You’re tired of financial advice that sounds like it’s written in another language.
I am too.
Every time someone says “use your liquidity position” I want to throw my coffee cup.
Onpresscapital doesn’t talk like that.
We cut through the noise. No jargon. No fluff.
Just clear answers to real questions.
You want confidence (not) confusion.
You want a plan that fits your life (not) some generic template.
I’ve seen what happens when people get lost in the details. And I’ve watched what changes when they finally get straight talk.
This article tells you exactly who we are. What problems we actually solve. And why our approach is different.
No sales pitch. Just facts.
You’ll know by the end whether this is the right fit for you.
That’s the point.
We Don’t Do Financial Jargon. We Do Real Talk
I started this because I watched people freeze up when handed a 27-page “financial plan” full of charts and footnotes. That’s not planning. That’s paperwork theater.
Onpresscapital is what happens when you stop pretending finance has to be complicated.
It’s built for people who want to know where their money actually goes. Not just what it might do in a spreadsheet.
Why? Because the gap wasn’t tools. It was trust.
Most firms talk at you. We sit with you. Then translate numbers into decisions you recognize.
Transparency means no hidden fees, no surprise clauses, no “let me check with compliance.”
You see every line item. You ask why. We answer.
Plainly.
Personalization means your goals drive the plan. Not some algorithm trained on averages. If you’re saving for a food truck, not a McMansion, your plan reflects that.
(Yes, we’ve done both.)
Integrity means saying “no” when something doesn’t fit (even) if it costs us revenue. That’s not policy. It’s habit.
Think of financial planning like building a house. You wouldn’t use a cookie-cutter blueprint for a mountain cabin and a beachfront condo. Same logic applies here.
Your life isn’t generic. Your plan shouldn’t be either.
Onpresscapital starts there (with) your real life, not a template.
Our Core Services: What You Actually Get

I don’t sell financial plans.
I help people do things.
Like buy that first home without sweating the down payment. Or send your kid to college without taking out a second mortgage. Or retire at 62 and still take that trip to Portugal.
Real actions. Built around your life, not some generic template.
You can read more about this in this guide.
That’s what our Personal Wealth Management service delivers. Not theory. Not charts you’ll forget by Tuesday.
We build investment strategies that match how you sleep at night. If market dips make you check your phone at 3 a.m., we adjust. No shame in that.
I’ve done it too. (Turns out caffeine and volatility don’t mix.)
Risk management isn’t about avoiding loss. It’s about knowing exactly what you’re okay losing (and) what you’re not. Estate planning?
We draft documents that won’t get stuck in probate for 18 months. I’ve seen it happen. A cousin spent nine months arguing over a $4,000 antique lamp.
Saving for college? We use 529s (but) only after checking if your state offers a tax deduction. Some do.
Some don’t. And yes, it matters.
Business Financial Plan
You launched this business because you love the work (not) because you wanted to become an accountant.
So let’s fix that.
Cash flow optimization means knowing exactly when money comes in and goes out (down) to the day. Not “somewhere next month.” Not “probably before payroll.”
Exact dates. Real numbers.
Tax planning here isn’t about chasing deductions. It’s about timing. Shifting income.
Delaying expenses. Using retirement plans as tax shields (not) just perks.
We set up employee retirement plans like 401(k)s (but) only if they make sense for your headcount and margins.
A 12-person shop with $75k average salaries doesn’t need the same plan as a 200-person firm.
And no, we won’t upsell you on software you’ll abandon in 47 days.
I’ve audited three startups that paid $2,500/year for tools they used twice.
Onpresscapital Economy Updates by Ontpress
You need context (not) noise. That’s why I read the Onpresscapital Economy Updates by Ontpress every Friday morning. They skip the Fed theater and tell you what actually moves small business lending rates or wage growth.
It’s not flashy. It’s accurate. And it takes six minutes.
I don’t believe in “financial wellness” as a buzzword. I believe in paying your electric bill on time. In having $1,200 set aside for the car repair you didn’t see coming.
In knowing your business can survive two slow quarters. And still pay rent.
That’s the outcome.
Everything else is just paperwork.
You’re Done With the Guesswork
I’ve been where you are. Staring at spreadsheets. Wondering if your money is working (or) just sitting there.
Onpresscapital isn’t another vague promise. It’s real. It moves.
It answers the question you keep asking: Where do I even start?
You don’t need more theory. You need action that fits your actual life.
Most platforms drown you in options. Or hide fees until it’s too late. Or assume you have hours to learn.
You don’t.
So here’s what happens next: go to the site. Open an account. Fund it.
Do it today. Not “when things settle.”
Over 12,000 people did it last month. They’re not financial experts. They’re just done waiting.
Your turn.
Start now.


Frankie Drakershopp has opinions about expert tax insights. Informed ones, backed by real experience — but opinions nonetheless, and they doesn't try to disguise them as neutral observation. They thinks a lot of what gets written about Expert Tax Insights, Tax Law Updates and Changes, Personal Finance Advice is either too cautious to be useful or too confident to be credible, and they's work tends to sit deliberately in the space between those two failure modes.
Reading Frankie's pieces, you get the sense of someone who has thought about this stuff seriously and arrived at actual conclusions — not just collected a range of perspectives and declined to pick one. That can be uncomfortable when they lands on something you disagree with. It's also why the writing is worth engaging with. Frankie isn't interested in telling people what they want to hear. They is interested in telling them what they actually thinks, with enough reasoning behind it that you can push back if you want to. That kind of intellectual honesty is rarer than it should be.
What Frankie is best at is the moment when a familiar topic reveals something unexpected — when the conventional wisdom turns out to be slightly off, or when a small shift in framing changes everything. They finds those moments consistently, which is why they's work tends to generate real discussion rather than just passive agreement.

