The Hidden Risk Most Business Owners Carry: “The Bottleneck”

The Hidden Risk Most Business Owners Carry: “The Bottleneck”

Author: Brandon Jordan, CFP®, CHFC®, CEPA®, CVGA®, CLU®, MSA, EA | CEO of Impact Advisors Group

Is my balance sheet designed for growth—or for life? Does it matter?

Most successful business owners don’t feel like they’re being risky. After all, they’ve “bet on themselves”. Revenue is coming in, assets are growing, and net worth looks strong on paper. Yet, beneath the surface, many families are carrying a significant and often unrecognized risk—one that is very hard to quantify but is certainly IMPACTful. They often have concentration risk paired with a lack of liquidity. 

We refer to this undesirable combo as The Bottleneck because it’s where everything can get stuck.  

Where Most Wealth Actually Lives

For many business owners, the majority of their net worth is often concentrated in just two places:

1. Their Business (70% – 80%)
2. Their Primary Residence (10% – 20%)

Both may be valuable. Both may be appreciating in value. But both share an important characteristic: they are illiquid. Even if the business value is high on paper, quickly converting that value to usable cash often requires one or more undesirable methods:

  • Selling at the wrong time and/or accepting unfavorable terms.
  • Taking on debt or some other recapitalization method.

On paper, wealth may look substantial, but in real life, it can feel surprisingly constrained.

Why This Becomes a Problem Over Time

Concentration and illiquidity introduce several risks that tend to compound quietly:

1. Your financial future is tied to a narrow set of outcomes.
When most wealth depends on one business, one market, or one asset class, a single disruption—economic, regulatory, operational, or health-related—can have an outsized impact on the family’s experience and outcome.

2. Illiquid wealth often limits good decision-making.
Owners often feel pressure to stay in a business longer than they want, delay strategic changes, and accept the financial stress of being illiquid as “part of the deal.” Additionally, being illiquid often inhibits the ability to say “yes” to other valuable opportunities. An otherwise successful person may have to say “no” to things they should say “yes” to and say “yes” to things they should say “no” to. 

Liquidity creates options. Lack of liquidity creates dependence.

3. Timing risk is unavoidable.
Even great businesses can be hard to exit when markets tighten. When capital is trapped, families can be forced to make decisions based on timing or external factors rather than wisdom. 

4. Spousal stress often rises quietly.
This is one of the most overlooked issues. When a family’s financial security is tied almost entirely to the health, stamina, and ongoing success of one person and one enterprise, it can create anxiety—especially for spouses who feel the weight of their future being tied to something that feels entirely out of the control and their ability to influence.  

Why Moving Wealth to the Personal Balance Sheet Matters

Systematically moving wealth from the business balance sheet to the personal balance sheet isn’t a reflection that we think the money would grow faster outside of the business. Rather, it’s an example of financial prudence.

Here’s what it allows families to do:

1. Reduce dependence on a single outcome.
Personal liquidity creates diversification—not just of assets, but of life options. Does having the future financial well-being of the family tied to a single future event align with the level of flexibility and security you want?

2. Increase peace of mind at home.
When families know there are resources available independent of the business, stress often decreases. Decisions feel less urgent. Conversations become calmer. Confidence increases.  

3. Say yes more often—to the right things.
Liquidity enables family experiences without hesitation, strategic opportunities when they arise, generosity when it matters, and flexibility during seasons of transition.

This is where wealth begins to serve the family—not the other way around.

4. Build optionality, not just net worth.
Optionality means the ability to slow down, the freedom to pivot, and the choice to exit—or not—on your own terms. This type of wealth (a.k.a. financial freedom) is rarely created in one moment. It’s built systematically over time.

The Ultimate Goal Isn’t Just Financial

The goal isn’t merely to accumulate assets—it’s to design a life with greater margin, flexibility, and shared confidence.

Families with adequate liquidity tend to experience:

  • More peace of mind (especially for spouses).
  • Better decision-making under pressure.
  • Greater alignment between wealth and values.
  • More meaningful “yeses” over the years.

If your wealth is largely locked inside your business, it may be time to step back and reflect on a bigger question: Is my balance sheet designed for growth—or for life?”  

To help answer this, we’ve developed a self-assessment tool that may help you discern if you are at risk of experiencing The Bottleneck.

If this topic resonates or if your self-assessment suggests an opportunity for improvement, let’s have a conversation. Sometimes a small shift in how wealth flows can create a disproportionate improvement in clarity, confidence, and family well-being.

Please also share this with anyone you know that may be exposed to this undesirable risk. We’d love to discern if we can have an IMPACTful relationship together.
Impact Advisors Group LLC (“[IAG]”) is a registered investment advisor offering advisory services in the State of Massachusetts and in other jurisdictions where exempted. Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. The information on this site is not intended as tax, accounting or legal advice, as an offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or as an endorsement of any company, security, fund, or other securities or non-securities offering. This information should not be relied upon as the sole factor in an investment making decision. Past performance is no indication of future results. Investment in securities involves significant risk and has the potential for partial or complete loss of funds invested. It should not be assumed that any recommendations made will be profitable or equal any performance noted on this site. The information on this site is provided “AS IS” and without warranties of any kind either express or implied. To the fullest extent permissible pursuant to applicable laws, Impact Advisors Group disclaims all warranties, express or implied, including, but not limited to, implied warranties of merchantability, non-infringement, and suitability for a particular purpose. IAG does not warrant that the information on this site will be free from error. Your use of the information is at your sole risk. Under no circumstances shall IAG be liable for any direct, indirect, special or consequential damages that result from the use of, or the inability to use, the information provided on this site, even if IAG or a IAG authorized representative has been advised of the possibility of such damages. Information contained on this site should not be considered a solicitation to buy, an offer to sell, or a recommendation of any security in any jurisdiction where such offer, solicitation, or recommendation would be unlawful or unauthorized.

Tax Benefits to Be Grateful For