Every client here runs a law firm, and nobody else is taken on. That single filter shapes almost everything about The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network, a financial planning and business advisory practice built by Darren Wurz, a CFP who also wrote a book on the subject that the American Bar Association published. The narrow focus is the point. Instead of pitching itself as a general wealth manager who happens to have a few attorney clients, the whole of The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network is pointed at the specific money problems of people who own their firms.
Fixed pricing model for law firm owners
The money model is stated up front, which is rarer in this field than it should be. There are no commissions and no fees pegged to assets under management. You pay a flat monthly membership that starts at $797, and that is the arrangement. For a lawyer who has spent years watching advisors take a slice of a growing portfolio, a fixed price removes an obvious conflict, and putting the number on the page instead of hiding it behind a discovery call says something about how The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network wants to be read.
Services across the business lifecycle
The service list reads like the financial life cycle of a firm owner rather than a menu of products. Business expansion strategy sits next to profit and cash flow work, tax planning and entity structure, investment strategy, and the retirement or exit end of things where a lawyer eventually sells or winds down the practice. These are treated as one continuous problem, since for most firm owners the business and the personal balance sheet are the same balance sheet.
That framing is the strongest thing The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network has going for it. A generalist planner can handle a 401(k) and a brokerage account. Fewer of them can speak fluently about partner compensation, the tax consequences of a particular firm structure, or how to price a practice for sale. By refusing every client who is not a firm owner, The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network forces itself to stay fluent in that narrower vocabulary.
There is a real ladder here, and it is worth understanding before booking anything. At the bottom is a free online community, hosted on Mighty Networks, where masterclasses and networking happen at no cost. Above that is the flat-fee membership. At the top sits a separate, invite-only Founders Network advisory aimed at high-net-worth firm owners, the kind of relationship you do not simply sign up for.
That structure lets someone sample the material before spending anything, which is a fairer on-ramp than a hard paywall. It also means the headline name covers a spread of very different commitments, and a visitor should be clear about which one they are actually looking at. The community and the top-tier advisory are not the same thing, even though they share the branding of The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network.
Building credibility through published work
A large part of what The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network puts out is educational, and there is a lot of it. The ABA book anchors it. Around that sit a weekly podcast, a Monthly Masterclass Series, and free guides with titles like "The Real Retirement Roadmap" and "Break Free From the Grind." The volume works two ways. A prospective client can gauge whether Wurz knows the terrain without spending a dollar, and the same library puts the expertise behind the paid service on open display.
Being published by the ABA puts it in a different category than a self-published PDF. A professional body attaching its name to the book is a credential The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network did not manufacture for itself. Anyone can print a business card that says financial advisor; not many can point to a bar association imprint.
The site has an About Us section and a Success Stories page carrying client testimonials, and here the reader has to be careful. Testimonials a business selects and publishes about itself are marketing, however genuine the underlying clients are. They are not independent verification, and The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network should be read with that distinction in mind.
Limited independent verification available
Looking for outside confirmation, I came up mostly empty. No Google, Trustpilot, Yelp, or BBB reviews surfaced in a search. There is a LinkedIn company page and a profile on Wealthtender, but Wealthtender is an advisor directory that lists The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network, not a platform where clients leave ratings.
So the public evidence trail is genuinely limited. That is not proof of anything bad. A boutique, one-advisor practice serving a small and private clientele will not generate the review volume a restaurant does, and lawyers are not a group that tends to post about their financial planners in public. But it does mean a prospective client cannot lean on a crowd of strangers to vouch for the work, and will have to do more of the vetting personally, likely by consuming the free material and talking to Wurz directly.
Reaching a person is the weakest part of The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network. There is no phone number, no email, and no physical address anywhere on the public site or the material behind it. Every path runs through a single "Book a Call" button that leads to a strategy-call scheduling page. There is no separate contact page at all.
For a business built on high-trust, long-term financial relationships, funneling every inquiry into a booked sales call is a defensible choice and a slightly frustrating one. It is defensible because a real planning conversation cannot happen over a contact form anyway, and the scheduling flow is honest about what the next step is. It is frustrating because a firm owner who just wants to ask one quick question, or confirm someone actually answers at The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network, has to burn a calendar slot to find out. A visible phone number or mailing address would cost The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network nothing and would settle the basic question of whether someone is actually there.
A missing public email is no real fault, since a form and a scheduler cover that ground and public inboxes just collect spam. The lack of any address or phone is a more real gap for a service asking people to hand over their financial future.
What a visitor ends up with, in the case of The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network, is a clearly specialized practice with a transparent fee, a credible published foundation, and a deep library of free material, set against a near-total absence of independent reviews and a contact model that offers exactly one door. The specialization and the ABA book do a lot of the reassurance work that outside ratings would normally handle. Whether that is enough will come down to how much a given firm owner trusts what they read in the free guides and hear on the podcast before they book the call.
Business address
The Lawyer Millionaire Founders Network
6904 Spring Valley Drive, Ste 301,
Holland,
OH
43528
United States
Contact details
Phone: 8592919879