You can look incredibly wealthy on paper…and still feel a disconnect in your bank account.
If you’ve got RSUs vesting, stock options piling up, or a big chunk of your net worth tied up in company stock, you know the feeling. Your compensation package looks impressive. But then real life shows up in the form of tuition bills, helping a parent, or unexpected expenses, and suddenly that “wealth” feels frustratingly untouchable.
This problem is more common than anyone likes to admit.
The Disconnect: Wealth vs. Cash Flow
Here’s the core issue: equity compensation often creates paper wealth, not usable cash flow. You might have:
- A large portion of your net worth tied up in company stock
- Significant future income projected from vesting schedules
- Confidence that you’re “doing well”
But when a real expense hits, you’re suddenly asking the question, “What can I actually use right now without blowing up my long-term plan?”
That’s the moment where equity compensation stops feeling like a nice-to-have and starts revealing its limitations. Because even if your net worth looks strong on paper, not all of it is accessible, predictable, or liquid when you need it. Vesting schedules, tax implications, market swings, and company-specific risk all come into play at exactly the wrong time.
The more your life demands flexibility, the more intentional those decisions need to be. So, what are your choices?
RSUs: Income First, Investment Second
Restricted Stock Units (RSUs) are often misunderstood as “extra investments,” but that framing misses what’s happening.
At vesting, RSUs are taxed as income and, in practical terms, function the same as if you were handed a cash bonus and then used it to purchase your company’s stock. That shift in perspective matters because it reframes the decision entirely. The real question isn’t whether you should continue holding the stock; it’s whether you would choose to buy it today if you were starting with cash instead.
For many people balancing real-life expenses like tuition, caregiving, or everyday cash flow needs, the honest answer is no. And that’s not a failure of strategy, it’s a reflection of priorities, and it’s completely reasonable.
Selling some or all RSUs at vesting can:
- Create liquidity for near-term needs
- Reduce overexposure to one company
- Allow you to fund goals without pulling from other assets
This isn’t being pessimistic about your company; it’s being realistic about your life.
Stock Options: Opportunity with a Clock
Stock options are where people tend to overthink – and sometimes overcommit.
Yes, there’s upside potential. Yes, there are tax strategies. But there’s also timing risk, cash requirements, and the very real possibility of tying up even more of your financial life in one company.
The mistake many people make is treating options like a long-term “maybe someday” decision. But in reality, options are a use-it-or-lose-it asset with risk attached.
Waiting too long can mean:
- Missing favorable tax planning windows
- Concentrating even more wealth in one stock
- Losing the ability to exercise altogether
On the flip side, exercising too aggressively without a plan can create:
- Large tax bills
- Cash flow strain
- Pressure to hold stock you didn’t intend to hold
This is where planning matters – not just maximizing upside, but aligning decisions with your actual financial capacity.
Concentration Risk: The Silent Problem
When your paycheck, bonus, and investments are all tied to the same company, you don’t just have exposure – you have concentration risk. And it rarely feels obvious in the moment because it builds slowly over time. You stay because the job is good, the stock has performed well, and selling can feel disloyal or like you’re jumping the gun.
Meanwhile, more and more of your financial life becomes dependent on a single outcome.
This is where real life should start driving the decision-making. When you have tuition on the horizon, a parent who may need care, or just a desire for more flexibility and options, the goal shifts. It’s not just about maximizing growth anymore; it’s about creating resilience. And that often means gradually diversifying, even when it feels uncomfortable or counterintuitive.
When Strategy Meets Reality
Equity compensation can be an incredibly effective way to build wealth, but only if it supports your life, not just your net worth on paper.
The goal isn’t to hold on at all costs or chase the highest possible outcome. It’s to use your equity in a way that helps fund what matters now, protects you from unnecessary risk, and still leaves room for long-term growth.
A thoughtful strategy can help you turn equity compensation into something that works with your life, not against it. And that’s where I can help. If you’re juggling equity compensation and everything else – career, kids, aging parents, and your own future – you don’t have to figure this out on your own.
CLICK HERE to make an appointment.



