This book started out with a promise that "this won't be a bunch of theory". The author does cover the "basic ideas" that are true for wealth building, such as buying productive assets and eliminating lifestyle (consumer) debt. I appreciate that she pointed out that you should create a "Wealth Account" where you save money to be invested in productive assets and that you should automate your "pay yourself first" savings transfer into this account.
But immediately it claimed "success" in putting the first family on the "road to wealth building" after two sessions. Statements such as "quickly shifting these assets to being more productive" are whack. There's nothing quick about the suggested path: buying 10 single family homes in the midwest. The clients are (presumably) buying far from where they live, have no team in that location, and likely have no expertise in real estate in the first place. Wealth building on paper is simple.
It also over-emphasizes the importance of "Entities"... as if creating an entity is the hard part of starting a business. At the same time, every case study included starting your own business as the one-step-fits-all and yet there was zero discussion around finding customers, operations, or anything else that's reasonably challenging for first-time business owners.
That being said, I believe the author has several other books that may address each of the steps presented here individually. Each of the topics can fill multiple books, so I may just be frustrated that this book was very repetitive instead of touching on any of these topics.