Stories and advice from Jaxon Forge, Founder of MoneyForged.com
Raw, no-fluff truth on wealth psychology, iron discipline, free-market capitalism, tariffs, and the systems that separate the self-made from everyone else.
From $0 to Accredited Investor: My Unfiltered Timeline | MoneyForged.com
From $0 to Accredited Investor: My Unfiltered Timeline
By Jaxon Forge, Founder of MoneyForged.com • March 2026
I didn’t wake up accredited. No inheritance, no lottery, no viral exit. Just consistent, boring execution over years—stacking income, killing expenses, building assets, and paying the Discipline Tax early instead of forever. This is the raw timeline: ages, numbers (where I can share without doxxing myself), big mistakes, and the mindset flips that actually crossed the $1M net worth line (excluding primary residence) and locked in accredited status under current SEC rules. If you’re grinding toward private deals, venture, or syndications, this is what it really looks like—no fluff.
~2010-2012
Age 22-24: $0 Net Worth, Entry-Level Job, First Realizations
Graduated with minimal debt but zero assets. Made ~$45k/year in a decent but soul-crushing job. Lived paycheck-to-paycheck. Realized laziness was just unexamined fear. Started side hustle #1: freelance skill I hated but paid. Saved first $5k emergency fund. Biggest shift: stopped trading time for money blindly—began valuing systems over motivation.
~2013-2015
Age 25-27: Hit First $100k Net Worth Without a Fancy Degree
Scaled freelance to $80k+/year while keeping day job. Lived on 40% of income. Invested the rest in boring index funds and first rental property (small down payment, cash-flow positive from day 1). Avoided crypto hype, chased compounding. Key: The Power of Boring—exciting investments rarely make you rich. Net worth crossed $100k. Felt unstoppable, but still far from accredited.
~2016-2018
Age 28-30: Built the Side Hustle Stack to $150k+ Income
Turned one boring skill into three income streams: freelance → agency → digital product. Quit day job. Income jumped to $180k/year. Maxed tax-advantaged accounts, bought second rental. Avoided shiny objects. Biggest mistake: Said yes to too many opportunities—hidden cost killed momentum for 6 months. Learned to say no to 10x income. Net worth ~$350k.
~2019-2021
Age 31-33: Grinding in Silence, First Private Investment
Income stabilized at $250k+. Focused on recurring revenue, not viral. Bought boring business #1 (laundromat—low overhead, prints money). Net worth climbed to ~$650k. Made first accredited-friendly private investment (syndication) via friend—realized most deals gatekeep behind status. Motivation died; built iron-clad systems instead. Woke at 4:30 without alarm. Discipline Ladder in full effect.
~2022-2024
Age 34-36: Crossed $1M Net Worth – Accredited
Passive income from rentals/businesses hit $8k/month. Sold agency stake for lump sum. Added more boring assets: self-storage, another multifamily. No crypto gambles. Net worth (excluding primary home) crossed $1M in late 2023. Officially accredited via net worth test. Income already qualified ($200k+ consistently). First real private equity deal: 10x potential asymmetric upside. Doors opened.
2025-2026
Now: Accredited & Still Grinding
Net worth well past $1M, income north of $400k. Still pay Discipline Tax daily. Accredited status isn’t the end—it’s the new starting line for better compounding. Most never reach it because they chase motivation, post wins online, or hide in comfort zones. I chased systems, ground in silence, and turned boredom into wealth’s secret weapon.
The Real Lesson
Accredited isn’t talent or luck—it’s math + discipline + time. Pay the tax early: cut waste, stack streams, own boring cash-flow assets, negotiate like your freedom depends on it. The ladder from broke to unstoppable exists. Climb it one boring step at a time.
A quick, hypothetical questionnaire based on current SEC rules (as of 2026). This is not official, not financial advice, and does nothing legally. It’s just a mirror to see how close you are to opening the door to private deals—the ones that often separate the self-made from the crowd.
— Jaxon Forge, Founder @ MoneyForged.com
Important Disclaimer: This quiz is purely educational and hypothetical. Only issuers or qualified professionals can verify accredited investor status. Rules can change; always check sec.gov directly. Hitting “qualified” here doesn’t mean anything legally—it’s just math and self-reflection.
Official SEC Rules & Resources
This quiz is hypothetical and for educational purposes only. For the real, binding definition of an accredited investor, always go straight to the source. Here’s where the rules live:
Pro tip from Jaxon Forge: Don’t chase shortcuts—build the real numbers. Most people stay non-accredited because they avoid the boring grind of stacking income streams and assets. Pay the Discipline Tax early, and the doors open themselves. For my full timeline from $0 to accredited, read From $0 to Accredited Investor: My Unfiltered Timeline right here on MoneyForged.com.
How to Price Your Services So High People Thank You | Money Forged
How to Price Your Services So High People Thank You
Stories and advice from Jaxon Forge, Founder of MoneyForged.com
Published by Jaxon Forge • @MoneyForgedHQ
The faster you stop charging by the hour, the richer you get. That’s one of the biggest shifts I ever made in my own businesses, and it’s the same one I see separate people who stay comfortable from those who build real wealth.
Most folks in service work—whether you’re consulting, coaching, doing high-end concrete work like what a lot of you in the volume concrete space handle, freelancing, running an agency—they stay stuck at these hourly rates, maybe a couple hundred bucks an hour, because it feels fair. It feels safe. You can justify it to yourself: this many hours, this much pay. But fair doesn’t compound. Value does.
I stopped trading time for money a long time ago, and it was one of the highest-leverage moves I’ve ever pulled. Clients don’t buy your hours. They don’t buy your coffee meetings or your keystrokes. They buy outcomes. They buy the revenue you help them add, the costs you help them cut, the headaches you eliminate, the freedom you give them back.
So the mindset flip is simple but brutal: price based on the economic impact you create, not on your inputs. Ask yourself, what is this really worth to them in dollars? If you’re helping a business owner plug a leak that’s costing them two hundred grand a year, or add half a million in revenue, or free up twenty hours a week that they can turn into more growth—your fee should be a meaningful fraction of that first-year upside. Ten to thirty percent is a range I see work really well. When they look at a fifteen-thousand or thirty-thousand-dollar investment that delivers a hundred grand or more back in the first year, it doesn’t feel expensive. It feels like the smartest decision they made all quarter. They thank you for the invoice because you’re the one who made them richer, not the vendor who billed them for time.
I remember raising a long-term client’s retainer once. We were at four grand a month, and I took it to eighteen. They paused hard. They said, this hurts a bit. But you’ve already put seven figures on our bottom line. Let’s do it. Six months later they were back saying, best investment we’ve ever made—thank you. That’s the moment you’re aiming for.
How do you actually pull off the jump
Don’t just send a rate-increase email. You schedule what I call a strategy review call. Not a pricing talk—a strategy review. You open with the numbers. Hey, since we started, we’ve added this much revenue, saved this much cost, freed up this much time. The current setup is actually capping what we can do next. I want to go deeper. Here’s what full access to my best systems, priority bandwidth, everything would look like.
You present a new package: less time from them, higher impact from you, premium price. To make it land even smoother, give them tiers. One keeps the old scope and old pricing—they won’t pick it, but it makes the new one look reasonable. The middle is the five-times jump with real upgrades. The top is the elite white-glove version at eight or ten times with exclusivity and bonuses. Almost always they go middle or top. The high anchor does the heavy lifting.
If they push back, you don’t argue. You get curious. I get it, this is a big number. Let’s model the ROI together. If we hit this milestone in the next ninety days, you’re already ahead. Most sign because the trust is already there from the results they’ve seen.
Positioning that makes premium stick
Niche down hard. Boring niches pay more—high-ticket industries like construction, real estate development, SaaS founders. They have real money problems and real budgets. Build proof—case studies, testimonials, hard metrics. Create scarcity: I only take on a handful of new clients a year now. And that one-man empire feel—no big team—means every interaction carries higher perceived value.
Start today by auditing your current clients. Look at the real value you’ve delivered versus what you’ve charged. That gap is your next conversation. Kill hourly forever. Move to project fees, retainers, or even performance-linked where it makes sense. Practice saying bigger numbers out loud until they stop feeling weird.
The day you start pricing like the expert who moves the needle instead of the vendor who fills slots, everything shifts. Better clients show up. They treat you like a partner, not a commodity. And yeah, they start thanking you for the privilege of writing the check.
If you’re listening and you’ve got a service you’re thinking about re-pricing—maybe it’s your concrete volumes, maybe consulting on the side—drop it in the comments or hit me on X. I’ll give you a tailored angle.
Forge ahead.
Ready to price like the expert you are? DM me on X @MoneyForgedHQ or join the conversation.
The exact 10-step system I used to go from broke renter to multiple cash-flow doors. Skip any step and the market will punish you — hard.
— Jaxon Forge, Founder @ MoneyForged.com
I didn’t inherit properties or get a real estate degree. I bought ugly, boring duplexes in solid areas, screened tenants like they were applying for my life savings (because they basically were), and built systems so I wasn’t on call 24/7.
In 2026, insurance is brutal, regs are tighter, and weak players are exiting. If you want real cash flow — not Instagram fantasy — follow this framework religiously.
The 10-Step Landlord Starter Framework
1. Get Your Money Right First
Don’t buy until you have 6–12 months living expenses + 6–12 months per-door reserves (repairs, vacancy, CapEx). Run your numbers: 1% rule is a filter, not gospel. Aim for 8–12% cash-on-cash return after everything. Use hard numbers — no “it feels good” deals.
2. Buy Boring, Not Sexy
Target 3-bed/1–2-bath in working-class neighborhoods with jobs, schools, low crime. Avoid war zones or luxury flips. Ugly houses rent faster and appreciate steadily. Pay cash or low-leverage if possible — debt kills beginners.
3. Master Your Local Landlord-Tenant Laws (2026 Update)
Know eviction timelines (now months in many states), security deposit max/return rules, required disclosures, habitability standards, Renters’ Rights Act changes if applicable. Non-compliance = fines or lost property rights. Read your state statutes + local ordinances. Ignorance isn’t a defense.
4. Bulletproof Tenant Screening
Income 3x rent minimum. Full credit + background + eviction/criminal check. Previous landlord references (call them). No exceptions for “nice people.” Bad tenant = $10k–$50k nightmare. Use services like TransUnion SmartMove or Cozy — worth every penny.
5. Ironclad Lease + Addendums
Use state-specific lease. Add pet policy, late fees (max legal), no smoking, maintenance responsibilities. Include move-in checklist/photos. Require renters insurance. Make it crystal clear — ambiguity breeds disputes.
6. Set Up Systems, Not Hope
Separate business bank account + bookkeeping (QuickBooks or Stessa). Online rent collection (no checks). Calendar for inspections, insurance renewals, tax deadlines. Property manager if scaling — 8–10% fee buys freedom.
7. Prepare for the Inevitable
Budget 1–2% of property value/year for CapEx (roof, HVAC). 5–10% vacancy. Emergency fund per door. Have plumber, electrician, handyman on speed dial. Eviction attorney retainer if in tough state.
8. Insurance & Tax Game
Landlord policy (not homeowner’s) + umbrella. Ask about landlord-specific riders. Track every expense — mileage, repairs, depreciation. Use 1031 if selling up. Talk to CPA early — deductions saved me six figures.
9. Inspect & Document Ruthlessly
Move-in/move-out photos/videos. Quarterly walk-throughs (legal notice). Fix issues fast to avoid habitability claims. Document everything in writing/email.
10. Know When to Exit or Scale
Run annual review: cash flow, appreciation, headache level. Sell losers. 1031 into better. Don’t fall in love — it’s business. Goal: freedom, not more properties forever.
2026 Reality Check: Tenant protections are stronger, insurance premiums up 20–50% in many markets, interest rates still sting. If you half-ass screening, skip reserves, or ignore laws, you’ll bleed money or lose the asset. Most quit in year 1–3. Don’t be most.
Ready to Execute?
This framework isn’t theory — it’s battle-tested. Print it. Tattoo it. Live it.
So You Want to Be a Landlord | Jaxon Forge | MoneyForged.com
So You Want to Be a Landlord
Passive income sounds sexy until the toilet explodes at 2 AM and your “tenant” ghosts you on rent. Here’s the real talk nobody posts about.
— Jaxon Forge, Founder @ MoneyForged.com
Everyone sees the Zillow screenshots and thinks: “Buy a duplex, collect checks, retire on the beach.”
I bought my first rental at 28. By 32 I had six doors. By 35 I’d learned why 80% of new landlords quit or lose money in the first five years.
This isn’t motivation porn. This is what actually happens when you become the bank.
The Money Looks Good… Until It Doesn’t
Cash flow is king — but after vacancy, repairs, CapEx reserves, property tax hikes, insurance doubling, and that one tenant who trashes the place… most “positive” deals are break-even at best. The ones that win? Boring locations, brutal screening, and zero emotion.
Tenant Horror Stories Are Not “If” — They’re “When”
Non-payment. Hoarding. Unauthorized pets. Police visits. Squatters in some markets. In 2026 tenant protections are stronger than ever. Evictions take months and cost thousands. You’re not just renting property — you’re running a small courtroom drama every few years.
It’s Never Passive (Unless You Pay Someone to Make It Passive)
Property manager = 8–12% of gross rent gone forever. DIY = your phone never stops buzzing. Weekends become “fix the AC” instead of family time. The only people calling it passive are selling courses.
The Real ROI Is Freedom… But Only If You Survive
Done right, rentals can buy your freedom — no boss, no 9-to-5, compounding equity while you sleep (finally). Done wrong, it’s a second full-time job that bleeds you dry. Most people never make it to the freedom part.
Brutal Truth 2026 Edition: Rising insurance, new regulations, higher interest on new buys, and tenant-friendly laws mean amateur landlords are getting filtered out fast. If you treat this like a side hustle instead of a business, the market will punish you.
What Separates Winners From Quitters
Buy ugly/boring properties in solid cash-flow areas — not Instagram bait
Screen tenants like your life depends on it (because your net worth does)
Keep 6–12 months reserves per door — emergencies are monthly, not yearly
I’ve watched too many sharp, driven guys dive into real estate rentals chasing that legendary passive income dream: snag a solid property, let reliable tenants handle the mortgage while equity stacks quietly in the background, freedom unlocked. It looks clean on spreadsheets, feels like the smart man’s escape from the daily grind. But after years in the game—multiple properties, wins that felt effortless, and headaches that tested every ounce of discipline—here’s the raw truth: “passive” is mostly marketing until you’ve paid the real price in blood, sweat, and midnight wake-ups.
This isn’t the glossy version where properties appreciate forever and tenants stay perfect. This is from someone who’s stared at water damage at 3 a.m., fought through drawn-out court battles, and learned that one bad call can erase years of progress. Being a landlord means you’re in the business of solving endless problems for profit—tenant drama, surprise repairs, shifting rules—and if you don’t build ironclad systems around it, the game eats you alive.
Start with the money reality. Cash flow sounds simple: rent in, expenses out. But the list of what actually subtracts from that check is brutal and sneaky. Property taxes climb without apology. Insurance premiums spike, especially in places hit by weather risks or rising claims. Maintenance isn’t optional—it’s constant, from small leaks to full system failures that hit when you least expect. Vacancy periods turn income into silence, turnover eats time and cash on cleaning, touch-ups, marketing. If you’re self-managing, your evenings and weekends become part of the overhead. And the big-ticket items—roofs, HVAC, appliances—don’t ask permission; they demand reserves you build early or pay painfully later.
Miss those buffers, and even “good” rent feels like treading water. I’ve seen properties that looked profitable on paper bleed red once reality layered in. The winners treat every line item like a fight to control, not a line to ignore.
Then come the people. Tenants aren’t abstract revenue streams; they’re humans with full lives, stresses, and sometimes zero regard for the asset you’ve bet on. The great ones pay early, respect boundaries, communicate like adults—pure gold. They make the whole machine hum. The difficult ones? They stretch limits until something breaks. Late payments pile up, rules bend with extra occupants or unapproved changes, damage goes beyond wear-and-tear into destruction. And when it escalates to eviction, especially in tenant-heavy markets, you’re in for a slog.
Portland right now? It’s one of the tougher arenas. Strong tenant protections, layered regulations from city and state, recent tweaks that add more steps and safeguards for renters. No-cause terminations get restricted after the first year, notices stretch longer, processes drag through backlogged courts. Eviction filings spiked hard early this year—highest in half a decade—showing the pressure, but also how sticky things get when disputes hit legal channels. Rent caps sit at 9.5% for most older units, squeezing margins as costs keep rising. Add in new rules around notices, deposits, access, and it demands precision. One wrong form or missed deadline, and your leverage evaporates.
I’ve navigated markets friendlier to owners, where rules tilt a bit more balanced and cash flows stronger without constant regulatory chess. But if Portland’s your battlefield—and I get it, roots run deep here—you adapt or you bleed. Screen like your freedom depends on it: deep background, rental history, income verification well above rent. Price smart but aggressively to cut turnover. Document everything obsessively. Build relationships where possible, but never confuse courtesy with weakness.
The long-game winners treat rentals like a real operation. Systems over hope. Proactive maintenance plans. Ruthless tenant selection. Emergency funds that actually get used. Boring properties in stable pockets over flashy rehabs that promise big but deliver drama. Avoid over-leveraging—debt plus a nightmare tenant equals nightmare amplified. Diversify when you can, across units or even markets. Know your exit ramps: when to hold tight, when to sell clean, when to trade up.
If you’re just stepping in, don’t cannonball. House-hack to start—live in one unit of a duplex or triplex, rent the rest. Learn the rhythms with lower stakes. Or run paper deals: dissect listings, crunch scenarios, spot red flags before money moves.
Bottom line: Landlord life isn’t about effortless checks hitting your account. It’s high-leverage problem-solving—tenant issues, property upkeep, market curves, rule changes. If you crave structure, can handle chaos without folding, and pay the discipline tax upfront, it builds wealth faster than most paths, compounding into real independence. But if people problems or surprise fixes drain your soul, pivot to cleaner plays: index funds, syndications where operators eat the headaches, or businesses that scale without emergency texts.
Single-family homes to start simple? Multi-family for leverage? Short-term for higher yield but more touch? What’s drawing you in right now, and how’s the Portland scene looking from your side? Drop the details—I’ll sharpen a framework that matches your edge.
Rental Cash Flow Analyzer | MoneyForged.com – Real Estate for Real Wealth
Rental Cash Flow Analyzer
Tools & Truths from Jaxon Forge, Founder of MoneyForged.com
Why Cash Flow Is King – Not Net Worth, Not Hype
I’ve bought (and passed on) hundreds of deals. The ones that built my wealth? The boring ones that cash flow positive from day one. Cash flow pays the bills, covers vacancies, funds repairs, and lets compounding do its thing without you sweating payroll.
Most landlords lose because they ignore expenses or chase appreciation. I run every deal through math like this: gross rent minus realistic ops (50% rule as baseline), minus debt service. If monthly cash flow isn’t positive and strong, I walk—no exceptions.
Use this calculator to vet your next rental. Input conservative numbers. If it still looks good, dig deeper. If not, next deal.
Rental Property Cash Flow Calculator
Crunch the numbers like a landlord who wants to stay rich.
Quick Rules I Live By
Target 8-12%+ Cash-on-Cash Return minimum for leveraged deals.
Cap Rate >7-8% in most markets—higher risk, higher reward.
Positive monthly cash flow after ALL expenses or pass.
Use the 1% Rule as a quick screen: Monthly rent ≥1% of purchase price.
More articles dropping soon: “Why Cash Flow Beats Net Worth Every Single Time”, “The Hidden Leverage of Owning Boring Businesses (and Rentals)”, “The Tax Strategies That Saved Me Six Figures Legally”.
Most people pay the discipline tax forever because they only look at monthly payments. This shows total cost over your years: depreciation/resale, overages, multiple leases, lost compounding on down payments, fuel/insurance/maintenance. I leased when cash was tight to fuel side hustles. Once recurring revenue hit, buying outright freed $700+/mo for real assets. See it here.
Lease vs Buy a Car in 2026: Stop Wasting Money on the Wrong Ride | Jaxon Forge
Lease vs Buy a Car in 2026
The Raw Truth Most Hustlers Get Wrong
By Jaxon Forge, Founder @ MoneyForged.com
2026 Reality Check
New cars are averaging $48-50k. Monthly payments? Pushing $700-750+ to finance. Leases look cheaper because manufacturers subsidize deals to move inventory—especially EVs with incentives. But cheap monthly doesn’t mean smart money.
Most stay broke chasing the lowest payment. Real wealth builders treat cars like tools, not flexes. Here’s the breakdown—no fluff.
Lease Wins If…
You drive < 12k miles/year (overage fees kill you at $0.25+/mile)
You want fresh tech, safety, and new vibes every 2-4 years
Lower payments free up cash to stack investments (the compounding cheat code)
Hate surprise repairs—warranty covers it all
2026 example: $45k car lease ~$450-600/mo (36 months, ~$18-22k total outlay). Turn it in, repeat. Great for side-hustle mobility without tying up capital.
Buy Wins If…
You keep cars 6+ years (pay off → zero payments forever)
High miles (>15k/year)—leases punish you
You want freedom: mods, no restrictions, sell/trade anytime
Long game: Own outright = massive cash flow for real assets
Same $45k car financed 60-72 months: ~$700-850/mo. After payoff, drive payment-free 5-10 more years. Over 10 years, buying often saves $10-20k+ vs chaining leases.
My Quick Decision Framework
Plan to keep it >6 years? → Buy
Drive >15k miles/year? → Buy
Crave new every few years? → Lease
Can you invest the payment difference at 8%+? → Lease + invest hard (but most just spend it—be honest)
Hate limits & surprises? → Buy for control
I leased early when cash was tight and I needed wheels to grind. Once I hit escape velocity, I buy boring, reliable rides—often outright. No payments = freedom. Cars depreciate. Make yours a tool, not a trap.
Hey, it’s Jaxon Forge—founder of MoneyForged.com. If you’re listening to this while grinding coffee, driving, or pacing the garage at dawn… perfect. Today we’re diving deep into the One-Man Empire Model. The exact blueprint I used to cross seven figures with zero employees, zero co-founder fights, and zero “where’s the report?” Slack pings at midnight.
This isn’t theory. This is the machine I wake up to every morning—quiet, ruthless, and printing money while I’m still in bed thinking about whether I want to check email today.
The Brutal Truth I Had to Swallow
I used to believe the gospel: scale = team. Bigger team = bigger business. I watched buddies hire VAs, marketers, ops people. Then the horror stories rolled in—key player ghosts before launch, six figures vaporized. Co-founder turns into courtroom co-founder. Payroll taxes, bonuses, “can we talk about my raise?” convos, and you’re still the one putting out fires at 2 a.m.
I lived it. Revenue climbed. Freedom cratered. Stress became a full-time job. So I did the unthinkable in entrepreneur circles: I fired the idea of ever hiring again. Unless the numbers literally force my hand, no more humans on payroll. Period.
That single, scary decision flipped everything. Margins jumped to 85–90% after tools and taxes. No drama. No HR nightmares. Just me, one MacBook, and an army of silent software that works harder than any team I ever managed.
The Mindset That Makes Solo Actually Scale
🔥 Overhead is the silent killer of freedom. One human = endless variables. Tools = predictable leverage.
🔥 Build when calm, not when drowning. Pay the discipline tax early—build systems before the pain hits.
🔥 True north metric: days of absence. I can vanish for 45+ days now with ~2 hours/week touch. That’s not “boss,” that’s liberated.
🔥 80/10 rule. If software nails 80% of a task for 5–10% of human cost, replace forever. Keep only the irreplaceable (taste, judgment, high-touch closes).
The 2026 Solo Empire Stack – What Actually Runs MoneyForged.com
Website & Front Door
Framer for killer landing pages, blog, opt-ins—no code, blazing fast. Webflow for anything heavier. Cloudflare for speed + security. SEO locked in: schema, fast loads, internal links, alt text on point.
Content Engine (Attracts While I Sleep)
I write the raw gold in Notion or IA Writer. Feed it to Claude/Grok/GPT → turns one idea into threads, newsletters, reels, carousels. Descript overdubs my voice, kills filler words, auto-edits. CapCut for quick cuts. Buffer + Later schedules everywhere. Beehiiv runs the newsletter empire—growth tools, referrals, paid subs built-in. Make.com zaps it all together seamlessly.
Your This-Week Action Plan – Start Cutting the Cord
Audit one pain point today. Pick the greediest time-suck. List every sub-task.
Ask the kill question 3×: “Can software do 80% forever for <20% human cost?” Yes? Build it now.
Murder one manual process this month. Manual invoices? Zapier + Stripe says goodbye.
Run the disappear test. Document 7 days without you. Then test it for real.
Raise your human “minimum wage.” No hires until they 5× fully-loaded cost. (Most hire at 1.5–2×—that’s the trap.)
Solo isn’t lonely when the empire runs itself.
It’s freedom with teeth. Quiet empires. Loud life.
If your business still feels chained to people—even “reliable” freelancers—hit the comments or DM me. Tell me the one area that’s most human-dependent right now. I’ll hand you the exact first tool + workflow to sever that rope for good.
Jaxon Forge
Founder, MoneyForged.com
Building quiet wealth. One ruthless system at a time.
The $0 Startup Blueprint That Still Works in 2026 | Money Forged – Jaxon Forge
The $0 Startup Blueprint That Still Works in 2026
No funding, no fancy tools, no excuses. Here’s exactly how I launch profitable ventures with zero upfront capital today.
— Jaxon Forge, Founder of MoneyForged.com • @JaxonForgeHQ
I’m Jaxon Forge, founder of MoneyForged.com. I’ve built multiple income streams from nothing more than a phone, internet access, and relentless execution. In 2026, the game hasn’t changed—it’s just gotten sharper. The barrier to entry is lower than ever if you know where to look.
Here’s the exact blueprint I still use (and teach) to go from $0 to first revenue in weeks, not years.
Step 1: Pick a High-Leverage, Zero-Cost Skill You Already Have (or Can Acquire Fast)
Forget “build an app” or “launch a SaaS.” Start with what prints money immediately:
Service arbitrage (e.g., cold outreach + fulfillment)
Boring niches people pay to solve fast (lead gen, copy tweaks, simple automations)
My first $0 play in recent years? Offering cold email audits for B2B founders. I used free Gmail + Hunter.io free tier + manual research. No paid tools. First client paid $497 in week 2.
Step 2: Validate Demand Without Spending a Dime
Post value-first content on X, LinkedIn, or Reddit in your niche.
Example thread structure that still crushes:
Pain post: “Most founders waste $5k+/mo on cold email that never lands. Here’s why.”
Proof: Share a quick before/after screenshot (anonymized real results or mockup).
Offer: “DM me ‘AUDIT’ for a free 5-point cold email teardown.”
Collect 10–20 DMs. That’s your signal. Turn the best questions into paid offers.
Step 3: Land Your First Paying Client (The $0 Sales Script)
Use this exact DM/close sequence:
Deliver insane free value first (5–15 min audit).
End with: “Here’s the brutal truth: Your current setup is leaking $X/mo in opportunity. I can fix it in 7 days for $997. If it doesn’t 3x your reply rate, you pay nothing.”
Payment: Stripe link (free to set up) or PayPal invoice.
No website needed. No LLC yet. Just deliver.
Step 4: Stack Revenue Without Scaling Headcount
Once you have $1k–$5k in the bank:
Productize the service (templates, Notion packs, Loom walkthroughs → $47–$197 one-time).
Build recurring: Monthly retainers or group coaching.
Outsource fulfillment to Upwork/Fiverr talent at 20–30% of what you charge.
I turned one $997 service into a $4k/mo retainer stack within 60 days—all while keeping my day job initially.
Step 5: Protect & Compound the Wins
First money in?
50% to taxes/buffer
30% reinvest (tools, ads once profitable)
20% to personal “screw you” fund
Use the free compounding interest calculator at moneyforged.com/finance-calculators to model how fast that first $5k turns into real momentum when invested boringly (index funds, boring businesses, cash-flow assets).
Biggest Mistakes I See in 2026
Waiting for “perfect” (website, logo, LLC)
Chasing viral instead of recurring
Spending on ads before proving demand manually
Telling the world instead of grinding in silence
Ready to Forge Your First Revenue Stream?
Head to MoneyForged.com for more unfiltered plays. Or DM me on X @JaxonForgeHQ with “BLUEPRINT” if you want the updated 2026 cold outreach template I’m using right now.