The Wilson Wealth Show

Ep 47: Why High-Income Earners Don’t Do What They Should — with Jon Bolston

44 min · 14 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Ep 47: Why High-Income Earners Don’t Do What They Should — with Jon Bolston

Descripción

Hosts Maurice L. Wilson and Jon Bolston discuss why many high-income earners miss obvious but important financial moves and outline practical steps to take control of taxes, investments, and legacy planning. They explain Roth options inside employer plans, after-tax contributions and the backdoor Roth technique as ways to build a tax-free bucket for retirement and avoid a large taxable bill later. The episode critiques target-date funds for often becoming too conservative too early and stresses tailoring risk to account balances and long retirement horizons rather than following a cookie-cutter glide path. They also cover how taxable brokerage margin accounts can let you borrow against positions (like RSUs) to access cash without selling, or to opportunistically increase exposure—while noting the leverage risk involved. Finally, they emphasize estate planning—setting up trusts and clear documents to avoid probate, protect family outcomes, and keep assets flowing the way you intend.

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51 episodios

episode Ep 51: Should Business Owners Use Debt to Grow Their Business artwork

Ep 51: Should Business Owners Use Debt to Grow Their Business

On this episode of The Wilson Wealth Show, host Ablavi Gbenyon-Little welcomes founder and CIO Maurice Wilson and guest Kimi Walker to debate whether business debt helps growth or harms stability. The conversation opens with each expert sharing their background and why financial security matters. Maurice argues that strategic, productive debt can accelerate growth—when it funds staff, inventory, equipment, or marketing that produces returns. He stresses having a plan, measuring cash flow and ROI, and using lower-cost options like securities-backed loans when appropriate. He also warns about inflation and interest risks and the danger of unmanaged lifestyle debt. Kimi emphasizes caution, especially for service-based businesses with human-limited capacity. She recommends using liquid reserves over high-interest credit, focusing on profitability rather than flashy revenue numbers, and ensuring you can cover living and business expenses before taking on large loans. The hosts discuss practical metrics—profit margins, working capital, and replacement salary—urging business owners to track cash flow weekly, consult credentialed accountants and advisors, and build several months or years of runway to avoid having to return to a job. Quick-fire takeaways include: only borrow with a clear plan, avoid emotional borrowing, and make number-checking a regular habit. Bottom line: there is no one-size-fits-all answer. Debt can be a powerful tool when used strategically and monitored closely, but it can become a trap without strong cash flow, planning, and discipline. Business owners should match debt choices to their model, risk tolerance, and long-term goals.

26 de may de 202649 min
episode Ep 50: Does College Still Make Sense in 2026? artwork

Ep 50: Does College Still Make Sense in 2026?

On this episode of the Wilson Wealth Show, host Ablavi Gbenyon-Little sits down with Founder and CIO Maurice Wilson to tackle a question many parents are asking in 2026: Does college still make sense for our kids? With rising tuition costs, student loan concerns, and changing career opportunities, Maurice explains why families must approach higher education more strategically than ever. The conversation explores when college is still a worthwhile investment—especially for careers like medicine, law, engineering, accounting, nursing, and education—and when alternative paths such as skilled trades, entrepreneurship, cybersecurity, software development, sales, and real estate may offer strong financial outcomes with less debt. Maurice breaks down the importance of evaluating the return on investment (ROI) of education by considering cost, earning potential, job demand, and a student’s strengths and interests. He also shares practical advice for parents, including using 529 plans, teaching financial literacy, encouraging career exploration, and balancing college savings with retirement planning. Drawing from personal experience as a father with a daughter in college, Maurice offers thoughtful perspective on preparing kids not just for school—but for long-term success. Ablavi also reflects on the emotional side of parenting and how quickly children grow. Whether you’re raising young kids or preparing for college decisions now, this episode will help you think differently about education, debt, and building a future with intention.

20 de may de 20261 min
episode Ep 49: Is It Too Late to Build Wealth at 40? artwork

Ep 49: Is It Too Late to Build Wealth at 40?

On this episode of the Wilson Wealth Show, host Ablavi Gbenyon-Little speaks with founder and CIO Maurice Wilson about whether its too late for 40-year-olds to build wealth for retirement. Maurice explains that 20–30 years is still plenty of time for compounding to work and gives a clear example of how consistent investing can grow into a meaningful nest egg. The episode covers practical first steps: assess your current finances, increase contributions, capture your employer match, pay down high-interest debt, and invest with a strategy that matches your goals and risk tolerance. Maurice also emphasizes tax-efficient planning to keep more of what you earn. For entrepreneurs, Maurice outlines options like solo 401(k)s, SEP IRAs, and cash balance plans, and stresses the importance of having an exit strategy and working with an advisor. He also warns against common mistakes—waiting for the perfect time, taking excessive risks, keeping too much cash, ignoring taxes and inflation, and trying to do everything alone. The episode closes with encouragement: start immediately, be consistent, invest wisely, and seek professional guidance. Your financial future can change dramatically with focused action today.

12 de may de 202614 min
episode Ep 48: High Earner, Unhappy Life I make $250K and I Hate My Job artwork

Ep 48: High Earner, Unhappy Life I make $250K and I Hate My Job

On this episode of the Wilson Wealth Show, host Ablavi Gbenyon-Little and founder Maurice Wilson explore a common but seldom-discussed problem: earning six figures yet feeling unfulfilled. Their guest, Shawnte Bell, a former HR executive turned entrepreneur, shares her journey from corporate leadership to building two businesses. Shawnte explains why money alone doesn’t guarantee happiness—covering burnout, workplace isolation, microaggressions, and the false sense of security that comes with a steady paycheck. She describes the practical and emotional factors that pushed her to leave a high-paying role and pursue entrepreneurship. The conversation also covers financial realities for high earners: higher taxes, lifestyle creep, fewer job options at the top, and the importance of building financial cushions and multiple income streams. Maurice and Shawntae discuss strategies for preparing to transition—saving deliberately, treating major purchases differently, building networks, and making business ideas concrete. Shawnte’s advice is straightforward: identify fears and blind spots, write a plan, act deliberately, and balance faith and wisdom in the leap. She emphasizes that entrepreneurship isn’t for everyone but urges listeners to create financial flexibility so work is a choice, not an identity. To connect with Shawnte, find her on LinkedIn (Shawnte Bell) and follow Sparkle Squad NW Gwinnett on social channels. The episode closes with a reminder that making money matters, but building a life you enjoy is priceless.

5 de may de 202648 min
episode Ep 47: Why High-Income Earners Don’t Do What They Should — with Jon Bolston artwork

Ep 47: Why High-Income Earners Don’t Do What They Should — with Jon Bolston

Hosts Maurice L. Wilson and Jon Bolston discuss why many high-income earners miss obvious but important financial moves and outline practical steps to take control of taxes, investments, and legacy planning. They explain Roth options inside employer plans, after-tax contributions and the backdoor Roth technique as ways to build a tax-free bucket for retirement and avoid a large taxable bill later. The episode critiques target-date funds for often becoming too conservative too early and stresses tailoring risk to account balances and long retirement horizons rather than following a cookie-cutter glide path. They also cover how taxable brokerage margin accounts can let you borrow against positions (like RSUs) to access cash without selling, or to opportunistically increase exposure—while noting the leverage risk involved. Finally, they emphasize estate planning—setting up trusts and clear documents to avoid probate, protect family outcomes, and keep assets flowing the way you intend.

14 de abr de 202644 min