Est. 1952 · Atlanta, Georgia

The rules wealthy families live by — written down, at last.

My father ran three businesses in Birmingham in 1955 and never put one of them in his own name. He kept a trust before most people knew what a trust was. He taught me the principles at fourteen — the same principles every family that keeps wealth for three generations operates by.

Nobody taught your father. Nobody taught you.

These volumes are that conversation — the one most families never had at the dinner table. Read them tonight. Start using them tomorrow.

Instant digital delivery · Read on any device · One payment, yours to keep
Two Roads

The same income. Two entirely different endings.

Most people
Old-money families
Hold assets in their own name — exposed to everything that comes for them
Build a wall between themselves and their assets before they own anything worth protecting
Treat their income as money to spend
Treat their income as capital to deploy into structure
Set up a simple entity and believe they are protected
Know that an entity without a stack behind it is a fence with no gate
Leave their children money
Leave their children the system that generates money after they are gone
Never discuss money at the dinner table
Make the rules of wealth ordinary dinner-table conversation

None of this requires a different income. Every one of them is a decision — and each is set down plainly in the volumes that follow.

What Is Inside

Ten volumes. One complete architecture.

From the seven rules a family lives by to the reading list that carries it for generations — each rule made a full chapter, with the mechanism laid bare.

IThe Seven Rules — the rules a family lives by
IIThe System They Never Taught — pile vs. machine
IIIThe First Decade — the order it goes up in
IVThe Entity Explained — C-corps & trusts
VThe Dynasty Architecture — the stack
VIThe Business Credit Foundation — the base beneath it
VIIThe Legacy Transfer — passing it down intact
VIIIThe Wealth Vocabulary — fifty terms
IXThe Quiet Habits — the disciplines that last
XThe Heirloom Reading List — forty books

The full System tier adds the working tools — calculators, templates, trackers, the Family Wealth Constitution, the letters, the checklists — everything you need to turn the principles into a functioning estate.

Choose Your Volume

Start tonight.

Inaugural pricing. One payment — no subscription, yours to keep, with every future revision included.

The Foundation
The first three volumes
$27.97$107
Save $79
  • Volumes I–III
  • The rules, the system, the sequence
  • Instant digital delivery
Most Complete Value
The Full Vault
All ten volumes
$47.97$350
Save $302
  • All ten volumes, I–X
  • The complete architecture
  • The vocabulary, habits & reading list
  • Instant digital delivery
The Drummond System
Ten volumes + the working tools
$97.97$650+
Save $550+
  • Everything in The Full Vault
  • Calculators, templates & trackers
  • The Family Wealth Constitution, letters & checklists
  • Lifetime access + all future revisions
Add The Drummond Ledger — the six-register record my father kept, for your entities and household. Normally $39.
About Solomon

I did not discover these principles. I was taught them — at a dining-room table in Birmingham, Alabama, in the summer of 1966, when my father sat me down and said: "Boy, I am going to tell you something Harold Pitts taught me that your grandfather never knew."

He talked for three hours. I have been thinking about that conversation for fifty-eight years.

My grandfather worked the mines and died with nothing. My father figured out the game — C-corps, trusts, separation, the wall — and kept it in the family. I was the first generation raised on the principles from the start. And I have spent the latter part of my life watching people work as hard as my grandfather and end in the same place — not for lack of effort, but for lack of what I was handed at fourteen.

These volumes are what my father told me. Written plainly, because you were never brought to that table — and someone should have shown you sooner.

Solomon Drummond · Est. 1952 · Atlanta, Georgia
A Plain Promise

Read the volumes. If what is inside does not change how you see your own situation, write to me within thirty days and I will return your payment in full. I would rather you keep your money than hold a thing that did not serve you — my father would have insisted on nothing less.

Reader reflections will appear here — real words from real readers, added as they arrive. Nothing invented.
Not Ready Tonight?

Read the Seven Rules, free.

The seven rules my father never wrote down — introduced through the story of the 1966 table. I will send you one rule a day for seven days, the way he gave them to me.

One email a day for seven days. Leave whenever you like.

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