Your Intent, Enforced
for Generations.
You already know the number. 70% of generational wealth transfers fail. Not because of market returns. Not because of bad investments. Because of governance failure — the slow erosion of intent across generations who never felt what you felt when you built it.
You've spent decades building something extraordinary. You've assembled advisors — good ones, expensive ones — but you know the truth they won't tell you: none of them see the complete picture. Your tax attorney doesn't know your insurance architecture. Your wealth manager doesn't know your estate structure. Your business advisor doesn't know your family dynamics.
Every handoff is a leak. Every silo is a blind spot. Every blind spot is a place where your intent can be diluted, misinterpreted, or simply forgotten.
Genesis doesn't just hold your assets. It holds your governance logic. Your Investment Policy Statement. Your values constraints. Your succession criteria. Programmatically enforced — not as a document that sits in a drawer, but as physics that cannot be violated.
A grandson cannot invest against your principles because the system won't allow it. Not because someone told him not to — because the architecture makes deviation impossible.
This is not about control from the grave. This is about clarity that transcends generations. Your intent — the "why" behind every structure, every allocation, every restriction — preserved with the same fidelity as the day you articulated it.
The 70% fail because intent decays. Genesis makes intent permanent.
You've been told the future is uncertain. That every generation must learn its own lessons. That wealth is fragile by nature.
Those are the truths of a world where information decays between humans. Where context is lost in succession. Where the founder's wisdom dies with the founder.
Genesis ends that decay. Not through control — through clarity. Not through restriction — through architecture. Your values, your principles, your hard-won wisdom — preserved in a living system that grows wiser with each generation rather than forgetting.
The question is not whether this intelligence will reshape wealth management. It will — with or without you. The question is whether your family is among the first to benefit, or among the last to realize what they missed.
The first five founding nodes are being finalized now.