Every year Forbes releases their list of the richest self-made women in America, and it’s a mix of household names and quiet giants. Women who have built empires from nothing, turned ideas into industries, and claimed their spots at tables that they were not always invited to. And how did these women build their wealth? Through ownership of assets.
Ownership, not effort, is the common thread among the richest women in America.
Ownership is the Real Path to Wealth
When people hear “self-made” they often visualize an entrepreneur grinding for 16 hours a day, sacrificing everything, and eventually making it big. And yes, hard work definitely plays a role in success, but the difference between high earners and the ultra-wealthy isn’t just hard work, it’s owning assets.
The richest women on this list didn’t just have jobs, they created assets. They build companies, brands, and intellectual property. That’s the wealth-building secret that sets you up for financial success.
For example, Rihanna created Fenty, and Judy Faulkner founded Epic Systems. Then there’s Sara Blakely who built Spanx from nothing and retained control in the business until she sold a majority stake in a billion-dollar deal.
The industries vary for the women who made the America’s Richest Self-Made Women list, but what unites these women is that they built businesses and brands with value beyond themselves.
Ownership is the Wealth Strategy Most Women are Missing
For many entrepreneurs there’s a heavy focus on income and ways to earn more. That is survival thinking. What separates survival mode from wealthiness is ownership thinking.
Ownership thinking is what unlocks the potential for real, sustainable wealth. This is where equity, licensing, intellectual property, and brand value come into play. You build fortunes off these assets, even if you are starting small.
Most women-owned businesses in North America are solo operations and service-based, and they are earning under six figures annually. That’s not because women lack talent or ambition, it’s because many are building businesses that depend on them. What you need to do is build assets that can scale, sell, and earn while you sleep.
What Gets in the Way of Ownership
1. Funding remains a massive barrier
Women get less than 3 percent of venture capital funding, and women of color receive even less.
2. Cultural messaging conditions women to play small
We’re encouraged to be grateful, careful, and selfless; not bold, strategic, or profit driven.
3. Risk feels heavier
Many women juggle caregiving, aging parents, and financial responsibilities alone. Betting on yourself can feel terrifying.
4. There’s a knowledge gap
Ownership, equity, and business valuation aren’t topics that get discussed enough in women’s networks.
It’s important to remember that these barriers are not permanent and that pushing through them is not only possible, but also powerful.
Ways to Start Thinking Like an Owner (Starting Now)
Here are four ways to start shifting your strategy now:
1. Build for scale
Create offers, products, or intellectual property that can grow beyond you. Think licensing, digital products, or even franchising.
2. Reinvest profits
Don’t just pay yourself, fund growth. The goal is to turn today’s income into tomorrow’s assets.
3. Develop a personal brand along with your business
Visibility drives value. People buy into people before they buy from companies—especially in the early stages.
4. Know what your business is worth
Even if you’re not planning to sell, you should be building toward an asset with real market value. That means tracking your numbers, increasing margins, and documenting systems.
The bottom line is that you don’t need to be famous to get rich, but you do need to think like a founder. You need to treat your business like an asset. And most importantly, you need to stop waiting for permission to play big. Women will never close the wealth gap if we don’t own more of what we’re building. Ask yourself: What am I building that will still make money when I stop showing up? Achieving that means ownership, equity, and wealth, and every woman deserves a shot at that.