods of
people's lives like 0 7 to 13 13 25 25 plus i'm curious because it's kind of going back into
elementary school and things like that um explain that concept and how that fits into you as a
leader trying to persuade and move people as well yeah so it's it's such a good question the there are
four developmental periods just like we just talked about um and as a as a quick recap a
Zero to seven is the first developmental period.
And during that period of time, it's defined,
it cognitively, it's defined as a period
where everything is learned, everything is learned.
Everything they hear, everything they see,
everything they taste, everything they touch.
From zero to seven, it's all given equal gravity, right?
It's the best age two.
Kids in that, that's like the, how old are your kids?
I have an eight-year-old and a 12-year-old.
Okay, yeah.
I agree completely.
Zero to seven is the best.
Absolutely.
That's what people keep having kids.
That's what we had five because we're like,
we need another one of these.
And then they all code out.
And then it's like, oh, we're thinking.
Anyway, I should say that.
I love all my kids.
You're all great.
But you were the best during like three to six or seven.
It's so true.
I say five to seven.
Five to seven is like magic.
So much fun.
Magic.
But in that period of time, everything's equal.
Mom and dad are equal, you know, whether they see something that's true or whether they see
something that's false, it doesn't matter.
To them, it's real.
From seven to 13 is the next developmental phase.
And this is a hard developmental phase because everything they hear, they still absorb it.
They can't reject it yet.
They still absorb it, but now they apply priority to what they absorb.
So I really like science.
I'll pay more attention to science.
I don't really like math.
I'll pay less attention to math.
But they can't resist absorbing it.
So that's why we may have all hated learning about the Revolutionary War, but we still remember it.
We couldn't resist it.
So from zero to 13 is this phase in a child where they simply can't resist learning.
But from 13 to about 25, you learn how.
to resist. You still have this incredible capacity for absorption, but now you not only can
prioritize, you can also reject information. And that's why we have such a hard time with people
between 13 and 25, because if they don't want to listen to you, they just learned how to not listen
to you. And they're going to keep practicing that skill over and over again. And similarly, when they
do get their teeth into something that they like, whether it's M&M or whether it's, you know, some video
game. When they're into it, they are literally dedicating resources to this thing that they're
interested in. And they might even struggle with how to pull themselves out. This age, this age is
also defined by a high tolerance for risk because they don't understand repercussions. So from 13 to 25,
almost all of us, when you think back on the stupidest things that you've ever done in your life,
what window did it happen? It was probably that window because you couldn't assess risk. You never
thought you might fall off the motorcycle. You never thought you might crash the mountain bike.
you never thought for a second that maybe it's a bad idea to speed in the rain you don't even think
about it right and then from 25 on all of your beliefs all of your values all of your all of your
mental habits are set there's still something called neuroplasticity which means you can still
change the way you think but you no longer have the ability to absorb everything and you have
learned how to control both your prioritization and your rejection sides of your cognitive brain
So you can prioritize what to learn when to learn it and you can reject things that you don't want to learn.
The problem is that for the vast majority of people after 25, they don't think any differently than the way they thought at 25.
They just stay in the same groove forever.
They have neuroplasticity, but they never exercise it.
And the small group that actually discovers that they can change the way they're wired, they can change the way they think, that group goes on to have exponentially more success than the average bear.
So those are the four developmental groups.
And the reason I think those are so valuable is because if you're trying to sell, for me,
my target is nobody under the age of 25.
It's completely out of my control under the age of 25.
If they're interested, they're interested, if they're not interested, they're not
interested, and there's nothing I can say, nothing I can do, no content I create that's going to
change it.
So why even target them?
Why not just do what I do and let 25 to zero essentially be free leads, free money,
free whatever else, assuming they even have a credit card. So I target above 25. Even more than that,
I target 10 years after 25. I don't want a customer between 25 and 35 because the vast
majority of those people haven't yet learned how to change the way they think. They haven't gotten
a pain yet to want to, yeah, I similar to things. Even 25 to 35, like they are in a state of
sedation, most people where they're like, they've got the job, they got the thing, and they're
stuck in that thing. And most people don't break out of it, but the ones you do break out,
out like that's the sweet and they may not even realize they're stuck they think that they're
succeeding oh yeah how many 28 year olds have you know an 80 000 a year job and they're like i'm
i'm doing really good and you're like just the train's coming buddy train's coming you just don't know
it yet yeah so i i really look for that that ideal customer for me i already know is between
40 and 55 because that's where life is painful multiple kids aging parents mid career to
to late career. If you were successful when you were 28 or 32, your rate of success has significantly
declined by the time you're 40. Very few people are succeeding more after 40 than they were
before 40 if they're successful high performing people. So they're looking for a level up.
And they have already demonstrated to themselves that they can follow process, they can follow
systems, they can follow concepts. And that's exactly what I need them to have success with spy processes
and spy frameworks because always teach us frameworks thank you if we want them to have success with
our frameworks they have to believe in frameworks and i it's much easier for me as a startup it was
much easier for me to teach people who already believed in frameworks rather than try to teach
people to trust frameworks so my world um my path my customers seems very simple because i'm like
you don't have a business you create a business you launch a business you scale a business
and you have these these trackers your audience seems like it can be so diverse someone's coming
in and they could be not business people, all like be athletes or corporate people.
Like, what is, when someone's coming into a world, what's the end, is there an end goal or
end state or who you're trying to help them to become?
Is it inside of their own thing or something different?
I'm curious what the, what that looks like for you in your mind.
Yeah.
So our business, our business mission is very simple, right?
Spy education that breaks barriers.
All I want to do is break a barrier.
We break barriers in three categories.
Three categories that CIA taught us to recruit people in.
The three categories that you lay out in expert secret.
right? Health, wealth, relationships. That's it. All of CIA operations are there to identify
whether a traitorous target wants better health, more wealth, or better relationships. That's it.
So it was such a simple analog comparison for me. I was like, holy smokes, this is the
national security.
Yeah, you should hire me to come teach me some stuff. If they haven't reached out to you, they really
should. But they're in complete disarray right now. But they have unlimited funding. So they should
definitely reach out. I'd be willing, just kidding. I will negotiate a special
expensive rate for you. In the current government shutdown. Oh yeah,
so they open those doors back up and the money starts flowing, let's go. But yeah, so I
look at the same thing as health, health, wealth, and relationships. So we have
essentially front-end offers in all three. We have breakthroughs, attainable breakthroughs
that take less than an hour in all three because we want someone to have a break,
break a barrier using a spy skill. If we can just get them to break a barrier using a spy skill
and see that it works, they'll be in for the next step. They'll continue to go up the ascension
ladder. And now when we need two weeks of their time before they break a barrier, they'll commit
that. If we need a half a year of their time before they break a barrier, they'll commit to that.
Because they've seen the result earlier. Of the three categories, where do you skew heavier one
direction? Are they all pretty even? So I never would have guessed it. I never would have guessed it. It was
the last one that we built and it is by far the most popular front end is health oh that
i thought business for sure and i was like no it's going to be relationships no no yeah so i always
thought it would be relationships but it's health and i think it's in hindsight i think it's because
with my target demographic right 40 to 55 they all feel health pain every day they feel pain when
they wake up they feel pain when they try to poop right they feel pain because they don't eat enough
they don't get to the gym enough they don't have enough energy for their kids like they don't
have enough energy for sex they lose their hair they gain their belly to health then because
cia teaches us how to be fit and deal with stress and and how to eat diverse diets because we
travel all over the world like they teach us all sorts of fitness hacks mental health hacks
physical health hacks they teach us this stuff all the time so so all we do is we teach people
a little bit about how to how to drink water and have a have a have a nighttime routine before they go to
to improve their sleep and it changes people immediately it's amazing what it's as simple as this is right
like 500 milliliters of water will literally change the way you feel in less than 15 minutes i think
we all know that but i'm the one that like my company actually put it on a page and called it a
challenge and now all of a sudden people are like oh this this sounds like fake and they drink a
500 millioners of water at 8 o'clock in the morning and then by 815 they feel really good and they're like
wow it's not coffee or caffeine or just exactly right so so what we found is that we have all these
breakthroughs with people on the health side so fast and then because they see what a little bit of
what strawberries in the morning can do for them they see what water in the morning can do for them
they see what uh what five minutes of a walk can do for them before they drink a cup of coffee
they make these huge i mean these are monumental changes to a person's routine drink a glass of water
have a bowl of berries and go for a walk before you drink a cup of coffee all in that's going to be
10 extra minutes in your morning we're not taking your coffee away we're just saying try this
and then by the time their coffee is done brewing they actually wonder if they even need their
coffee that's such a monumental change to ask for somebody when it comes to saying hey now pay
ninety seven dollars to join this once a month group they're like oh yeah that's easy yeah
you see the value that really fast um that's so cool do you when because if everyone's coming on
spike was initially, where do you separate health, wealth, relationships? Is that further down
the funnel or how do you get people to raise their hands for different? Yeah, we have to teach them,
just like you were saying. So people are not aware that there's these three different areas of
their life. I think they subconsciously realize that life doesn't all fit in one channel,
but they don't know how to name those channels. So we essentially take our entire audience,
everybody who comes in as a lead. That's who I consider the audience, right? Everybody who comes in
and doesn't squeeze to the lead, they're not ready for us yet. They'll come back to us in the
future, they can't resist. You can't resist when your algorithm feeds you me all the time.
You keep popping, like, fine, I'll take the quiz. We're about 20 times. I'm in. I'm going to do it.
For real this time, for real this time. But we break our entire audience into people who are on the daily
intelligence brief and people who are not yet in the daily intelligence brief. Because the daily
intelligence brief, that mid-tier offer that gives them one piece of content every day that's training
content, that's where they start to learn through one email, less than 500 words a day,
how to think like a spy. And that's where we teach them. Spies break their life into three
categories. And here's why we do it. And here's what category one is. And here's where category
two is. And here's how the national security infrastructure uses these three categories.
And all this cool stuff. It's like 70% cool, 30% education, because nobody wants 70%
education, 30% cool. So we teach them all this through this constant ongoing newsletter. The
open rates are out of this world. The click-through rates are fantastic. Um, and we know it works.
That's our, that's our core audience. And then that's the audience we can cultivate.
Everybody else who's not on that list is either, they either haven't gone past the $11 front end,
or they, they don't have the money to go to the daily intelligence brief or the offer is
not attractive to them. And if they're not attracted to a daily training, there's no way
they're going to be attracted to a six-month training.
You're year-long 365 emails.
Is that pre-written or are you generating them?
It's evergreen.
Every day.
It took me two years to write it.
So for the first from 2021, as when I started writing the emails,
and it was because I learned from the financial marketplace of Agora and our actual seed,
the first company to ever find us and start putting money into us as a consultant was a company
called FinNMC, Financial Marketing Company, I think FinNMC in Jacksonville, Florida. And right away,
because they were all, they were, they were a company that specialized in financial information.
They saw that we were putting out espionage information. And they were like, we want you to come
and be like our current events person so that you can speak to our audience about current events
and how they're going to impact the marketplace. And I was like, yeah, they put me on like a $4,000
a month retainer. And I was like, this is the best thing since sliced bread, right? So I go
I started helping them and I learned so much about how that works. But the point with all of that is I was writing, they write financial information newsletters, write original content every day multiple times a day. I was like, I don't have an editorial team. I can't do that. So I would create one rich content email that was written in evergreen fashion and I would post it that day. And then the next day I would write another email. And I learned this process at CIA. Because at CIA, your career is
developed by how much intelligence you create. So I started to learn that most case officers,
most field officers, only create two to three intel reports a week. So in the seven-day period,
they only create three intelligence reports. And that's average. So I wanted to hack the system.
And I was like, how do I get to be a good intelligence officer without actually collecting more
intelligence? It's like, oh, why don't I just take my three reports and spread them out over the
course of seven days? So then I will publish a report every single day. And it just,
absolutely jumpstarted my career at CIA.
So I was like, I'm already used to writing 800 words a day.
Let me just do it again.
And this time I'm doing it for money instead of for a promotion.
And I just got into this process.
And after a year, I had 220 dedicated emails just because the way it turned out.
And then after the second year, I got through another 220 emails.
And then I took 440 emails hired them up in the outspons.
Yeah.
And I hired a copywriter who was more qualified than me.
And I was like, pick the best out of these.
here are my open rates here are my click-through rates here's the here's the
deliverability for all of these and then we nailed it down to basically 320 that
were that were significantly better than the other 140 or 160 and and and just did it all
empirically and now that is the automated daily intel brief yeah that's the paid one right
yep yeah 35 and you get and you get what is essentially the best of two years worth of daily
training emails then you give me an idea
I appreciate that.
I have a really cool idea actually tied to that for the actual ClickFunnels brand.
So anyway, very cool.
That makes me feel good.
That makes me feel good.
ClickFunnels has done so much for me.
I'm glad I can do something for you.
That's awesome.
Okay.
So man, this has been so fun.
I appreciate you being here and sharing these things.
I would love just, again, I have people come to my world.
And I've been doing this a long time.
I've been doing just like 25 years.
And when I first started doing this, everyone thought what I was doing is a scam.
It was just like, in fact, I remember this is the worst story in my life.
It was my first Thanksgiving, my wife and I, we just got married.
I'm at her parents' house, and we're sitting down to Thanksgiving dinner.
And my mother-in-law is like, hey, I Googled your name.
And there's a video of some guy saying that you're a scam, are you scamming people?
And I was like, you know, like newly wet.
I'm like, oh, so I sneak away during dinner.
I like Google and like, sure if a guy made a video saying like, and it took a long time for like all this stuff that we're teaching now,
for people even think it was legitimate.
And then eventually it's been adopted.
and it's been more legitimized,
but it's always fascinating to me that like,
when it gets outside of like,
I don't know, like the entrepreneurs, the dreamers,
these kind of people, but like,
people who have real businesses and real, like,
something like you who's working in the government
doing these things and they, most of when they see what we're doing,
they reject it like, ah, this isn't a real thing.
So I'm curious, like, I love if you just even talk to them,
like helping people understand like this business,
this industry and like taking your information
and how you can change people's lives
and how it's, I'm sure, affected you just seeing how this skill set,
you had that you didn't even realize it was commercial for everyone else, how many people's lives
you've had a chance to change because of it. I think that they understand that how real this can be
and how it can change people's lives and how fulfilling it can be for you as a person. I think more
people would be interested in being part of it. And I am talking to you. I'm talking to whoever's
watching, but I really want to tell you because like you touched my life. There are three people
in my family, my wife and my two kids. And their life is completely different than it ever could
have been because of what you built with click funnels because you took that question from your
mother-in-law and asked you if you were a scam artist and you didn't shy away from that right so
i genuinely want you to know the work that you did in 2019 the work that you did in 2013 until
2019 is what made me take the action i took in 2019 and what keeps us on the click funnels train
even to this day even as competitors try to pop up to outperform you and even as competitors
pop up to try to compare themselves to you.
I'm like, they, they can, they can do whatever they're going.
Whatever bugs exist in ClickFunnels 2.0 are going to be fixed eventually, but there's
no way I'm leaving ClickFunnels because of what you did to start this revolution, right?
Human beings are all wired the same.
We all, irregardless of our skin color, our age, where we went to school, what language we
speak, what God we follow, it doesn't matter, what country we live in, we all are made of
the same organic matter. And that includes our brain. And CIA teaches us that the human brain
is the most consistent part of the human body. So everywhere in the world, every human being
that ever has existed and every human being that ever will exist, they have the same brain.
Within a neurotypical model on a bell curve, right, we can't compare people who are chemically
imbalanced or people who actually have a physical ailment with their brain. The vast majority
of the bell curve. 80% of human beings alive today have the same brain organically and chemically,
which means that they assess information the same way. It's only what they're nurtured with
that changes how they view information. Otherwise, they process it exactly the same way.
All you've done with click funnels, all you've done with this whole, with this book series
and the work that you've continued to create is given the code to that existing computer that
that exists in 80% of brains. If we change the language, we'll reach more people,
but the message doesn't even have to change. If we change the size of the font,
we'll reach different age groups, but the message doesn't have to change. And the process
is so repeatable, so scalable. It's why one to many selling works. And to your point about
moral obligation, if you have created something that helps other people,
and you believe in what you have created, you don't have a choice. You are morally obligated.
to do everything you can to spread that message as far and as wide as you can.
Everyday spy is my moral obligation.
CIA changed my life.
It changed my wife's life.
It gave us a whole different way of viewing the world.
It was a blessing that I cannot describe.
Traveling the world undercover, operating with my wife and foreign lands,
keeping Americans safe, absolutely a blessing.
And it does not compare to the way that I get to serve people now.
I serve people thousands of leads a day.
a day, thousands of leads a day with no ad cost.
They find me, they reach me, they learn about our content, they choose for themselves.
That's their choice, right?
We have hundreds of conversions a day with no ad cost and all evergreen marketing content.
We do this not because we knew what to do, it's because you programmed the pink matter between our ears,
and I was like, this is what CIA taught us to do with treason.
treason and now we get to do it with something that builds the world instead of something that
tears the world down we've touched millions of lives i have touched more than a billion lives
online when you look at all the content we've created and you can you summarize all the views
together a billion people have seen my content and i never put an ad dollar behind it and it's because
of traffic secrets and it just i mean russell i don't know what to tell you dude as soon as soon as i had the
chance to reach you. Instagram didn't work. So I tried to find other ways to reach you and those
didn't work. But finally, Jeremy Miner was like, let's just send him a real quick message. I'm going to
play pickleball with him this weekend. And I was like, I got to tell this guy the truth. Oh, man. I'm so
grateful you did. And yeah, so fun to hear your story and so proud of what you've done. And yeah,
it's, it's from your own work too. It's like the most rewarding thing you do in your work is
seeing somebody take it and do something with it. And so it's just so fun for me to be able to see that
and see what you've done and all the lives you're changing and and you're just getting started man
you're at the very beginning of this whole thing sooner you're going to convince them to start buying
ads and then imagine what's going to happen that's terrifying oh it's terrifying i'm a billion to 10 billion
that's so awesome but yeah i appreciate you man thanks for doing here so everyone your next step
on the podcast is go take the quiz everyday spy dot com slash quiz yes sir you're right uh go take the
quiz and i'll take mine as well let you guys know what mine is and then see how many guys are
similar to me and then and then uh yeah it would be awesome we'll build a spy team
Oh, I like where this is going.
The Funnel Hacker Spy Team.
See what happens with it.
That would be fascinating if we didn't our next event,
have everybody take it and then break them into groups.
And there's probably something magical we could do with that.
Oh, but there's all sorts of cool stuff we could do that.
Not to mention like bolt on challenges at the end of a funnel hacker
or on the second day of a funnel hacker convention.
Yeah.
And then we'll hog tie them all and throw them in the middle.
Yeah.
It'll be awesome.
So cool.
Well, thanks for being on the show, man.
Thanks for flying to Boise.
I know, I mean, you're super busy.
I will be here anytime you want.
My podcast is not like the biggest ones you've been on,
but I'm grateful for you willing to come out here and just, you know, come hang out with this.
Labor of love, man. Anything I can do to help. I told you that in 2021 and I meant it.
Yeah, that's awesome. Well, thanks, man. Appreciate you.
And, uh, yeah, thanks for being here. Absolutely.
