A new book from a Chester, New Jersey based wealth advisor is quickly making a name for itself well beyond the Garden State, climbing best seller lists within days of its release and resonating with readers looking for a genuinely different approach to personal and financial development. The Pink Code, written by wealth advisor, entrepreneur, and author Jessica Weaver, officially launched on July 9, 2026, and its rapid rise onto national best seller lists reflects just how strongly its core message has connected with readers since publication.
Weaver built The Pink Code specifically around women navigating the intersection of personal identity, financial independence, and long held family expectations, using the book as a direct challenge to old, limiting generational narratives that have historically told women to prioritize caution and sacrifice over ambition and growth. Rather than treating personal development and financial literacy as separate subjects requiring separate books, Weaver weaves both together throughout, arguing that genuine confidence in one area naturally reinforces confidence in the other.
The book is structured around several core pillars designed to help women approach their own lives with greater intentionality. One central theme, faith and purpose, encourages readers to move away from what Weaver describes as playing small, instead choosing bold possibilities even when doing so feels genuinely uncomfortable or unfamiliar. A second pillar centers on financial confidence, merging wealth building principles directly with leadership development and broader personal growth, treating financial literacy as inseparable from a woman’s overall sense of agency and self worth. A third major theme involves overcoming what Weaver calls practicality, directly challenging the deeply ingrained cultural notion that women must constantly prioritize security and self sacrifice over pursuing their own larger, more ambitious goals. Taken together, these pillars give the book a genuinely holistic framework, one that treats faith, financial empowerment, and personal ambition as three deeply interconnected pieces of the same larger project of building an intentional life.
Given how quickly The Pink Code has climbed the best seller charts, it’s worth noting for anyone researching the title online that the name itself is not entirely unique. Readers searching for more information should be aware that several earlier, entirely unrelated books share the exact same title. One is The Pink Code, Thirty Days of Self Development for Teen Girls, a 2020 confidence building daily journal written by Daneile Hicks Burnett and aimed specifically at teenage readers rather than adult women navigating career and financial questions. Another is a 2021 fiction novel also titled The Pink Code, subtitled Love Travel Diary, a drama following a young woman’s transformational journey across a month long trip abroad. A third, published in 2023 by Stefanie Honold, carries the related title PINK Colon CODE, subtitled The Eight Keys to Unlocking the Secret of Unlimited Success in Network Marketing, a business focused guide aimed at a completely different audience within the direct sales industry. None of these earlier titles have any connection to Weaver’s new release, and readers should also take care not to confuse the book’s title with Code Pink, an entirely unrelated term used in hospitals as a medical emergency alert specifically announcing an infant or child abduction, a phrase that has also lent its name to several unrelated medical mystery novels over the years.
With that distinction clarified, Weaver’s version of The Pink Code stands on its own as a genuinely timely entry within the broader personal finance and empowerment genre, one clearly striking a chord with readers given its swift climb onto national best seller lists so soon after its July 9 release. For a New Jersey based author, that kind of rapid national traction represents a genuinely significant milestone, positioning Weaver alongside a growing wave of finance focused authors using their own professional expertise as wealth advisors to reach readers hungry for a message that treats financial confidence and personal purpose as inseparable parts of the same larger conversation about how women choose to build their lives.















