How to Build Wealth Outside Your Business: A Guide for Entrepreneurs and Founders

Your Business Is Growing – But Is Your Personal Net Worth?

You’ve poured everything into your business. The time, the risk, the vision – it’s paying off. Revenue is strong. The brand is growing. You’re building something meaningful.

But here’s the question we often ask our clients: If your business stopped tomorrow, would your personal financial life stay intact?

This isn’t fear-mongering – it’s strategic awareness. Many successful entrepreneurs find themselves asset-rich on paper but dangerously under-diversified in reality. Their wealth is locked inside their business, their lifestyle is tied to fluctuating cash flow, and their exit plan? Often vague or undefined.

If that sounds familiar, you’re not alone – and you’re not off track. But now is the time to create a strategy to build personal wealth outside your business so that your legacy, security, and freedom don’t depend on one source.

Let’s break down how to do it.

The Founder Trap: Why Business Growth Doesn’t Always Mean Personal Wealth

Entrepreneurs tend to fall into a pattern: reinvest, reinvest, reinvest. It makes sense – your business likely offers the highest ROI and the most control. But this instinct to “double down” can backfire without guardrails.

Here’s what we see most often:

  • 80%+ of net worth tied to the business
  • No personal retirement savings or liquidity strategy
  • No clear succession or exit plan
  • No tax strategy beyond the CPA’s annual filing

That’s a lot of risk concentrated in one place. If market shifts, partner disputes, or health issues hit unexpectedly, everything could unravel fast.

The key mistake? Thinking that building your business is the same as building your wealth. In reality, they need to run in parallel but independently.

Strategic Moves to Grow Wealth Outside Your Business

You don’t need to pull the plug on reinvesting in your business. But you do need a plan that builds personal wealth in tandem. Here’s how we guide our business-owner clients through it:

1. Start with a Personal Financial Plan

Even if your business is complex, your personal financial plan can be simple but it must be intentional. Know:

  • Your ideal annual income (now and in the future)
  • Your lifestyle costs (including kids, home, travel)
  • Your financial freedom number (how much you need to be work-optional)

From there, you can calculate the personal savings rate required outside the business to hit your goals.

2. Pay Yourself Like a Future You Would

Too many founders leave themselves last in the cash flow hierarchy. Flip that.

  • Set a consistent salary (reasonable compensation helps with IRS compliance too)
  • Use distributions strategically, but don’t treat them as your only source of income
  • Automate personal savings – just like you would with a W-2 income

Treat yourself like the most valuable employee in the company.

3. Diversify Your Assets (and Your Tax Buckets)

Once you have margin, start building personal accounts that give you flexibility:

  • Tax-deferred: SEP IRA, Solo 401(k), or Defined Benefit Plan
  • Tax-free: Roth IRAs (via backdoor strategy), Roth Solo 401(k)
  • Taxable: Brokerage accounts for liquidity and long-term growth

Don’t forget to build an emergency fund for your personal life, not just business operating reserves.

4. Build Exit-Readiness Now (Not When You’re Burnt Out)

Exit planning isn’t just about selling – it’s about optionality. The earlier you build structure around your financials, team, and systems, the more your business becomes a transferable asset, not a personal job.

And the more you build wealth outside your business, the more leverage you have to walk away when the time is right.

Other Strategies Entrepreneurs Should Consider

Every founder’s situation is different, but here are a few additional moves we tailor to high-income business owners:

Cash Balance or Defined Benefit Plans

If you’re earning high income and want to reduce taxes while turbocharging retirement savings, these can allow contributions of $100,000+ per year, depending on age and income.

Best for: Older business owners, profitable businesses with few employees

Asset Protection Trusts and Entity Structuring

Using LLCs, S-Corps, or irrevocable trusts can provide legal protection and help separate your personal wealth from business liability. It’s especially relevant if you have a high-risk profession or significant real estate.

Best for: Founders with complex risk or real estate exposure

Real Estate as a Diversification Tool

Strategically owning investment property, outside the business, can offer both passive income and tax benefits. Just make sure it’s part of your plan, not a scattered opportunity grab.

Best for: Business owners who want a tangible, semi-passive wealth stream

FAQs

How much should I reinvest in my business vs. save personally?
There’s no perfect ratio – but a good rule is to set aside 20–30% of profits toward personal savings and wealth-building once your business is sustainably profitable.

Can I use a 401(k) or IRA if I’m self-employed?
Yes. Solo 401(k)s, SEP IRAs, and even Cash Balance Plans are available for business owners, depending on your structure and income.

What’s the best way to get liquidity out of my business?
Pay yourself a consistent salary, use distributions carefully, and explore installment sale strategies, profit-sharing, or partial exits with equity partners.

How do I know if I’m on track financially outside my business?
A financial plan will quantify your savings rate, ideal asset mix, and income needs based on your lifestyle and goals. Without that clarity, it’s all guesswork.

What if I want to sell my business eventually?
The earlier you start preparing, financially and operationally, the more leverage you’ll have. That means cleaning up books, reducing owner dependency, and building a personal plan for life after the sale.

Final Thoughts: Real Wealth Means Optionality

Running a business is bold. But true wealth? That’s about having freedom of choice to scale back, sell, shift, or take a sabbatical without financial stress.

You’ve already taken the biggest risk by building something from the ground up. Now it’s time to take the next step: securing your personal financial life with the same strategic energy you bring to your business.

At Truly Aligned, we help founders turn momentum into long-term wealth without sacrificing purpose, family, or freedom.

 

There is no guarantee that a diversified portfolio will enhance overall returns or outperform a non-diversified portfolio. Diversification does not protect against market risk.
LPL Financial representatives offer access to Trust Services through The Private Trust Company N.A. an affiliate of LPL Financial.
Investments in real estate may be subject to a higher degree of market risk because of concentration in a specific industry, sector or geographical sector. Other risks can include, but are not limited to, declines in the value of real estate, potential illiquidity, risks related to general and economic conditions, stage of development, and defaults by borrower.
This information is not intended to be a substitute for specific individualized tax or legal advice. We suggest that you discuss your specific situation with a qualified tax or legal advisor.
The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual.
Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC. Investment advice offered through The Wealth Consulting group, a registered investment advisor. The Wealth Consulting group, WCG Wealth Advisors and Truly Aligned, INC are separate entities from LPL Financial.

 

Scroll to Top