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Owned by Jeweliet

Sovereignty (with JT)

117 members • Free

Sovereignty 🤝 Build a life - beyond the default. We’re not anti gov… We’re just free-thinkers who want more control over wealth, health, and life.

Memberships

33 contributions to Sovereignty (with JT)
📢 Special Edition: AI Funder App
In fall of 2025 we developed an app to help users find and apply for grants more easily. Today's edition is "special" because I'm showing you the full-spec buildout and deck for it. This is for to copy our development specs of building an AI, training it, and connecting to live government databases. It's also for you if you are looking for a real example of a pitch deck that works. You can stop guessing on what to include in your decks. The app works in three simple steps: 1. User inputs the grant ideas 2. The app searches government database and shows user options 3. Once selected, the app then produces a full grant application with all accompanying documents (often up to 119+ pages) It doesn't guarantee funding to anyone. But it does speed up the process by months and saves users up to $7,500 per grant application (that's the average cost to hire someone to apply for a grant on your behalf). I suspect this will help a lot of people, even if you just copy the AI buildout framework. JT -- Click here to read the full buildout report & deck! If it's "locked" for you then you need to subscribe to the newsletter. It's pay what you want.
0 likes • 10d
@Dawn Berg hey dawn! You just need to subscribe to the newsletter here and then you can access it and all the others: https://jewelietgrace.com/newsletter?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=post20052026
📢New Edition: The 3 Stages Of Going From Entrepreneur - To Investor
Shifting away from total dependence on an active business does *not* require abandoning your baby. It simply requires allocating some of your profits with intent. There are 3 stages to becoming an investor with cash producing assets that can carry your early retirement, each stage progressively more involved. 1. Easy: Automatic placements (best for beginners) 2. Moderate: Alternative Assets (where things get exciting). Best for founders with experience. 3. Advanced: Structural Investing (sounds boring, but is very sexy). Best for people with existing investments and need to think about taxes, selling their company, and legacy options. We've broken each of these down to steps that can be started as soon as *today*. Yep, today. Because I really get cringed out seeing the lengths entrepreneurs are going to stay in business... When they could be prepping wisely for an early retirement. (If they'd just get out of the marketing-bro mindset that's designed to keep them building & spending). If you’ve been reading every week then you know the default outcomes for most founders are, we can say - “unideal” - at best. Businesses statistically don't sell, and most founders don’t have any outside assets to support themselves. Read this to learn how people are transitions from average entrepreneurs - to investors with early retirement options. -- Click here to read the full edition on Skool. If it's 'locked' for you, then you just need to subscribe. (Pay what you want). Subscribe here: https://sovreport.com/subscribe
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📢New Edition: The 3 Stages Of Going From Entrepreneur - To Investor
📢 NEW Edition: Research Shows That Employees Have Better Retirements Than Founders
Published: April 26, 2026 Themes, Tags: Founders, Investing, Retirement planning Somewhere along the way of watching grown people, myself included, undermine our true value to grow engagement online by filming ourselves as we walk down the street, with our chins up trying to look as sophisticated as possible and shitty 'trending' music played ontop of it, I recognized one glaring issue: Who wants to do this forever? Even if we've managed to keep our dignity and not employ any, lets call it 'cringe', marketing tactics.. What is our retirement plan, my fellow founders? 👉🏼 The data shows something that successful entrepreneurs absolutely hate to recognize. Most businesses never sell. And most employees have better retirements than founders do. The default founder cycle is so heavily encouraged that it rarely gets questioned (which is why we're talking about it). I've ended up here more than once: Start a business. Revenue begins to climb. Take out just enough to live, then sends the rest straight back into the machine for marketing and growth. On paper, it looks disciplined and feels responsible. In reality, it creates nothing more than a job we control. No wealth and no retirement. A typical owner’s income, net worth, and future all sit inside one active asset — the very thing that depends on their continued effort to survive. The data around this is not subtle. At all. First of all, 95% of Sovereignty readers are 'typical founders'. I mention that as a wake up call so we don't fall for the illusion that this doesn't apply to us. Research from Manta shows that roughly one-third of business owners have no retirement savings plan at all. ...Perhaps no surprise there - we all want to have a big exit, that's our plan A of course! Wells Fargo Bank found that over 50% of business owners 'expect to fund retirement' through selling their company. Which would be reassuring… if it worked. But it almost never does. Data from the Exit Planning Institute shows that as many as 75–80% of businesses never successfully sell.
Q&A / live hangout?
If I hosted a monthly (or 1-off) live meeting for Q&A and discussions.. Would you come? Theme: All things *outside the default path*. From investments, to privacy structures and gaining Sovereignty.
📢 NEW: Investing Sovereignty: Why Smart Capital Is Leaving Stock Markets for Alternative Assets
(Click here to be taken to the full edition in Skool.) More investments have been alternative markets in the last 5 years than in the previous decade combined. So what does that actually mean for everyday investors? It means wealth and freedom are quietly being accumulated by those who are willing to look outside the default systems. And that matters for Sovereignty, because we are here to show you legitimate paths to control, freedom, and privacy. Here's the problem: If the only opportunities you know about are the ones sitting behind a brokerage app or financial advisor, then your financial world is still being defined for you by what’s easiest to distribute — not what’s most beneficial to you. Meanwhile, alternative investments, everything from private lending to cash-flowing private deals, have quietly become one of the fastest-growing segments in finance. It’s not just institutions moving capital either. Over 60% of high-net-worth individual portfolios now include alternative assets, and retail access has expanded significantly through private credit platforms, fractional real estate, and secondary markets. Today's Sovereignty Research Edition shows you: - What alternative assets actually are (in layman’s terms) - Why capital keeps moving into them - Where most people usually start when they want more control over how their money works - And the specific entry points that don’t require institutional-level capital or connections -- To read the full edition make sure you are subscribed to Sovereignty newsletter (pay what you want). Once you subscribe you will automatically be granted access to the portal with this and all other editions.
2 likes • Apr 21
@Bobby Dhinjal I can definitely do more on successful deal structures and flags. But keep in mind you can have 11 green flags and one red one that you missed and still lose. That said, I won’t make you wait. Here are some green flags I look for. 1- LOW interest. Anything promising over 9% I usually decline unless it is from someone I have previously worked with. A lot of startups and deals will offer higher interest rates to incentivize investors to come on board, without realizing how hard it is to build a company that can actually afford to pay that. 2- Previous success of founder who has actually raised capital before. Not just someone who has ran a successful company… working with investors is a completely different ball game. And business and previous success alone does not indicate the person is qualified. 3- Not over capitalized. Basically making sure that the profit they are projecting to be left with is 5X more than what they are promising to pay investors. If the profit margin is slimmer than that, there is a good chance the investors won’t get paid on schedule. 4 - actual KPIs with numbers. Not guessing how much it will cost to acquire a customer or do certain marketing… But someone who actually went out in, ran the marketing campaign already before they’re speaking to investors. ( Yes, you can do this even before a company is launched in the product is finalized. So don’t let them fool you)
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Jeweliet Tangen
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7points to level up
@jeweliet-tangen-7119
JT is an entrepreneur who's done some things

Active 11h ago
Joined Dec 12, 2025