Do you ever look at your income and wonder why it doesn’t feel like enough?
You’re making six or even seven figures… so why does money still feel tight, disorganized, or just plain stressful?
You’re not imagining it. And you’re not alone.
At Tannery Company, we work with smart, high-achieving women. Many of them are moms, professionals, and business owners who are doing everything “right” and still feeling behind.
They’re earning more than ever, but their finances feel scattered and fragile. Not because they lack discipline, but because they’re carrying an enormous load.
Professionally. Emotionally. Logistically.
This blog isn’t about budgeting.
It’s about naming what’s really going on and offering a clearer path forward.
1. Your income has grown, but your lifestyle complexity has outpaced it
In most cases, income is not the problem. The real challenge is that life has become far more complex than the systems that support it. You’re managing dual-career households, kids in multiple schools, aging parents, business ventures, and a to-do list that never ends.
But here’s what no one tells you:
The more successful you become, the more structure you need — not less.
What to do:
Start by mapping out your true financial picture. That means:
- Identifying recurring expenses across personal and business life
- Clarifying what’s essential, what’s flexible, and what’s invisible (emotional labor has financial consequences)
- Creating a centralized view of income, debt, savings, and investment flow
What feels like “leakage” is often twofold — part lack of visibility, part lifestyle creep. Seeing everything in one place is the first step. The next is being honest about what spending actually adds value. Review your recurring expenses, compare them to your priorities, and make small adjustments where needed. It’s not about cutting everything — it’s about realigning spending with what matters most right now.
2. You’re delegating everything… except your finances
We see this often with successful women: you’ve outsourced your calendar, your home, and your business operations, but the money still lives in your head. Or worse, it lives in dozens of logins and half-finished spreadsheets.
You’re too busy to handle it alone. But you’re also too overwhelmed to delegate it fully.
What to do:
Treat your finances like a business. Create a workflow. Set recurring review points. And identify what decisions you need to own, and which can be handed off to a trusted advisor.
Clarity isn’t about knowing everything. It’s about knowing enough to make confident decisions and having support to carry the rest.
3. You’ve prioritized growth… but haven’t paused to protect it
You’re contributing to retirement. Paying for college. Investing in your business. You’re growing wealth, but it may not be protected. Many high-income women we meet haven’t updated life insurance since their 20s. Their estate plans are outdated. Their liability coverage doesn’t reflect their current lifestyle.
So, what happens?
One major life event like a lawsuit, illness, or unexpected death can undo years of progress.
What to do:
This isn’t just about being prepared for worst-case scenarios. It’s about giving yourself peace of mind and protecting the people you love. A good financial plan includes:
- Term life insurance aligned with your real household costs
- Updated wills, guardianship plans, and healthcare directives
- Insurance audits to cover both personal and business risks
You’ve worked hard to build something meaningful. Make sure it lasts.
We’ve written a few blogs about this:
4. Your financial plan doesn’t reflect your actual values
Many women come to us feeling uneasy about their money. They’ve checked the boxes: save for retirement, buy the house, fund the 529. But they still feel uncertain. It’s not because they’re off track, but because they’re out of alignment
Why?
Because the plan they’re following is someone else’s. Not theirs. Maybe it came from a parent, an article they read on Google, a financial influencer, or even their best friend. And to be fair, it probably worked for that person. It may have even worked for a season. But if it’s not rooted in your real life, values, and goals, it’s going to feel disconnected.
What to do:
Good financial planning starts with a conversation about your life and not just your assets. The numbers matter, but they only make sense in the context of who you are and what you’re working toward.
What do you want your money to do? What kind of flexibility, freedom, or impact matters to you right now?
When your financial strategy is rooted in your values, it doesn’t just feel better. It works better.
5. You’ve achieved a lot but haven’t stopped to ask what’s next
Success often comes at the cost of reflection. When you’re constantly moving, there’s no time to ask, “What is all this for?” Many of our clients have been in growth mode for so long that they’ve never paused to think about the next chapter.
And that pause matters because the next season of your life might need a different financial strategy.
What to do:
Create a space to zoom out and ask:
- What would less stress or more freedom look like?
- What’s no longer serving me financially or emotionally?
- What does success look like in this next stage?
A powerful plan isn’t just about accumulation. It’s about intention.
And often, it helps to have a guide.
If you’re ready for a more thoughtful approach to what’s next, we’d love to be part of that conversation. Let’s talk.
Final Thoughts
If you’re making great money but still feeling behind, the issue isn’t your income. It’s that you’ve outgrown the systems — and maybe even the mindset — that once worked.
That’s not a failure. It’s a sign you’re ready for a new kind of plan.
Let’s Build a Plan That Actually Works for You
At Tannery Company, we help high-earning women create financial clarity, build smart structures, and protect what matters most. Whether you’re running a business, raising a family, or managing a major life transition — we’ll help you build a plan that reflects your real life, not just your balance sheet.
We’re here when you’re ready.
Upcoming Webinar: Mid-Year Tax Planning & What the New Law Means for You
Join us Thursday, July 17 from 2:00–3:00 PM for a live tax planning session where we’ll cover:
- What the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) means for your 2025 and 2026 taxes
- Mid-year planning moves to reduce your tax bill
- How to adjust your strategy before heading into Q3
Whether you’re navigating a complex household, running a business, or managing a high-income career, this session will help you make smarter decisions with the new tax landscape in mind.
Can’t make it live? Register anyway and we’ll send you the replay.