This article was originally published in the Nashville Business Journal on May 1, 2026.
Think of your financial life as a three-legged stool. Investment management, tax planning, and financial planning are each a leg, and the stool only stands when all three are sturdy and working together. For too many high-income earners, those legs are built by different people at different firms, with no one responsible for ensuring they're balanced.
It seems like a reasonable approach. In practice, it's one of the most common sources of costly financial surprises and one of the most overlooked obstacles to building long-term wealth.
When your wealth, tax, and investment professionals operate at separate firms, coordination becomes a job in itself, and it's a job that often doesn't get done. Each advisor works with the information they have, optimizing for their piece of the puzzle without full visibility into the broader picture.
Consider a common scenario: your investment manager realizes significant capital gains late in the year, triggering a large and unexpected tax bill your CPA didn't see coming. Or your financial planner recommends a Roth conversion without knowing that your accountant is projecting an unusually high income year due to a business event. These aren't hypothetical mistakes. They happen regularly when teams aren't communicating in real time.
For high earners, these gaps are especially painful. The more complex your financial life, including business income, equity compensation, real estate, and inheritance, the more moving parts there are, and the more critical it becomes that all three legs of the stool are built to work together.
True tax-centric wealth management means your tax projections, investment decisions, and long-term financial plan are developed together, not in isolation. Rather than sending documents between firms and hoping someone connects the dots, your advisors are already in the same conversation, with ongoing review and analysis happening throughout the year, not just at tax time.
This means that when a significant RSU vesting event is on the horizon, your team is already modeling the tax impact and adjusting your investment strategy accordingly, rather than scrambling to react after the shares hit your account. It means reviewing whether your tax withholding is calibrated correctly and adjusting estimated payments throughout the year so a large vesting event doesn't result in an unexpected bill or underpayment penalty. It means the timing of stock sales, charitable giving, and other major financial moves are coordinated around your vesting schedule, not managed in isolation. When you have access to a team of fiduciaries including CFP® professionals, credentialed investment professionals, and an in-house CPA, that kind of forward-looking coordination is built into the process.
Anticipating and strategically addressing potential tax scenarios before they happen requires a team already aligned on your income projections, investment activity, and long-term goals. That kind of coordination simply isn't possible when the legs of the stool are being built in separate workshops.
Large financial institutions offer plenty of resources, but integrated, personalized service is rarely one of them. At big firms, wealth management, tax, and investment functions often exist in separate divisions with different incentives, different systems, and different client relationships. Meaningful coordination requires effort that the structure doesn't naturally support, and in the meantime, the stool wobbles.
Independent boutique firms are built differently. Your financial success requires more than run-of-the-mill advice, and smaller firms are structured to deliver exactly that. Without the bureaucracy of large institutions, advisors can collaborate more fluidly, sharing client information, meeting together, and building strategies that account for the full financial picture from the start. There's no internal competition between divisions and no incentive to keep services separate.
For clients with complex financial lives, this structural difference matters enormously. A boutique firm where your financial planner, tax advisor, and investment manager know each other and know your situation is simply better positioned to deliver proactive, cohesive advice that keeps all three legs firmly on the ground.
One of the clearest signs that the stool isn't balanced is the annual scramble. When clients are blindsided by a large tax bill in April, it's almost always because the planning conversation happened too late, or didn't happen at all across the full advisory team.
Minimizing surprises at tax time isn't about finding loopholes. It's about having enough visibility into your full financial picture, early enough in the year, to make informed and intentional decisions. For high earners in Nashville and across Middle Tennessee, the complexity of your financial life demands more than a collection of capable individual advisors. It demands a single team to protect and grow your wealth, one that builds the stool together and makes sure it holds.
Important Disclosures
Burney Wealth Management has been a fee-only fiduciary since 1974. We are ranked #4 on the latest CNBC FA 100, and our Nashville office provides tax-centric wealth and investment management to families and professionals across Middle Tennessee. Come see us at 105 West Park Drive, Suite 370, in Brentwood. Learn more at burneywealth.com/nashville.
CNBC’s annual FA 100 ranking was published on 10/1/2025 for the year 2025. The Burney Company did not pay CNBC any compensation for being considered for the list; however, Burney Company does pay a licensing fee to use the CNBC logo in marketing materials. A link to the CNBC selection criteria can be found by going to https://www.cnbc.com/2025/10/01/financial-advisor-100-methodology-2025.html. The CNBC award was given to The Burney Company, which includes portfolio managers associated with Burney Wealth Management and nine other affiliated portfolio managers.
Advisory services are offered through the Burney Company, an investment advisor registered with the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission. SEC registration does not constitute an endorsement of the firm by the Commission nor does it indicate that the advisor has attained a particular level of skill or ability.
The Burney company provides tax preparation and planning services to financial planning clients through Burney Tax Advisors, a separate but affiliated company that employs licensed CPAs. Burney Tax Advisors assists with filing federal and state tax returns for individuals, trusts, and businesses. Tax preparation and planning fees are separate from advisory fees.
For more information about our firm and services, please refer to our Form ADV Part 2A or contact us directly.