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Investment Management

The Right Investment Strategy Depends on Which Game You're Playing

Building wealth and living on it are two different disciplines with different rules. We manage money in both phases and build the transition between them with the landing in mind.

100% FiduciaryTampa Bay, FloridaRetirement Income SpecialistsRISA Certified
A couple enjoying the Tampa Bay waterfront while planning their financial future
The Reality

Accumulation and Distribution Are Two Different Games

For 40 years, the rules were simple: put money in, don't panic, and let time do the heavy lifting. Market drops could work in your favor because you were buying shares at lower prices.

Then you retire and the whole thing flips. Now market drops can happen while you're selling shares to fund daily life. Time is no longer the same teammate, and the strategy that built your wealth can quietly work against you once withdrawals start.

The rules genuinely change depending on which phase you're in. Start with the phase that best describes you.

For Wealth Builders

The Accumulation Years: Fewer Decisions, Bigger Consequences

While you're building, good investing is often about avoiding the handful of mistakes that quietly cost six figures over a career. That's where we earn our keep.

1

Tax-Efficient Construction From Day One

Asset location, which investments live in taxable, tax-deferred, and Roth accounts, compounds for decades. Getting it right at 45 is worth dramatically more than fixing it at 62.

2

The Roth vs. Traditional Question, Answered With Math

Pre-tax or Roth isn't a coin flip; it's a bet on your current bracket versus your future one. We run it on your actual numbers and revisit it as tax law and your income change.

3

Concentration Risk, Handled Early

If a big slice of your wealth sits in one stock, especially employer stock, the time to plan is now. Some decisions, like NUA treatment on company stock in a 401(k), are one-shot opportunities that can be lost through an automatic rollover.

4

Behavioral Guardrails

The biggest threat to a 30-year compounding streak isn't a recession. It's selling during one. A written plan you actually believe in is worth more than any fund pick.

5

Low-Cost, Diversified, Boring

We're not going to pretend we can outguess the market, and we'd be suspicious of anyone who says they can. Costs and taxes are the things we can actually control, so we control them relentlessly.

Building with the landing in mind: every accumulation decision is made by people who know where the money eventually has to land. A growth-only portfolio can become a tax problem at 65. We design for the transition from the beginning.

The Transition

The 10 Years That Decide Everything

The five years before retirement and the five years after are the Retirement Red Zone, where accumulation rules give way to distribution rules. Sequence risk peaks, Roth conversion windows open, and your income style begins to matter more than a generic risk score.

Read: Welcome to the Retirement Red Zone →
The Four Strategies

We Don't Pick Your Portfolio Until We Know Your Income Style

Most firms hand you a risk questionnaire, match you to a model, and call it personalized. We use the RISA Profile, a research-backed assessment developed by retirement researcher Dr. Wade Pfau, to identify how you want your income to work. Your answers point toward four legitimate strategy families.

Take the Free RISA Assessment →

Strategy 1: Total Return (Systematic Withdrawals)

Probability-Based + Optionality
Who It Fits

You're comfortable relying on markets, you value flexibility, and you'd rather keep every dollar working than lock anything up. About a third of retirees land here.

How We Build It

A diversified portfolio across your accounts, with a sustainable withdrawal rate and guardrails: pre-set rules for when spending adjusts up or down based on how the portfolio is doing. We handle asset location, tax-loss harvesting in taxable accounts, and coordinate which account each year’s withdrawal comes from.

The Honest Tradeoff

Your income is not guaranteed. Sequence risk is managed, not eliminated. This strategy also asks for the discipline to follow the plan in a downturn instead of selling at the bottom. Some people have that discipline. Some people think they do until 2008 happens again.

Strategy 2: Time Segmentation (The Bucket Strategy)

Safety-First + Optionality
Who It Fits

You want safety for the money you'll need soon, but you don't want to lock anything in permanently. You sleep better knowing your next few years of income can't be touched by a market headline.

How We Build It

A near-term bucket holds 1–2 years of spending in cash and short-term bonds. A mid-term bucket covers roughly years 3–7 in balanced investments. Money you will not touch for 8+ years stays in a growth bucket. When markets are up, we harvest gains to refill the near-term bucket. When markets are down, we do not, so grocery money never has to come from stocks in a downturn.

The Honest Tradeoff

Holding 1–2 years in cash means some of your money earns less than it could. That's the price of the sleep insurance. Buckets also need disciplined refill rules or they quietly turn back into a regular portfolio with extra steps.

Strategy 3: Income Protection (The Income Floor)

Safety-First + Commitment
Who It Fits

You want essential expenses covered by income that shows up no matter what the market does. Once the plan is set, you'd rather not revisit it. This is the most common RISA result.

How We Build It

We start with Social Security timing because it is the best inflation-adjusted guaranteed income most people will ever have. If Social Security and any pension do not cover essentials, contractual income can fill the gap. With essentials covered, the rest of the portfolio can stay invested for growth, travel, and legacy.

The Honest Tradeoff

Dollars committed to guaranteed income give up liquidity and flexibility. Guarantees are backed by the claims-paying ability of the issuing insurance company, and fixed payments need an inflation plan around them. Certainty has a price tag. For some people it is the best money they ever spend; for others, the loss of flexibility would drive them crazy.

Strategy 4: Risk Wrap (Protected Growth)

Probability-Based + Commitment
Who It Fits

You believe in the market, but you want a floor under you: commitment to protection without giving up participation.

How We Build It

Market participation is paired with structured downside protection. This category typically uses buffer annuities, which absorb a defined portion of market losses in exchange for a cap or limit on gains, or annuities with living benefit riders that guarantee a minimum income regardless of account performance.

The Honest Tradeoff

Protection is not free. Caps and participation limits mean giving up some upside in strong markets. These products can carry fees and surrender periods, and they are more complex than a plain portfolio. Guarantees are backed by the claims-paying ability of the issuing insurer.

Most clients do not end up purely in one box. A plan may combine an income floor for essentials, a bucket structure for discretionary spending, and a total-return sleeve for long-term growth and legacy. The four strategies are tools, and your RISA profile helps determine which tools to reach for first.

Key Concepts

Investment Terms That Change Meaning in Retirement

Sequence of Returns Risk+

Two retirees can earn identical average returns over 20 years and end up in wildly different places, depending on when the bad years hit. A 20% drop in year 2, while you are selling shares to live on, does far more permanent damage than the same drop in year 18. Averages hide this. Retirement portfolios have to be built for it.

Withdrawal Sequencing+

Which account you pull from each year, taxable, tax-deferred, or Roth, is a tax decision disguised as an investment decision. Done well, it fills lower tax brackets on purpose, coordinates with Roth conversion windows, and keeps required minimum distributions from ambushing you at 73.

Asset Location+

Not allocation: location. Tax-inefficient assets may belong in tax-deferred accounts. Tax-efficient index funds may belong in taxable accounts, where long-term capital gains rates apply. Roth accounts can hold higher-growth assets because qualified withdrawals are tax-free. Same investments, different addresses, meaningfully different after-tax outcomes.

Tax-Loss Harvesting+

When an investment drops, selling it can capture a loss to offset gains or up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year, while reinvesting in something similar, but not identical, so the strategy stays intact. It turns a bad market day into a tax-planning opportunity.

Employer Stock & NUA+

If you hold company stock inside a 401(k), Net Unrealized Appreciation may convert what would be ordinary income into long-term capital gains. It is a one-shot decision with strict rules and must be evaluated before a rollover. This is why the rollover conversation should never be automatic.

Rich Ison, financial advisor

“There are four legitimate ways to invest in retirement. The malpractice isn't picking any one of them. It's picking one before you know who the retiree is.”

Rich Ison, Financial Advisor
FAQ

Investment Management Questions

Retirement Investment Management Across Tampa and Surrounding Zip Codes

Managing investments in retirement is fundamentally different from accumulation. Retirees across Tampa Bay need portfolios designed around their retirement income style, with sequence risk protection and tax-aware withdrawal coordination built in. We coordinate portfolio structure with Social Security timing, RMD schedules, Roth conversion windows, and Medicare premium thresholds.

Serving Tampa, New Tampa, South Tampa, Carrollwood, Westchase, Town N Country, Temple Terrace, Palma Ceia, Davis Islands, Seminole Heights, Hyde Park, Brandon, Riverview, Wesley Chapel, Land O' Lakes, Lutz, Odessa, Trinity, Clearwater, and St. Petersburg. We also work with clients across Florida and those relocating to the state.

Tampa zip codes served include 33602, 33603, 33604, 33605, 33606, 33607, 33609, 33610, 33611, 33612, 33613, 33614, 33615, 33616, 33617, 33618, 33619, 33620, 33621, 33624, 33625, 33626, 33629, 33634, 33635, 33637, 33647.

See Which Strategy Actually Fits You

Start with the free RISA assessment, or bring your current statements and we'll review your portfolio in the context of your income needs, tax situation, and timeline.