March 23

Most Relocation Plans Miss One Critical Factor.

Does Yours?

The first five episodes of our new 11-part Legacy program, The Existential Mistake Made When Immigrating, are now available. You can watch the trailer [here], and Legacy members can access the first 5 episodes [here].

A reminder for Insider members: you’re welcome to upgrade to Legacy and return to Insider at any time without losing your Insider status. Simply email us at
team@firmsconsulting.com when switching back, and we’ll manually re-grant your Insider access.

We’ve designed Legacy to be convenient for Insiders — so whenever you see a program you’d like to explore, you have the flexibility to upgrade on an as-needed and as long as-needed basis.

Let’s now turn to this important new program, particularly relevant for anyone considering immigration.

 

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What is the existential reason for paying taxes? (Not being able to answer this question should require you to rethink how you make life decisions.)

This is an Editors' Choice Program. The insights are so powerful and counterintuitive that we recommend it to all members, irrespective of whether you are considering immigrating.

Every major decision carries risk. But some risks are easier to see than others.

Relocating to another country seems like a matter of careful planning: run the numbers, analyze the legal framework, evaluate lifestyle factors. It’s the kind of decision that should feel methodical, logical, and within your control.

Until it isn’t.

From a distance, everything looks predictable. But once you’re inside a system, you realize how much depends on the fine print, on factors that never made it into your analysis.

Laws shift. Policies tighten. The stability you assumed was permanent turns out to be conditional. And the most important question emerges only after you’ve made the move:

Do I still have control?

Too many leaders think of relocation as a financial decision. It’s not only a financial decision. It’s a strategic one.

Executives and investors know this when structuring deals, assessing markets, and evaluating risk. Yet, when it comes to choosing where to live, too many focus only on what they can measure and overlook the factors that are harder to quantify but impossible to ignore once they become a problem.

The questions that don’t get asked in relocation plans but should:

- What happens when policies change, and the advantages that made you move disappear overnight?
- How do you assess whether a country will work for you beyond tax incentives?
- What are the hidden costs of choosing this country?
- What makes a country a true long-term base for wealth, security, and stability?
- How do the world’s top private equity firms assess investment environments and how can you apply that thinking to your personal decisions?

These are the kinds of questions most professionals don’t ask until they’re already committed.

At StrategyTraining.com, our members (executives, investors, consultants, and leaders from major organizations) are trained to think differently. They don’t just ask the typical questions. They don’t just follow conventional wisdom. They apply the same rigor to personal decisions as they do to business strategy.

That’s why the most ambitious leaders invest in their own development.

We see it every day in our Insiders, Legacy Members, Strategy Control Room Advanced, and Strategy & Consulting AI members. Those who dedicate themselves to this way of thinking don’t just advance their careers, they break out of their orbit. 

Some of our most committed members have broken out of their orbit not just once.

This program is not only about how to evaluate relocation decisions but also about how you approach every major decision.

This new 11-part program breaks down how to think about global mobility, personal strategy, and long-term positioning. The first 5 episodes are already available for Legacy members.

If you’re considering a move, the question you need to answer is not only where to go. It’s whether you’re making the decision taking into account what must be considered and almost always overlooked.

It's about understanding the full game, not just the first few moves.

[Join Legacy Now & Access the Full Program]