Aligning Wealth With What Matters - Purpose & Philosophy

Aligning Wealth With What Matters: Purpose & Philosophy

Key Takeaways:

Clarity reduces stress. When you’re clear on what matters most, money decisions get simpler, even when life and markets feel noisy.

Define what “enough” means for you. A shared definition of what you’re trying to fund shapes saving, investment risk, and timelines, and helps you follow through when conditions change.

The standard behind the advice matters. Fee-only fiduciary advice, a credentialed team, and B Corp accountability support transparency and long-term consistency.


Money decisions rarely arrive in isolation. They show up alongside work demands, family needs, market headlines, and the constant pull of outside expectations. When those inputs compete, it’s easy to feel reactive, like you’re managing pressure instead of making intentional choices.

At Colorado Capital Management, we help clients align wealth with what matters most by connecting values, goals, and disciplined planning into a practical approach. Our role is to help you clarify what you are trying to accomplish, translate that into a strategy you can live with, and invest in a way that stays grounded through market cycles and real-life change.

Align Wealth: A Practical Framework for Decision-Making

Alignment becomes useful when it helps you make real decisions, such as how much to save, what to prioritize, what to say yes to (and what to say no to), and how much investment risk is appropriate. We don’t treat this as a worksheet or a rigid step-by-step program. We treat it as a set of conversations that lead to clear planning and disciplined investing.

Here’s what that often looks like in practice:

  • Clarify what you’re trying to solve for: Whether you’re thinking it through on your own or as a couple, start with the same question: What matters most right now, and what are you building toward over time? For some people, that’s retirement timing or work flexibility. For others, it’s supporting family, making a major purchase, transitioning a business, or simplifying a financial life that has become more complex. If you’re making decisions with a partner, part of the work is getting on the same page about priorities and tradeoffs.
  • Align your money with your priorities: Once priorities are clear, day-to-day choices tend to follow. You spend on what matters, you save for what matters next, and you create more intention around things that can quietly take over, lifestyle creep, recurring costs, and unplanned commitments. This is not about perfection. It’s about direction.
  • Put the investment approach in writing: On the front end, we create an Investment Policy Statement (IPS). It clarifies the portfolio’s purpose, target allocation, rebalancing approach, and the guardrails intended to help clients stay steady through market ups and downs.
  • Practically incorporate values-based investing: For clients who want it, values-based preferences are incorporated into the overall approach. That may include discussing core pillars, using positive or negative screens, and making adjustments that reflect what matters to you. In some cases, we also explore impact-oriented opportunities through private investments. The goal is to reflect preferences in a disciplined way, with a clear understanding of tradeoffs, while maintaining diversification.
  • Stay disciplined, adjust when life changes: We don’t believe in constant tinkering. We do adjust when something meaningful changes, work, family, health, a liquidity event, retirement timing, or priorities. The goal is to keep the strategy connected to your life, not to the headlines.

The Purpose of Wealth: Defining the “Why” Before the Numbers

A plan works best when it’s anchored to what you are actually trying to accomplish. Purpose is not a slogan. It’s the context behind your decisions, and it often shapes the numbers more than people expect.

One of the most helpful questions is: What is “enough”? Not as a vague feeling, but as a working definition. Enough might look like a lifestyle you want to sustain, a timeline for stepping back from work, a level of flexibility you want to protect, or a commitment to family support and giving.

When “enough” is clear, decisions around saving, spending, and investing tend to feel less reactive. It also helps during market volatility, because the question becomes, “Is our plan still aligned with what we’re trying to do,” rather than, “Should we change everything because markets are uncomfortable?”

Turning Philosophy Into a Plan You Can Measure

Once priorities are clearer, the next step is to make the plan concrete enough that you can tell whether you’re on track without guessing. That usually starts with the basics: cash flow, a balance sheet, and a clear view of what is being saved and invested, and why.

Planning tends to work better when goals are separated by timeline:

  • Near-term needs may be better served by liquidity and lower volatility.
  • Long-term goals can often tolerate more market movement in exchange for growth potential.

This kind of structure can reduce the odds that a short-term need forces a long-term investment decision at the wrong time.

Progress does not need a complicated dashboard. Many clients benefit from tracking a few practical items, savings and cash flow direction, reserve levels and liquidity comfort, progress toward major goals, and whether the portfolio still aligns with the plan and the IPS.

Fee-Only Fiduciary Advice: Why the Standard Matters

Advice works best when incentives are straightforward, and accountability is clear. Colorado Capital Management is a fee-only fiduciary firm. That means clients pay directly for advice, and recommendations are not influenced by commissions, product sales, or revenue-sharing arrangements.

In practical terms:

  • Fee-only helps keep conversations focused on fit, costs, and long-term outcomes, rather than on transactions.
  • Fiduciary duty means we are obligated to act in clients’ best interests when providing advice, with care, loyalty, and prudence.

The standard behind the advice matters. Like all SEC-registered investment advisers, Colorado Capital Management has a fiduciary duty to act in our clients’ best interests. We are a fee-only firm, which means clients pay us directly for advice rather than through commissions on product sales, and we work to clearly identify and manage any conflicts of interest that may still exist. A credentialed team and B Corp accountability support our commitment to transparency and a consistent, long-term approach to managing wealth.

CFP® Expertise: Coordinating the Moving Parts Without Creating Complexity

Many professionals on our team hold well-recognized credentials, including CFP® and CFA®, as well as specialized training in areas such as portfolio management and values-based investing. Credentials alone don’t make advice good, but strong training can support more coordinated, thoughtful planning.

A Certified Financial Planner™ professional has met education, examination, experience, and ethics requirements established by the CFP Board. In practice, CFP® training can be helpful because it encourages planning to be integrated rather than fragmented. It supports coordination across areas that commonly drift when handled in pieces, such as retirement planning, tax considerations, account structure, insurance decisions, and estate coordination.

We also routinely collaborate with CPAs and estate attorneys. The goal is not to make planning complicated; it’s to help clients feel confident that the key pieces are aligned across accounts, documents, and decisions.

Certified B Corporation® Status: What It Is and Why It Matters for Alignment

Colorado Capital Management is a Certified B Corporation®, meaning the firm has been evaluated against measurable standards related to governance, transparency, and accountability, not just investment outcomes. Certification requires ongoing verification.

For clients who care about aligning wealth with purpose, B Corp status can be meaningful because it reinforces a long-term mindset at the firm level. It supports the idea that how advice is delivered, how decisions are made, and how tradeoffs are evaluated should be guided by durable standards, not short-term incentives.

Stewardship and Disciplined Investing: A Philosophy That Holds Up Over Time

Once planning is clear and incentives are transparent, the investment process should support the plan. At CCM, stewardship and discipline are not marketing terms. They show up in how portfolios are designed, monitored, and adjusted.

Key elements include:

  • Portfolios built around purpose and timeline: Risk and liquidity are aligned to what the portfolio is meant to fund and when.
  • Diversification and concentration awareness: We pay attention to risks that can quietly accumulate, such as employer stock, a single-company position, a business, or real estate that dominates the balance sheet.
  • IPS-guided investing: The IPS provides structure around allocation targets and rebalancing, helping decisions stay consistent through market cycles.
  • Tax-aware implementation: Coordination across account types, taxable, retirement, and other structures, can matter over time, especially for higher-income households or concentrated situations.
  • Clear, ongoing communication: We meet with clients regularly to discuss what’s happening in their lives and in the markets, and to make sure the plan still reflects their goals and reality. Markets change, life changes, and priorities evolve. Consistent communication keeps decisions grounded and prevents quiet drift.
  • Clear expectations about volatility: We aim to help clients understand what market movement can feel like in practice, so they are less likely to make reactive changes at the wrong time.

Stewardship is ultimately about keeping the investment strategy aligned with the plan, and keeping the plan aligned with the life you want to live.

Sustainability and Impact Metrics as Analytical Tools

For many clients, alignment includes how capital relates to broader long-term risks and priorities. Sustainability and impact metrics can be helpful when used as analytical tools rather than labels.

At a practical level, these metrics can inform how we think about areas like governance quality, regulatory exposure, supply-chain resilience, and environmental risk. Used carefully, they can complement traditional financial analysis.

Implementation matters. Preferences work best when they are clearly defined, such as exclusions, positive screens, tilts, or engagement preferences, and when tradeoffs are understood. Metrics can vary by provider and methodology, and scores can conflict. We treat these as inputs to a disciplined process, not as perfect answers.

The Transition From Accumulation to Distribution: When Purpose Gets Real

The shift from building assets to using them tends to change how decisions feel. Income sources layer together, taxes often become more visible, and market volatility can feel more personal.

In distribution years, planning often focuses on:

  • separating baseline needs from discretionary spending
  • thinking through liquidity, so spending does not force untimely sales
  • coordinating withdrawals across taxable, tax-deferred, and tax-free accounts in a way that reflects the client’s broader situation

Common Ways Wealth Drifts Out of Alignment

Drift is rarely one dramatic mistake. It’s often a series of small choices that add up over time. Common patterns we see include:

  • Lifestyle creep and autopilot spending: Fixed costs rise quietly, saving becomes “whatever is left,” and priorities get crowded out. Clarity often starts with simply seeing the full picture again.
  • Over-concentration risk: Concentration can build through employer equity, a single stock, a business, or real estate. Even when the story is compelling, excessive reliance on a single outcome can create avoidable stress.
  • Complexity that does not improve results: Extra accounts, overlapping funds, and stacked strategies can make it harder to understand risk and easier to lose the plot.
  • Letting headlines or tax tactics drive the strategy: Taxes matter, and so does staying disciplined. The goal is to keep tactics in service of the plan, not the other way around.
  • Outdated assumptions: Timelines, cash flow, and risk comfort can change. When they do, the plan should adapt thoughtfully rather than drift silently.

Aligning Wealth With What Matters FAQs

1) How do I figure out my values if I’m not sure what they are?

Start with your real life. Look at where your time and money actually go, and what you protect first when things feel tight. Then talk it through. For many people, the most useful outcome is a short list of priorities and tradeoffs they can live with. If you’re making decisions with a partner, it helps to get aligned on what matters most and where you’re willing to compromise.

2) Can I focus on purpose without sacrificing results?

It depends on how preferences are implemented and how tightly they constrain the investable universe. Many clients can incorporate preferences while maintaining diversification, but it’s important to understand tradeoffs in advance and implement them consistently rather than reactively.

3) What if my partner and I have different priorities?

That’s common. A helpful approach is to separate shared goals (baseline lifestyle, retirement timing, family commitments) from individual priorities (experiences, giving, work flexibility), then talk through tradeoffs openly. The goal is fewer silent assumptions and clearer decisions when life gets busy.

4) How often should we revisit our goals and plan?

Many clients benefit from a structured review rhythm, plus updates when something meaningful changes. The right cadence depends on your situation and complexity, but the goal is the same: keep the plan connected to real life without making it a constant project.

5) Where do sustainability and impact considerations fit?

They fit best when treated as clearly defined preferences and analytical inputs. If you care about specific issues, it helps to name them and decide how you want them reflected in the portfolio, with a clear understanding that metrics vary and tradeoffs exist.

How Colorado Capital Management Helps Clients Connect Purpose and Performance

Colorado Capital Management helps clients connect what matters most to a plan they can follow. The work typically begins with clarity, goals, priorities, and tradeoffs, then moves into planning and portfolio design that reflects the client’s timeline, tax situation, and comfort with risk.

We coordinate decisions across planning areas that often drift when handled in pieces, such as tax considerations, retirement strategy, risk management, and estate alignment. We also document the investment approach through an IPS and manage portfolios with a disciplined process that keeps us grounded through market cycles.

If you want help from qualified professionals using a fee-only, fiduciary approach, Colorado Capital Management can help you build and maintain a plan that is grounded in your priorities and implemented with discipline. Schedule a complimentary consultation to discuss your goals and next steps.

Resources:
https://www.cfp.net/certification-process
https://www.bcorporation.net/en-us/certification/

Lee Strongwater
Managing Partner, Senior Advisor, WMS |  + posts

As a serial entrepreneur and world traveler, Lee Strongwater, president of Colorado Capital Management, brings a global perspective to investments and life planning.

Editor’s Note: This blog post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Readers are encouraged to consult with a qualified professional regarding their individual circumstances. Please refer to our firm’s website for full disclosures and important information: CCM Website Disclaimer

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Jason Black, Financial Advisor (CFP)

Jason Black, CFP ®

With a drive to live purposefully and passionately, Jason focuses on helping clients to live in abundance.

Jason is a partner and senior advisor at Colorado Capital Management.  He brings more than 15 years of varied experience working in the financial services industry. He joined CCM after a long search to find the perfect firm that aligned well with his values and mission. Jason is passionate about helping individuals and families live abundant and intentional lives. He is proud to be part of a Certified B Corporation, doing meaningful financial and investment planning for clients, while also focusing on socially responsible business practices and making a positive impact. As a Chartered SRI CounselorSM, Jason has a strong background and keen interest in sustainable investing and enjoys helping clients understand the merits of this approach. Jason is also a Certified Financial Planner™ and has a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Colorado. 

Before joining CCM, Jason worked with Jackson National as a consultant for financial advisors. He helped create meaningful connections with families, creative asset allocation strategies, and tax-advantaged retirement-income solutions. During his tenure there he worked with over four thousand financial advisors across the country, was recognized multiple times as consultant of the year, and also managed a team of twenty-five individuals. 

Jason is happily married to his wife, Bridget, of thirteen years, who he met while in college at CU. Together they have a son and daughter, and a Frenchie named Coco Disco. They live in the Whisper Creek neighborhood of Arvada. When Jason is not at work, he and his  family can often be found making turns in Summit County, wakesurfing in Glendo, WY, cooking, dancing and traveling.

Erica Loughrey, Associate Financial Advisor

Erica Loughrey

Erica is passionate about providing purposeful advice to help clients enjoy a meaningful life.

Erica is an advisor at CCM. She joined the firm in 2021, fulfilling her desire to work for a values-based company with a deep commitment to making an impact. She moved from her hometown of Anchorage, Alaska and quickly fell in love with the sunny and beautiful state of Colorado. She brought with her prior experience as a para-planner and is delighted to be engaged in a profession that empowers individuals to flourish financially. She believes strongly in exceptional client service and creating lifelong generational relationships.

In 2022, she accomplished two of her major career goals, finishing her master’s degree in financial planning (MSFP) and earning her Certified Financial Planner™ designation.

Erica enjoys spending time outdoors and traveling to exotic locales. In her free time, you can find her out skiing, hiking, scuba diving, practicing yoga or jetting off to new places to explore. She has a never-ending list of travel plans, having already visited over 20 countries, and feels lucky to have so many wonderful opportunities and adventures.

Lee Strongwater, Senior Financial Advisor

Lee Strongwater, WMS

An entrepreneur and world traveler, Colorado Capital Management vice president and co-owner Lee Strongwater brings a global perspective to investments and life planning.

For more than 15 years, Lee has passionately assisted clients with their financial planning and portfolio management needs. He especially enjoys helping them live more meaningful lives and invest in ways that are aligned with their values. Lee holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of Colorado and a master’s degree in international affairs from Columbia University. He also holds the Wealth Management Specialist (WMS) certification.

Before joining Colorado Capital Management, Lee was a managing partner at Strongwater-Schott, a fee-only investment management and financial planning firm in Denver. Prior to that, he was an entrepreneur who helped start and manage several small firms, including a children’s product company that went public in 2007.

Lee is an active volunteer for several organizations. He is a past President and current member of the Board of Directors for the Boulder Jewish Community Center, an organization that is highly respected on both a local and national level. Lee is also on the Investment Committee of Girl Rising-Global Education, a venture philanthropy fund that invests in social entrepreneurs with culturally-relevant ideas. The fund’s investments promote gender equality and improve educational outcomes for girls and boys living in poverty in Kenya and India.

Lee is married and has two daughters. He enjoys hiking, skiing, traveling—mostly to Mediterranean countries—and trying out new recipes from his journeys. When he’s not on the go you can find him engrossed in a book.

Steve Ellis, Senior Financial Advisor

Steven Ellis, CFA

Steve Ellis has spent his career making an impact, so it’s not surprising that Colorado Capital Management’s founder and president launched the firm’s entry into impact investing.

He brings over 30 years of experience as a financial advisor to high net worth clients. His early work included teaching college courses in accounting and finance, consulting for a major accounting firm, and researching and acquiring investments as the chief due diligence officer of a leading national financial planning firm. Since 1989, he has advised individual and institutional investors on the management of their wealth. Steve is a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA), holds a business degree from the University of Colorado, magna cum laude, and a master’s degree from Cornell University.

Steve launched the firm’s entry into impact investing in 2012 and is committed to helping build the field. Steve is a passionate speaker on the topic. He has taught about impact investing at various conferences and classes around the country, including as a past faculty member at Middlebury Institute of International Studies. He is listed in the Who’s Who in Impact Investing.

Steve is married, with two daughters, enjoys hiking, biking, skiing, tennis and bridge, and is actively involved in the community. He has served on numerous boards and committees for a wide array of nonprofit organizations, including the Boulder JCC, Rose Community Foundation, Jewish Family Service, and Friendship Bridge. His passion for impact and community service helped lead Colorado Capital Management to become a Certified B Corporation and to build a strong culture of volunteerism and philanthropy.