Knowing Me, Knowing You

67. Navigating the Mental Blind Spots of Wealthy Professionals with Edward Karan

Marla Sofer

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 40:36

Most successful professionals handle massive complexity at work, but feel completely overwhelmed by their own financial clutter. Papers pile up, accounts sit scattered across institutions, and a five-million-dollar portfolio still looks exactly like the ten-thousand-dollar starter account they built decades ago. Finding a specific niche can certainly help, but the deeper opportunity often lies in changing how we look at data, essentially upgrading from a stethoscope to an MRI machine to truly understand a client's life.

In this episode, we sit down with Edward Karan, founder and managing partner of Aspire Wealth Advisory Group. Edward brings more than three decades of experience across private banking, private equity, and wealth management, most recently serving as Managing Director at Citi Global Wealth before launching his own practice from scratch. He pairs an elite institutional pedigree with a genuine passion for financial literacy and values-based guidance.

We dig into the psychology of wealth, particularly the fascinating behavioral blind spots that trip up brilliant lawyers and consultants. From the "billable hour trap" that turns time into an anxiety metric, to a trained obsession with downside risk that breeds financial inertia, Edward exposes why high earners struggle to get their own houses in order. The tech stack and the portfolios are essential, but they are just tools. The real magic happens when an advisor creates the space for a client to finally drop the complexity, align their money with their values, and breathe.

This episode is for wealth managers who want to see how a modern RIA scales by outsourcing the back office, and for any professional who has ever wondered what it would feel like to turn financial chaos into true calm.

Connect with us!