A pharmacist sat across from me last year making $172,000. She’d been contributing to her 401(k) for nine years. Maxing it out. Every single paycheck.
I asked her one question: “What are you invested in?”
She stared at me.
Nine years. Over $200,000 in contributions. And she had no idea what was inside the account. Her money was sitting in the default target-date fund her employer picked when she got hired. She never changed it. She never looked at it. She just assumed the box was doing its job because she was putting money in the box.
That is the most expensive assumption in personal finance.
The Box vs. What’s Inside the Box
Opening a 401(k) is step one. It is not the strategy. The strategy is what happens after the money lands. How is it allocated? Does the risk match where you’re trying to go? Is the fund lineup even good, or are you paying 1.2% in expense ratios for a portfolio you could build for 0.04%?
I’m an engineer by training. UVA undergrad, Drexel for the master’s. When I look at a retirement account, I see a structure. Load-bearing walls. Pressure points. Weight distribution. If the allocation inside your 401(k) doesn’t match the weight of your actual goal, the structure will buckle before you get there.
You want $1M by 55? That requires a specific engineering plan. You want $5M? Different load, different design. You cannot guess your way to either number.
The Advisor Test
I meet a lot of first-gen professionals who hired an advisor because someone at church recommended them. Or because they got a free consultation at work. And the advisor sold them a product without ever asking about the rest of their financial life.
Here is how you know if your advisor understands what they’re doing. Ask yourself: did they ask about your debt? Did they ask about your tax situation? Did they ask whether you have an estate plan?
If the answer is no, they sold you a product. They did not build you a plan.
A real advisor sees how debt management affects your ability to invest. They see how your tax bracket changes which account type makes sense. They see how your estate plan protects everything you’ve built. Those pieces connect. An advisor who ignores the connections is guessing, and they’re guessing with your money.
Regardless, most people don’t figure this out until they’ve been with the wrong person for five years.
The One Guaranteed Return
Before I talk to any client about the stock market, I ask one question: are you getting your full employer match?
Your employer match is a 100% return on your money. Put in a dollar, they hand you a dollar. There is almost nothing else in finance that gives you a guaranteed double. Secure that first. Always.
After the match, the next move depends on your debt. If your interest rate is under 5% or 6%, the math usually says keep investing. If it’s above that, we shore up the balance sheet before we build higher. You don’t add floors to a building with cracks in the foundation.
Three Buckets, One Tax Strategy
Here is something nobody explained to the pharmacist I mentioned. Tax diversification matters as much as investment diversification.
I break income into three buckets. Active income is what you work for. Portfolio income is what your paper assets generate. Passive income is what real estate and business ownership produce.
Each bucket gets taxed differently. A surgeon in the 35% bracket needs the tax write-off from a Traditional 401(k) today. A junior engineer should be locking in low tax rates with a Roth while their income is still climbing. And real estate offers tax advantages that a retirement account simply cannot replicate.
The question is which bucket needs attention right now, given where you are in your career.
Before You Invest, Audit
If all of this feels like a lot, start with the foundation. Before you can be a high-level investor, you need to know one number: the Cost to Be You.
What’s coming in? Where is it going? What stays at the end of the month?
I’ve sat with engineers making $160,000 who couldn’t answer those three questions. They were using a credit card to bridge a gap they never measured. You cannot build a structure on ground you haven’t tested.
That’s why I built the Financial Structural Integrity Test. The FSIT is a 40-point diagnostic that audits your cash flow, your debt, your asset protection, and your legacy plan across four zones. It tells you where the cracks are before they spread.
Anyway, the retirement account conversation is important. But it’s the third or fourth conversation, not the first one. The first one is: can your foundation hold the weight of what you’re trying to build?
Understanding your 401(k) asset allocation is crucial for building a secure financial future. After assessing your financial foundation with the Financial Structural Integrity Test, it’s time to explore how to optimize your retirement savings. A deliberate approach to asset allocation can help ensure your investments align with your long-term goals. At Lampados Financial, we are here to guide you through this essential aspect of your financial planning journey.
