Protect before you grow
Reducing the risk of a large, permanent loss matters more over time than chasing a slightly higher return.
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Foundation 06
Protect the progress you've built through planning, tax awareness, diversification, and informed decisions.
Building wealth and keeping wealth are two different skills. Preservation is about protecting hard-won progress from avoidable risks — concentration, taxes, fees, and a lack of planning — so it lasts and can be passed on.
Overview
Many families focus entirely on growing their money and never plan for keeping it. But progress can erode quietly through over-concentration, unmanaged taxes, high fees, or the absence of a clear plan.
Wealth preservation is not only for the wealthy. It is the discipline of seeing what you have clearly, reducing avoidable risk, and putting structure in place so your progress endures — and benefits the next generation.
The essentials
Reducing the risk of a large, permanent loss matters more over time than chasing a slightly higher return.
Spreading assets reduces the damage any single bad outcome can do. Concentration is the quiet enemy of preservation.
Taxes and fees are some of the largest, most controllable drags on long-term wealth. Awareness keeps more of what you earn.
A clear plan for what you have ensures it passes the way you intend, with less cost and confusion for your family.
Put it into practice
List what you own and what you owe in one place. You cannot protect what you have not measured.
Check whether too much depends on a single asset, employer, or investment — and rebalance toward diversification.
Understand where taxes and fees are quietly reducing your returns, and make informed choices to limit them.
Keep wills, beneficiaries, and key documents current so your wishes are clear and honored.
Pass on knowledge alongside assets. Financial literacy is the part of a legacy that keeps compounding.
Watch out for
Questions
No. Anyone who has built savings or assets benefits from protecting them. The same principles scale from a first emergency fund to a larger estate.
At least once a year, and after any major life or financial change. Preservation is maintenance, not a one-time event.
Write down your net worth. Seeing the full picture clearly is what makes every other preservation decision possible.
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Our complimentary workshops walk through wealth preservation and the rest of the foundations in plain language — no cost, no sales pressure.
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