Long Angle vs. Tiger 21 vs. WealthOps: Which Wealth Community Is Right for You?

Long Angle vs. Tiger 21 vs. WealthOps: Which Wealth Community Is Right for You?

You want smart peers and better deals. Long Angle and Tiger 21 deliver that. But if you also want to build the infrastructure of your wealth from the ground up, neither one does that. WealthOps does. This post is the breakdown comparing your options.

You want smart peers and better deals. Long Angle and Tiger 21 deliver that. But if you also want to build the infrastructure of your wealth from the ground up, neither one does that. WealthOps does. This post is the breakdown comparing your options.

by

Christopher Nelson, Founder of WealthOps

Long Angle compared to WealthOps

Key Takeaways

  • Long Angle is a free peer network for $2M+ investors focused on community discussion and private deal access — no base cost, no formal curriculum.

  • Tiger 21 is a $20M-minimum peer advisory group built around monthly portfolio reviews and ultra-high-net-worth accountability — annual dues run ~$33,000.

  • WealthOps is a structured education and community platform for $1M–$30M investors that teaches you how to build a Micro Family Office (MiFO) — the operating system for your wealth — while also connecting you with peers and deal flow.

  • The core difference: Long Angle and Tiger 21 give you a room full of smart peers. WealthOps gives you that room plus the blueprint for what to build.

  • If you want to run your wealth like a business — not just discuss it — WealthOps is the missing piece the others don't provide.

The Question Nobody's Asking

You searched for "Long Angle vs. Tiger 21" because you want to know which community is worth your time.

That's the right instinct. Peer networks matter. Who's in the room with you shapes how you think about money, risk, and opportunity.

But there's a bigger question underneath: What problem are you actually trying to solve?

If the answer is "I want smart peers and access to deals I can't find on my own" — Long Angle and Tiger 21 are both worth evaluating.

If the answer is "I want to stop feeling like a passenger in my own financial life and actually build a system for managing my wealth" — you're looking for something neither of them provides.

That's where WealthOps enters.

This post covers all three honestly. What each one is, what it costs, what it does well, and where it falls short. By the end, you'll know exactly which one fits where you are — and whether you need more than one.

What Is Long Angle?

Long Angle is a peer community for investors with north of $2.2M investable, founded in 2020 by post-exit entrepreneurs who wanted a trusted space to discuss wealth without the conflicts of interest that follow traditional financial services.

The community has grown to 5,000+ members across 45+ countries. Members span technology, finance, real estate, medicine, and law.

What You Get

Long Angle is organized around two core experiences:

Async community discussions. Members engage across 15+ topical groups — Alternative Assets, Real Estate, Tax & Retirement, Trust/Estate/Legacy, and more — plus 20+ regional city-based groups.

Trusted Circles. This is their paid option. It's small peer advisory groups of 6–8 members that meet monthly for three hours. They function like a personal board of directors — confidential, structured, built for accountability.

Deal flow. Long Angle deploys $100M+ annually across private equity, private credit, and other alternative assets. Members get access to vetted investment opportunities they wouldn't find through a traditional advisor.

What It Costs

Base membership is free. You only need to attend a 30-minute call with another member of the community before gaining access to the free community. You also need investable assets in the range of $2.2M+ — but there are no dues for standard community access.

Optional paid tiers exist: Trusted Circles carry a separate annual fee, as do certain events and the new Premier membership tier.

Where Long Angle Falls Short

Long Angle is excellent at what it does. Smart peers, good deals, light sales agenda.

What it doesn't do: teach you how to build wealth infrastructure. The discussions assume you already have entities, advisors, and a system in place. If you're still figuring out how all the pieces fit together, the conversations can feel like they're for someone a few steps ahead of you. Members are often overwhelmed by deal flow since they have no systems in place to determine if a deal is right for them.

What Is Tiger 21?

Tiger 21 is a peer advisory network for ultra-high-net-worth entrepreneurs, investors, and executives. Founded in 1999, it operates on a simple premise: the people best positioned to challenge your thinking about wealth are others who've built and preserved significant wealth themselves.

Tiger 21 currently serves members across North America, Europe, and beyond, with monthly group meetings as the core experience.

What You Get

Monthly group meetings. Groups of 12–15 members meet for a full day, once a month, facilitated by a trained Chair. The meetings are structured around accountability, challenge, and candor.

Portfolio Defense. Tiger 21's signature offering. Members take turns presenting their complete investment portfolio to the group — every asset, every allocation, every decision. The group provides candid feedback. It's described as confronting, valuable, and unavailable anywhere else.

Expert speakers and networks. Beyond local meetings, members access Tiger Talks, an annual Global Exchange conference, and interest-based networks around topics like venture capital, climate investing, and family governance.

What It Costs

Tiger 21 requires a minimum $20 million in investable assets to qualify. Annual dues run approximately $33,000, with a one-time initiation fee around $5,000. A dedicated Family Office membership tier runs $50,000 per year.

This is a significant financial commitment — and a significant signal about who the community is designed for.

Where Tiger 21 Falls Short

The Portfolio Defense model is genuinely powerful. Getting 12 experienced peers to stress-test your allocations is something most investors never experience.

But like Long Angle, Tiger 21 assumes you already have a functioning wealth system. The peer review makes your existing structure better. It doesn't help you build one.

And the $20M minimum means most of the people who need structured wealth management most — the $1M–$10M investor who just had a liquidity event or is accumulating fast — are priced out entirely.

Long Angle vs. Tiger 21: A Direct Comparison

Here's how the two stack up across the dimensions that matter most:


Long Angle

Tiger 21

Minimum assets

~$2.2M investable

$20M investable

Annual Costs

Free & Paid ($2,000/yr)

$33,000 + $5K initiation

Group Size

Free: 5,000 | Paid: 6-8

12–15 per monthly group

Meeting Cadence

Free: async | Paid: monthly

Monthly (full-day)

Deal Flow

Yes

Yes

Educational Depth

Newsletter, podcast, simple guides

Expert speakers, Tiger Talks

Structured Curriculum

No

No

Infrastructure Building

No

No

Who It's Built For

$2M–$50M+ investors wanting async community + deals

$20M+ investors wanting structured peer accountability

Both platforms are valuable for what they are. The gap they share is the same: neither teaches you how to build the operating system underneath your wealth.

What Neither One Teaches You

Here's the honest truth about peer networks, even excellent ones.

They make your existing wealth decisions better. They don't teach you how to architect your wealth infrastructure from scratch.

Long Angle discussions assume you know what a Holding Company does. Tiger 21 Portfolio Defense assumes you already have entities, a tax strategy, and a plan. Both communities are designed for people who've already figured out the basics.

Most high-net-worth investors haven't.

The $3M tech professional who just vested a significant RSU package. The physician doing $600K a year and still paying as much in taxes as their income warrants. The business owner who sold and suddenly needs to manage more complexity than they've ever faced.

These people aren't ready for Tiger 21 and won't get maximum value from Long Angle — because they don't yet have the foundational infrastructure those conversations assume you've built.

That's the gap. And it's the exact problem WealthOps was built to solve.

What Is WealthOps?

WealthOps is an education company that teaches high-net-worth individuals — $1M to $30M investable — how to build and operate a Micro Family Office™ (MiFO): the lean version of the same wealth management infrastructure that runs $500M Single Family Offices. There are hundreds of members representing 15+ countries.

The core insight: the principles that make ultra-high-net-worth families systematically build and preserve wealth aren't secret. They're operational. And if you can run a business, a project, or a team, you already have most of the skills you need to run your wealth the same way.

WealthOps was built by Christopher Nelson — tech executive, multiple IPOs, first-generation wealth builder — who reverse-engineered what Single Family Offices actually do and scaled it down using Lean methodology. Keep the processes that drive 90% of the results. Cut what doesn't work at this scale.

What You Get

A structured curriculum that builds from the ground up. The MiFO Accelerator takes you through three phases — Learn, Architect, Build — systematically teaching every component of your wealth business. You don't drop into a community conversation and hope to absorb what you need. You follow a deliberate path that ends with a functioning system.

The 7 MiFO Components. Every Micro Family Office needs the same seven things that power a $500M Single Family Office: Vision, Structure, Protection, Process, Data, Advisory Partners, and Governance. WealthOps teaches each one in depth — what it is, why it matters, and how it connects to the others.

Micro Family Office Core Components

The Two-Company Architecture. The foundational entity structure that separates asset protection from income generation. Two entities working together as a system. WealthOps explains this framework in detail the way no advisor ever will — because advisors get paid to execute, not to educate.

two company structure for a micro family office

Peers and deal flow. WealthOps isn't a solo education program. The community connects you with other Portfolio CEOs at similar stages, navigating similar decisions. Deal access comes through a network that understands the operational side of investing — not just the deal terms.

The Portfolio CEO identity shift. This is the transformation at the center of WealthOps. You stop being a client waiting for an advisor's next call. You become the CEO of a wealth business — setting strategy, hiring expert execution, making decisions with clarity. That shift changes everything.

What It Costs

WealthOps offers a free workshop as your entry point — a structured introduction to the MiFO framework and how it applies to where you are right now. After attending the workshop, you will have the option to join the Micro Family Office Accelerator, which is the full program.

Where WealthOps Fits

WealthOps is designed for the investor who wants to build the machine — not just sit in a room with people who've already built theirs.

It's for the $1M–$30M investor who knows they need more than an advisor but hasn't found the right system. The person who learns by understanding the why behind every decision, not just the what. The professional who runs teams and operations and wants to apply that same rigor to their wealth.

Long Angle vs. Tiger 21 vs. WealthOps: Full Comparison


Long Angle

Tiger 21

WealthOps

Minimum assets

~$2.2M investable

$20M investable

$1M investable

Annual Costs

Free & Paid ($2,000/yr)

$33,000 + $5K initiation

Workshop free; Accelerator program paid

Community

5,000+ members

12–15 per monthly group

Cohort-based + ongoing community

Group Size

Free: 5,000 | Paid: 6-8

12–15 per monthly group

150+

Meeting Cadence

Free: async | Paid: monthly

Monthly (full-day)

4 live calls per week

Deal Flow

Yes

Yes

Yes — community-based access

Educational Depth

Newsletter, podcast, simple guides

Expert speakers, Tiger Talks

Structured curriculum (Broken into 4 phases - Architect, Build, Run, Succession)

Infrastructure Building

No

No

Yes — core purpose

Entry Point

30-min intro call

$20M minimum + extensive vetting

Apply to join 2-hour live workshop

Who It's Built For

$2M–$50M+ investors wanting async community + deals

$20M+ investors wanting structured peer accountability

$1M–$30M wanting to build a business around their wealth and become the CEO

Can You Use More Than One?

Yes. And for the right investor, that combination is powerful.

Long Angle gives you deal flow and a broad peer network at no base cost. If you're in the $2M–$20M range, it's a solid resource available for staying connected to what sophisticated investors are doing.

Tiger 21 gives you structured accountability and Portfolio Defense at the $20M+ level. If you've built significant wealth and want a confidential group to stress-test your thinking, the value is real.

WealthOps gives you the operating system underneath both. The curriculum that teaches you how to architect entities, structure protection, optimize for taxes, manage advisors, and run your wealth as a business — systematically, not reactively.

You could be in Long Angle for the deals and the community. You could move to Tiger 21 when you hit the threshold. And WealthOps is the foundation that makes you better in both rooms — because you understand your own system deeply enough to have something worth discussing.

The question isn't which one you choose. The question is which one you start with.

Who Each Platform Is Built For

Long Angle is right for you if:

  • You have $2M+ in investable assets and want a peer community without a membership fee

  • You want access to private market deals you can't find through traditional advisors

  • You're comfortable with async discussion as your primary learning format

Tiger 21 is right for you if:

  • You have $20M+ in investable assets and want structured, high-accountability peer reviews

  • You're ready to present your full portfolio to a group of peers monthly — and hear candid feedback

  • You want the discipline of a formal governance structure around your wealth decisions

  • You can commit to full-day monthly meetings and $33,000+ in annual dues

WealthOps is right for you if:

  • You have $1M–$30M and want to build — not just discuss — the infrastructure of your wealth

  • You want to understand the why behind every financial decision, not just take advice on faith

  • You think in systems and want to apply operational rigor to wealth management

  • You want peers, deals, and the curriculum to build a functioning Micro Family Office from the ground up

  • You're done being a client. You're ready to become the CEO.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Long Angle actually free?

Base membership is free. Long Angle does not charge dues for standard community access, including topical groups, regional groups, and community discussions. Optional paid experiences — Trusted Circles peer advisory groups ($2,000/yr), certain events, and the Premier membership tier — carry separate fees. Investment participation through Long Angle's deal structures typically includes a 0.55–1.00% management fee.

How much does Tiger 21 cost?

Approximately $33,000 per year, plus a one-time initiation fee around $5,000. The Family Office tier runs $50,000 annually. Annual dues cover eleven monthly group meetings, chapter events, and access to the digital member platform. Tiger 21 also requires a minimum of $20 million in investable assets to qualify.

What's the difference between WealthOps and a peer network like Long Angle or Tiger 21?

Peer networks give you access to smart people navigating similar challenges. WealthOps gives you that plus a structured system for building your wealth infrastructure. The MiFO Accelerator curriculum covers entity structure, asset protection, tax optimization, advisor management, and governance — the seven components every Micro Family Office needs. You don't just hear what others have built; you learn how to build your own.

What is the minimum net worth to join Tiger 21?

Yes. Tiger 21 requires $20 million in investable assets (or a net worth of $20M+, verified through financial statements or brokerage accounts). This is a firm requirement, not a guideline. Prospective members also go through background checks and a multi-step interview process.

Can I use WealthOps and also join Long Angle?

Absolutely. They're designed for different jobs. Long Angle gives you peers and deals. WealthOps gives you the operating system underneath. Many investors use both — Long Angle for deal flow and community connections, WealthOps for the curriculum and infrastructure. The combination is more powerful than either alone.

Is WealthOps financial advice?

No. WealthOps is education, not advice. The curriculum teaches frameworks, systems, and mental models for managing wealth as a business. It does not provide personalized investment recommendations. As always, verify current tax and legal rules with qualified professionals before implementing any strategy.

The Bottom Line

Long Angle and Tiger 21 are excellent peer networks. If you want smart people in your corner and access to deals that don't show up in a traditional brokerage account, both are worth your time.

But peer networks optimize your existing system. They don't build one for you.

WealthOps does both. It connects you with a community of Portfolio CEOs navigating the same terrain — and it teaches you how to architect the wealth infrastructure that makes you worth having in the room.

Peers and deals, plus the operating system. That's the difference.

Key Takeaways

  • Long Angle is a free peer network for $2M+ investors focused on community discussion and private deal access — no base cost, no formal curriculum.

  • Tiger 21 is a $20M-minimum peer advisory group built around monthly portfolio reviews and ultra-high-net-worth accountability — annual dues run ~$33,000.

  • WealthOps is a structured education and community platform for $1M–$30M investors that teaches you how to build a Micro Family Office (MiFO) — the operating system for your wealth — while also connecting you with peers and deal flow.

  • The core difference: Long Angle and Tiger 21 give you a room full of smart peers. WealthOps gives you that room plus the blueprint for what to build.

  • If you want to run your wealth like a business — not just discuss it — WealthOps is the missing piece the others don't provide.

The Question Nobody's Asking

You searched for "Long Angle vs. Tiger 21" because you want to know which community is worth your time.

That's the right instinct. Peer networks matter. Who's in the room with you shapes how you think about money, risk, and opportunity.

But there's a bigger question underneath: What problem are you actually trying to solve?

If the answer is "I want smart peers and access to deals I can't find on my own" — Long Angle and Tiger 21 are both worth evaluating.

If the answer is "I want to stop feeling like a passenger in my own financial life and actually build a system for managing my wealth" — you're looking for something neither of them provides.

That's where WealthOps enters.

This post covers all three honestly. What each one is, what it costs, what it does well, and where it falls short. By the end, you'll know exactly which one fits where you are — and whether you need more than one.

What Is Long Angle?

Long Angle is a peer community for investors with north of $2.2M investable, founded in 2020 by post-exit entrepreneurs who wanted a trusted space to discuss wealth without the conflicts of interest that follow traditional financial services.

The community has grown to 5,000+ members across 45+ countries. Members span technology, finance, real estate, medicine, and law.

What You Get

Long Angle is organized around two core experiences:

Async community discussions. Members engage across 15+ topical groups — Alternative Assets, Real Estate, Tax & Retirement, Trust/Estate/Legacy, and more — plus 20+ regional city-based groups.

Trusted Circles. This is their paid option. It's small peer advisory groups of 6–8 members that meet monthly for three hours. They function like a personal board of directors — confidential, structured, built for accountability.

Deal flow. Long Angle deploys $100M+ annually across private equity, private credit, and other alternative assets. Members get access to vetted investment opportunities they wouldn't find through a traditional advisor.

What It Costs

Base membership is free. You only need to attend a 30-minute call with another member of the community before gaining access to the free community. You also need investable assets in the range of $2.2M+ — but there are no dues for standard community access.

Optional paid tiers exist: Trusted Circles carry a separate annual fee, as do certain events and the new Premier membership tier.

Where Long Angle Falls Short

Long Angle is excellent at what it does. Smart peers, good deals, light sales agenda.

What it doesn't do: teach you how to build wealth infrastructure. The discussions assume you already have entities, advisors, and a system in place. If you're still figuring out how all the pieces fit together, the conversations can feel like they're for someone a few steps ahead of you. Members are often overwhelmed by deal flow since they have no systems in place to determine if a deal is right for them.

What Is Tiger 21?

Tiger 21 is a peer advisory network for ultra-high-net-worth entrepreneurs, investors, and executives. Founded in 1999, it operates on a simple premise: the people best positioned to challenge your thinking about wealth are others who've built and preserved significant wealth themselves.

Tiger 21 currently serves members across North America, Europe, and beyond, with monthly group meetings as the core experience.

What You Get

Monthly group meetings. Groups of 12–15 members meet for a full day, once a month, facilitated by a trained Chair. The meetings are structured around accountability, challenge, and candor.

Portfolio Defense. Tiger 21's signature offering. Members take turns presenting their complete investment portfolio to the group — every asset, every allocation, every decision. The group provides candid feedback. It's described as confronting, valuable, and unavailable anywhere else.

Expert speakers and networks. Beyond local meetings, members access Tiger Talks, an annual Global Exchange conference, and interest-based networks around topics like venture capital, climate investing, and family governance.

What It Costs

Tiger 21 requires a minimum $20 million in investable assets to qualify. Annual dues run approximately $33,000, with a one-time initiation fee around $5,000. A dedicated Family Office membership tier runs $50,000 per year.

This is a significant financial commitment — and a significant signal about who the community is designed for.

Where Tiger 21 Falls Short

The Portfolio Defense model is genuinely powerful. Getting 12 experienced peers to stress-test your allocations is something most investors never experience.

But like Long Angle, Tiger 21 assumes you already have a functioning wealth system. The peer review makes your existing structure better. It doesn't help you build one.

And the $20M minimum means most of the people who need structured wealth management most — the $1M–$10M investor who just had a liquidity event or is accumulating fast — are priced out entirely.

Long Angle vs. Tiger 21: A Direct Comparison

Here's how the two stack up across the dimensions that matter most:


Long Angle

Tiger 21

Minimum assets

~$2.2M investable

$20M investable

Annual Costs

Free & Paid ($2,000/yr)

$33,000 + $5K initiation

Group Size

Free: 5,000 | Paid: 6-8

12–15 per monthly group

Meeting Cadence

Free: async | Paid: monthly

Monthly (full-day)

Deal Flow

Yes

Yes

Educational Depth

Newsletter, podcast, simple guides

Expert speakers, Tiger Talks

Structured Curriculum

No

No

Infrastructure Building

No

No

Who It's Built For

$2M–$50M+ investors wanting async community + deals

$20M+ investors wanting structured peer accountability

Both platforms are valuable for what they are. The gap they share is the same: neither teaches you how to build the operating system underneath your wealth.

What Neither One Teaches You

Here's the honest truth about peer networks, even excellent ones.

They make your existing wealth decisions better. They don't teach you how to architect your wealth infrastructure from scratch.

Long Angle discussions assume you know what a Holding Company does. Tiger 21 Portfolio Defense assumes you already have entities, a tax strategy, and a plan. Both communities are designed for people who've already figured out the basics.

Most high-net-worth investors haven't.

The $3M tech professional who just vested a significant RSU package. The physician doing $600K a year and still paying as much in taxes as their income warrants. The business owner who sold and suddenly needs to manage more complexity than they've ever faced.

These people aren't ready for Tiger 21 and won't get maximum value from Long Angle — because they don't yet have the foundational infrastructure those conversations assume you've built.

That's the gap. And it's the exact problem WealthOps was built to solve.

What Is WealthOps?

WealthOps is an education company that teaches high-net-worth individuals — $1M to $30M investable — how to build and operate a Micro Family Office™ (MiFO): the lean version of the same wealth management infrastructure that runs $500M Single Family Offices. There are hundreds of members representing 15+ countries.

The core insight: the principles that make ultra-high-net-worth families systematically build and preserve wealth aren't secret. They're operational. And if you can run a business, a project, or a team, you already have most of the skills you need to run your wealth the same way.

WealthOps was built by Christopher Nelson — tech executive, multiple IPOs, first-generation wealth builder — who reverse-engineered what Single Family Offices actually do and scaled it down using Lean methodology. Keep the processes that drive 90% of the results. Cut what doesn't work at this scale.

What You Get

A structured curriculum that builds from the ground up. The MiFO Accelerator takes you through three phases — Learn, Architect, Build — systematically teaching every component of your wealth business. You don't drop into a community conversation and hope to absorb what you need. You follow a deliberate path that ends with a functioning system.

The 7 MiFO Components. Every Micro Family Office needs the same seven things that power a $500M Single Family Office: Vision, Structure, Protection, Process, Data, Advisory Partners, and Governance. WealthOps teaches each one in depth — what it is, why it matters, and how it connects to the others.

Micro Family Office Core Components

The Two-Company Architecture. The foundational entity structure that separates asset protection from income generation. Two entities working together as a system. WealthOps explains this framework in detail the way no advisor ever will — because advisors get paid to execute, not to educate.

two company structure for a micro family office

Peers and deal flow. WealthOps isn't a solo education program. The community connects you with other Portfolio CEOs at similar stages, navigating similar decisions. Deal access comes through a network that understands the operational side of investing — not just the deal terms.

The Portfolio CEO identity shift. This is the transformation at the center of WealthOps. You stop being a client waiting for an advisor's next call. You become the CEO of a wealth business — setting strategy, hiring expert execution, making decisions with clarity. That shift changes everything.

What It Costs

WealthOps offers a free workshop as your entry point — a structured introduction to the MiFO framework and how it applies to where you are right now. After attending the workshop, you will have the option to join the Micro Family Office Accelerator, which is the full program.

Where WealthOps Fits

WealthOps is designed for the investor who wants to build the machine — not just sit in a room with people who've already built theirs.

It's for the $1M–$30M investor who knows they need more than an advisor but hasn't found the right system. The person who learns by understanding the why behind every decision, not just the what. The professional who runs teams and operations and wants to apply that same rigor to their wealth.

Long Angle vs. Tiger 21 vs. WealthOps: Full Comparison


Long Angle

Tiger 21

WealthOps

Minimum assets

~$2.2M investable

$20M investable

$1M investable

Annual Costs

Free & Paid ($2,000/yr)

$33,000 + $5K initiation

Workshop free; Accelerator program paid

Community

5,000+ members

12–15 per monthly group

Cohort-based + ongoing community

Group Size

Free: 5,000 | Paid: 6-8

12–15 per monthly group

150+

Meeting Cadence

Free: async | Paid: monthly

Monthly (full-day)

4 live calls per week

Deal Flow

Yes

Yes

Yes — community-based access

Educational Depth

Newsletter, podcast, simple guides

Expert speakers, Tiger Talks

Structured curriculum (Broken into 4 phases - Architect, Build, Run, Succession)

Infrastructure Building

No

No

Yes — core purpose

Entry Point

30-min intro call

$20M minimum + extensive vetting

Apply to join 2-hour live workshop

Who It's Built For

$2M–$50M+ investors wanting async community + deals

$20M+ investors wanting structured peer accountability

$1M–$30M wanting to build a business around their wealth and become the CEO

Can You Use More Than One?

Yes. And for the right investor, that combination is powerful.

Long Angle gives you deal flow and a broad peer network at no base cost. If you're in the $2M–$20M range, it's a solid resource available for staying connected to what sophisticated investors are doing.

Tiger 21 gives you structured accountability and Portfolio Defense at the $20M+ level. If you've built significant wealth and want a confidential group to stress-test your thinking, the value is real.

WealthOps gives you the operating system underneath both. The curriculum that teaches you how to architect entities, structure protection, optimize for taxes, manage advisors, and run your wealth as a business — systematically, not reactively.

You could be in Long Angle for the deals and the community. You could move to Tiger 21 when you hit the threshold. And WealthOps is the foundation that makes you better in both rooms — because you understand your own system deeply enough to have something worth discussing.

The question isn't which one you choose. The question is which one you start with.

Who Each Platform Is Built For

Long Angle is right for you if:

  • You have $2M+ in investable assets and want a peer community without a membership fee

  • You want access to private market deals you can't find through traditional advisors

  • You're comfortable with async discussion as your primary learning format

Tiger 21 is right for you if:

  • You have $20M+ in investable assets and want structured, high-accountability peer reviews

  • You're ready to present your full portfolio to a group of peers monthly — and hear candid feedback

  • You want the discipline of a formal governance structure around your wealth decisions

  • You can commit to full-day monthly meetings and $33,000+ in annual dues

WealthOps is right for you if:

  • You have $1M–$30M and want to build — not just discuss — the infrastructure of your wealth

  • You want to understand the why behind every financial decision, not just take advice on faith

  • You think in systems and want to apply operational rigor to wealth management

  • You want peers, deals, and the curriculum to build a functioning Micro Family Office from the ground up

  • You're done being a client. You're ready to become the CEO.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Long Angle actually free?

Base membership is free. Long Angle does not charge dues for standard community access, including topical groups, regional groups, and community discussions. Optional paid experiences — Trusted Circles peer advisory groups ($2,000/yr), certain events, and the Premier membership tier — carry separate fees. Investment participation through Long Angle's deal structures typically includes a 0.55–1.00% management fee.

How much does Tiger 21 cost?

Approximately $33,000 per year, plus a one-time initiation fee around $5,000. The Family Office tier runs $50,000 annually. Annual dues cover eleven monthly group meetings, chapter events, and access to the digital member platform. Tiger 21 also requires a minimum of $20 million in investable assets to qualify.

What's the difference between WealthOps and a peer network like Long Angle or Tiger 21?

Peer networks give you access to smart people navigating similar challenges. WealthOps gives you that plus a structured system for building your wealth infrastructure. The MiFO Accelerator curriculum covers entity structure, asset protection, tax optimization, advisor management, and governance — the seven components every Micro Family Office needs. You don't just hear what others have built; you learn how to build your own.

What is the minimum net worth to join Tiger 21?

Yes. Tiger 21 requires $20 million in investable assets (or a net worth of $20M+, verified through financial statements or brokerage accounts). This is a firm requirement, not a guideline. Prospective members also go through background checks and a multi-step interview process.

Can I use WealthOps and also join Long Angle?

Absolutely. They're designed for different jobs. Long Angle gives you peers and deals. WealthOps gives you the operating system underneath. Many investors use both — Long Angle for deal flow and community connections, WealthOps for the curriculum and infrastructure. The combination is more powerful than either alone.

Is WealthOps financial advice?

No. WealthOps is education, not advice. The curriculum teaches frameworks, systems, and mental models for managing wealth as a business. It does not provide personalized investment recommendations. As always, verify current tax and legal rules with qualified professionals before implementing any strategy.

The Bottom Line

Long Angle and Tiger 21 are excellent peer networks. If you want smart people in your corner and access to deals that don't show up in a traditional brokerage account, both are worth your time.

But peer networks optimize your existing system. They don't build one for you.

WealthOps does both. It connects you with a community of Portfolio CEOs navigating the same terrain — and it teaches you how to architect the wealth infrastructure that makes you worth having in the room.

Peers and deals, plus the operating system. That's the difference.

Next Steps

Want to attend our next live workshop? Complete the application on this page to join us.

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Prefer video? Check out the Managing Tech Millions YouTube channel.

Next Steps

Want to attend our next live workshop? Complete the application on this page to join us.

Want weekly frameworks? Subscribe to Managing Tech Millions newsletter.

Prefer video? Check out the Managing Tech Millions YouTube channel.

DISCLAIMER
WealthOps (Wealthward Publishing LLC) provides educational content only. We are not financial advisors, CPAs, attorneys, or licensed professionals. Our programs teach general wealth structuring concepts and should not be construed as financial, investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. You must consult qualified professionals (CPA, attorney, financial advisor) before implementing any strategies. No guarantees of results. Individual outcomes vary significantly.

RESULTS DISCLAIMER
Testimonials and examples used are exceptional results and do not guarantee that you or others will achieve the same outcomes. Typical results vary widely, and many participants may experience little to no results. Success in wealth management requires dedication, learning, and consistent application of principles over time.

PRIVACY POLICY

TERMS OF SERVICE

DISCLAIMER
WealthOps (Wealthward Publishing LLC) provides educational content only. We are not financial advisors, CPAs, attorneys, or licensed professionals. Our programs teach general wealth structuring concepts and should not be construed as financial, investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. You must consult qualified professionals (CPA, attorney, financial advisor) before implementing any strategies. No guarantees of results. Individual outcomes vary significantly.

RESULTS DISCLAIMER
Testimonials and examples used are exceptional results and do not guarantee that you or others will achieve the same outcomes. Typical results vary widely, and many participants may experience little to no results. Success in wealth management requires dedication, learning, and consistent application of principles over time.

PRIVACY POLICY

TERMS OF SERVICE

DISCLAIMER
WealthOps (Wealthward Publishing LLC) provides educational content only. We are not financial advisors, CPAs, attorneys, or licensed professionals. Our programs teach general wealth structuring concepts and should not be construed as financial, investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. You must consult qualified professionals (CPA, attorney, financial advisor) before implementing any strategies. No guarantees of results. Individual outcomes vary significantly.

RESULTS DISCLAIMER
Testimonials and examples used are exceptional results and do not guarantee that you or others will achieve the same outcomes. Typical results vary widely, and many participants may experience little to no results. Success in wealth management requires dedication, learning, and consistent application of principles over time.