The success rate of estate plans is discouragingly low. Most plans created using self-service tools have gaps and inconsistencies, and many attorney-prepared plans fail because they require too much leg work from clients and provide too little guidance for their family members.
Hugh Beck's career as a federal securities attorney centered on reinventing stale regulatory practices. When Hugh became the executor of his parents' estate, the obstacles he encountered administering their attorney-prepared plan led him to suspect general deficiencies in conventional planning practices.
Drawing on his regulatory experiences, Hugh developed a new estate planning approach.
Hugh's approach minimizes the leg work required of clients, provides comprehensive guidance for family members, and generates cryptographically-protected instructions that financial institutions and other third parties can verify and execute immediately.
Learn more about the advantages of Hugh's pragmatic design and implementation methodology by scrolling through the illustrations below or explore all three distiguishing features of Hugh's planning approach in depth.