
For many affluent families, financial life has a way of becoming more complex over time. What may have started with saving, investing, and planning for retirement can eventually grow into a broader set of decisions involving taxes, estate planning, insurance, charitable giving, second homes, business interests, family support, and legacy goals.
The challenge isn’t simply having the right professionals in place. Many families already have a CPA, estate planning attorney, insurance professional, financial advisor, banker, and other trusted professionals working with them. The bigger question is whether those professionals are working from the same set of facts, priorities, and long-term goals.
That’s where coordinated advice becomes especially valuable, and where a financial advisor who sees beyond the portfolio can serve as a steady guide in the middle of the planning process.
Wealth Decisions Rarely Stay In One Lane
As wealth grows, decisions often overlap. A portfolio move may create tax consequences. A gift to a child or grandchild may affect your estate plan. A second home near the water or a family cottage Up North may raise questions about ownership, insurance, maintenance, future use, and whether the next generation wants to keep it.
This is where advice can become fragmented, even when each professional involved is doing good work. Your CPA may understand the tax impact. Your attorney may understand the estate documents. Your insurance professional may understand coverage. Each has an important role, but each may only be seeing one part of the picture.
Your financial advisor is often in a position to see the broader picture. By understanding your investments, income needs, family goals, estate priorities, and long-term concerns, the “right” financial advisor can help connect the dots and identify when another professional should be brought into the conversation.
When Coordination Matters Most
While every family’s situation is different, there are certain moments when coordination becomes especially important. These are often times when it’s better to involve the right professionals before a decision is finalized, rather than trying to adjust after the fact.
Consider reaching out before you:
- Sell a business, real estate property, or highly appreciated asset
- Make a large gift to children, grandchildren, or charity
- Buy, sell, or transfer ownership of a second home or family cottage
- Update estate documents, trusts, or beneficiary designations
- Change residency or spend more time in another state
- Begin taking retirement income or required minimum distributions (RMDs)
- Review or replace life, disability, long-term care, or liability insurance
- Receive an inheritance or other major financial windfall
- Make a significant charitable commitment
- Help an adult child with a home purchase, business venture, or ongoing financial support
These decisions can have lasting effects. When handled thoughtfully, they can help preserve wealth, reduce unnecessary friction, and support your broader family goals.
Black Walnut’s Role In The Process
At Black Walnut Wealth Management, our role isn’t to replace your CPA, attorney, or insurance professional. Those professionals remain essential, and their expertise is often critical to making well-informed decisions.
Our role is to help you view decisions through the lens of your broader financial plan.
That may include helping you understand what questions to ask, identifying when outside professionals should be involved, reviewing how a decision may affect your investment strategy, and helping coordinate conversations so the moving pieces are considered together.
For example, if you’re considering a major charitable gift, we may help evaluate how the gift fits within your portfolio, income needs, and legacy goals, while coordinating with your CPA and attorney regarding tax and legal considerations. If you’re reviewing insurance coverage, we may help identify gaps and coordinate with insurance professionals who can evaluate appropriate coverage options.
In that way, your financial advisor can help keep the conversation focused on a larger question: how does this decision support the life, family, and legacy you’re trying to build?
When your financial life is complicated, thoughtful coordination can make that complexity easier to manage. Instead of carrying every question alone, you have a professional who understands the broader picture and can help you bring the right people into the conversation at the right time.
A Practical Takeaway For Your Family
If there’s one habit affluent families can build, it’s this: before making a major financial decision, pause and ask whether the right people have been brought into the conversation early enough.
That doesn’t mean every decision requires a formal meeting or lengthy process. Sometimes a brief conversation with your advisor can help identify an issue before it becomes a problem. Other times, coordination between your advisor, CPA, attorney, or insurance professional may help clarify the best path forward.
In Northern Michigan, many families have built lives around hard work, family values, community involvement, and a desire to preserve something meaningful for the next generation. Coordinated advice helps ensure those values are reflected across the full picture.
As your wealth becomes more complex, coordination isn’t just helpful. It can be one of the most important parts of making thoughtful, informed decisions for your family’s future.
If you’d like to learn more about how we help families navigate financial decisions with clarity and confidence, we invite you to explore our approach or reach out for a conversation.


