Thursday, April 23, 2026

From Zilch to Debt Blaster: The 40-Year Journey Behind a Debt Payoff Program That Refused to Die

Debt Blaster for Mac. Same mission. A clearer name and a modern experience.


A Kitchen Table in 1986

In the summer of 1986, I was not trying to build a brand, start a company, or create an industry. I was a Marine with a computer, a friend with too many bills, and a problem that took more than five hours to solve at a kitchen table. 

At the time, I had no way of knowing that night would set something in motion that would still be alive forty years later, eventually re-emerging under a new name with the same mission it had from the start: help people get out of debt faster.

The whole thing began when a fellow sergeant showed me a magazine article written by a military chaplain about how to quickly pay off debt. The idea in the article was simple, practical, and powerful. Instead of trying to attack everything at once, you focused on one debt, paid the minimum on the others, and kept rolling the freed-up payments forward as each balance disappeared. Years later, people would come to know this as the Debt Snowball. Back then, it was simply a good idea passed from one struggling person to another. My friend asked if I would help him turn that article into a real payoff plan, so we sat down and spread his debts out across the table. Twenty-one of them. We worked through balances, interest rates, payment amounts, order, tradeoffs, and timing. One page led to another, one calculation led to the next, and before long we had spent more than five hours figuring it all out by hand.

By the time we finished, two thoughts had settled in hard. First, this is a really good idea. Second, nobody is going to want to spend five hours doing this.

The First Attempt (And the Drawer)

That was the moment the light came on for me. I had a Tandy 1000 SX, and over the next three months I built a crude little program that duplicated the same payoff process. It was not pretty. It had no polish, no marketing plan, no slick presentation, and no grand vision attached to it. But it worked. It took a mountain of debt and turned it into an ordered plan. At that point, I did not even have a real name for it. I just called it the "payoff program."

Thinking I might be onto something, I showed it to a few fellow Marines. They were not impressed. Maybe the program was too rough. Maybe I was too rough. Maybe I simply did not yet know how to present something useful in a way that made people see its value. Looking back, I had what you might call all steak, no sizzle. I knew how to build something practical. I did not yet know how to make people lean in and pay attention. So I copied the program onto a floppy disk, tossed it in a drawer, and let it sit there.

The original “Payoff Program” sat in a drawer for three years.

That disk stayed in the drawer for about three years, but not because the idea had died. It stayed there because I had not yet become the person who could carry it forward.

The Wall

During that stretch, I decided I ought to take a more respectable route. I started taking night classes, working toward a business degree. That seemed like the practical move. Maybe I needed more education. Maybe I needed more credibility. Maybe the road ahead was going to come through a classroom instead of a keyboard. For a while, I thought that was where things were headed. Then I hit a wall.

I was told I had to take English 101 before I could take any of the other classes I wanted. That was frustrating enough, but the real sting came from what I already knew: a year earlier I had taken the English 101 with Composition CLEP test and missed passing by one stinking point. One point. Not ten. Not twenty. One. And now, before I could even take English 101, I had to take an English placement test. The results came back saying, in effect, that I could read but struggled with writing, so before I could take the course I actually needed, I first had to take a remedial grammar and writing class.

I asked how long the class was.

Eight weeks.

I asked how many credits it gave.

Zero.

That was the turning point.

There was no way I was going to spend two months of my nights off from Marine Corps work taking a zero-credit class just to earn the right to take the class I actually wanted. I quit college on the spot. I went home, turned on my computer, and said to myself, "I guess I need to make this thing work."

The Real Beginning

That sentence mattered more than I knew at the time, because it was the moment I stopped waiting for another path to open up and decided to build one myself. I fooled around with a few small programs, but my mind kept drifting back to that earlier idea, the one that had started at a kitchen table and been shoved into a drawer after nobody seemed to care. Finally, I reached into the drawer, pulled out the floppy disk labeled "Payoff Program," and got back to work.

Looking back, that was the real beginning. Not the first crude version I built in 1986. Not even the day I tossed it in the drawer. The real beginning was the day I decided that if nobody was going to hand me a path forward, I would build one myself.

This time I was serious. I spent the next year of evenings and weekends turning that rough idea into a real product. I rebuilt it, sharpened it, and prepared it for the shareware world. What I lacked in polish, I tried to make up for with persistence. I did not have investors. I did not have a team. I did not have a roadmap pinned to a conference-room wall. What I had was a problem worth solving, a stubborn streak, and a very small amount of startup capital.

$93.95 and a Shot

My initial investment was $69 for Borland's Turbo Pascal 3.0 compiler and $24.95 for Jeff Duntemann's book, Complete Turbo Pascal Third Edition

My original classroom: a $24.95 book that taught me how to build something real.

That was it. No giant stack of venture money. No fancy hardware. No incubator. Just a compiler, a book, a computer, and the refusal to let a useful idea die. I do not have the original Turbo Pascal diskettes anymore, but I still have Duntemann's book. It sits on my bookshelf to this day, its binder cracked and held together with tape. I have kept it not because it is rare, but because it reminds me what this whole thing really started with: a modest bet, a lot of effort, and the willingness to learn by doing.

Naming It Zilch

By December of 1990, I was ready to begin distributing the program. That is when I ran into a problem I had not expected to matter so much: I needed a name.

Back then, shareware authors like me distributed software through bulletin board systems, or BBSs. Those boards often displayed files in one long, continuous alphabetical list. The list would scroll and scroll, and only the savviest users knew how to pause the screen at just the right moment. Naturally, when the list stopped, anything closer to the end of the alphabet tended to remain visible longer. I may have been naive as hell when it came to marketing, but I was not blind. I understood enough to know that visibility mattered, and I needed a product name that started with the letter Z.

So I thought about it for a few days. Then one day it hit me.

Zilch.

Zilch your debts. Make your debts zilch.

That was the name. It was short, memorable, and started with Z, which in those days actually mattered. More than that, it captured the goal of the program in a single word: take debt down to zero. At the time, I had no idea that the name would still be hanging around decades later. I was not thinking about a forty-year journey. I was not thinking about rebrands, websites, Mac versions, iPad versions, or cross-platform development. I was just a young Marine with a useful idea, a computer, and enough stubbornness to keep going.

The First Proof It Worked

Other shareware authors told me not to expect any sales for at least six months to a year. Two months later, I received my first order from Gifford Wherry of Kennewick, Washington. I have not looked back since.

What Quiet Success Looks Like

What happened next was never flashy, but it was real. 

This is what people actually used. No polish. No fluff. Just a plan to get out of debt.

Zilch kept helping people. One household at a time. One payoff plan at a time. One debt at a time. Over the years, the software evolved because the world around it evolved. The original DOS version eventually gave way to newer versions, then Delphi, then a long-running Windows desktop application. Operating systems changed. Development tools changed. User expectations changed. But the mission never changed. The mission was always to take something overwhelming and make it clear, to take chaos and turn it into order, to take a pile of bills and show someone a finish line they could actually believe in.

And quietly, steadily, year after year, people used it. More than 16,000 people. More than $114 million in debt eliminated. 

In 1994, Zilch was featured in Military Lifestyle as a real-world solution helping people get out of debt.



Along the way, it was featured on Good Morning America, profiled in Military Lifestyle magazine, and used by people from all walks of life who were simply looking for a fair shot at financial freedom. Those numbers matter, but not because they make for a nice headline. They matter because each one of those plans belonged to a real person or family who needed clarity, relief, and hope.

Why This Was Never About Software

That is why, to me, this story has never really been about software. It has always been about what software can do for a person when life feels stuck. Debt is not just math. Debt gets into your chest. It gets into your sleep, your marriage, your confidence, and the way you walk through a room. It can make people feel trapped, ashamed, and tired. What I learned all those years ago at that kitchen table was that people do not just need information. They need clarity. They need a plan they can trust. They need to see that freedom is possible. That was the whole reason for the software in the first place, and it still is.

Which brings me to this next chapter.

Why Zilch Had to Change

After all these years, the name Zilch has finally run its course. That does not mean it was a bad name. It was the right name for the shareware era. It was clever. It had personality. It worked in a world where bulletin board visibility mattered and a name that began with Z could literally stay on the screen longer than one that began with A. But times change. And as much as I still appreciate the history behind that name, it no longer says clearly what the product does. Back in 1990, I needed a name that would stay visible on a BBS screen. Today, I need a name that tells people, plainly and immediately, why they should care.

Debt Blaster does that.

Debt Blaster says exactly what it does. Get out of debt faster with Debt Blaster.


That line may sound simple, but simple is hard-won. It took years to get here. It took years to move from a clever name that fit the mechanics of the shareware era to a direct name that fits the clarity people want now. And there is another detail that makes this feel less like a sudden rename and more like the next step that has been waiting for its turn: I have owned the domain for more than ten years. In a strange way, this chapter has been sitting there patiently in the wings, just like that old floppy disk once did.

So no, I do not see this as abandoning Zilch. I see it as honoring Zilch. Zilch got me here. Zilch survived floppy disks, DOS, shareware catalogs, bulletin board systems, Windows versions, and decades of technological change. Zilch proved that a simple idea, if it solves a real problem, can outlast almost everything around it. But Debt Blaster is the right name for what comes next.

And what comes next is bigger than a new name.

The Three-for-One Breakthrough

When I decided to rebuild the software in Delphi FMX, I did it for a practical reason: I wanted both a Windows and Mac desktop version of the software. I also made another deliberate decision while building it. I crafted the default screen size around a 16:9 layout because I wanted any future tutorials or product videos to fit naturally on YouTube. That seemed like a straightforward design choice at the time. It turned out to be a blessing in disguise.

Because the same 16:9 layout that works beautifully for video also fits the iPad extremely well.

So what I thought was a two-for-one decision turned into a three-for-one: Windows, Mac, and a future iPad version as well. The Mac version is close to being ready. The iPad version is already in the planning stage and should not be far behind. That means Debt Blaster is not just getting a new face. It is opening a new front door for Apple users. What started as a rough proof of concept on a Tandy 1000 SX became a shareware product, then a long-running Windows application, and now the next chapter is taking shape for the Mac, with iPad waiting in the wings. Delphi FMX did not just help me modernize an old product. It gave that product a wider future.

The Long View

When I step back and look at the whole journey, it still surprises me. A friend. A forgotten chaplain's article. Twenty-one debts on a kitchen table. A crude program nobody respected. A floppy disk in a drawer. A one-point miss on a test. An eight-week zero-credit class. A hard stop. A decision. A compiler. A book with a taped-up binder. A bulletin board system. A name starting with Z. A first sale. Thousands of families helped. Millions of dollars eliminated. And now, after all these years, not just a new name, but a broader future.

That is the story behind Debt Blaster.

Where This Leaves Us

It did not begin in a boardroom. It did not begin with venture capital, branding consultants, or a polished startup pitch deck. It began with a real problem, a useful idea, and a stubborn refusal to let the idea die. I could not see all of that in 1986. I could not see it when I threw that disk in a drawer. I certainly could not see it standing in front of a college wall that felt like it had just shut me out. But here we are.

Forty years after the first spark, the mission is still the same: help people get out of debt faster, give them clarity, give them hope, and show them a finish line.

Only now, it has a new name.

Debt Blaster.

One More Thing

And before I close, let me say one more thing to any software developers reading this. If you have an old idea, an old codebase, an old project you once believed in, or a product that still solves a real problem, do not be too quick to bury it just because it is not flashy or because the first version did not impress people. Sometimes useful things need time. Sometimes they need better timing. Sometimes they need a better wrapper, a better name, or a better platform. And sometimes they just need the right person to refuse to quit.

If I can do this, so can you.

Stay Connected

Debt Blaster for Mac is coming soon. The iPad version is not far behind.

If you are an Apple user, visit:

👉 https://debtblaster.com

…and sign up to be notified when it is ready.


Enjoy!
Semper Fi
Gunny Mike
https://zilchworks.com



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