
In a recent episode of The Readiness Lens, host Sheri Radler sat down with two experienced tax professionals—Denise Hanlon of Hanlon CPA and Jane Watkins of Tax Time Services—to discuss a topic many business owners overlook:
Tax planning isn’t just about filing. It’s about building a strategy for your future.
Many business owners focus only on what’s directly in front of them—their day-to-day operations, revenue, and expenses.
But as Sheri points out, your business is just one part of a much bigger financial picture:
Your family
Your long-term wealth
Retirement goals
Estate planning
Legacy decisions
When these areas aren’t connected, important opportunities are missed.
“Every decision you make in the business affects your life.”
One of the biggest takeaways from Denise and Jane is this:
👉 Tax savings don’t happen at tax time.
👉 They happen throughout the year.
When planning is ignored, business owners often experience:
Unexpected tax bills
Missed deductions
Poor timing of decisions
Cash flow challenges
On the other hand, proactive planning creates:
✔ Clarity on your financial position
✔ Confidence in decision-making
✔ Better cash flow management
✔ Reduced overall tax burden
Many clients avoid tax planning for a simple reason:
They don’t know what to ask.
Tax conversations can feel overwhelming—filled with technical language and complex rules.
As discussed in the episode, this leads to hesitation and, ultimately, inaction.
“Tax is complicated… if they don’t talk about it before they act, it can turn into an unexpected liability.”
The solution?
Start small. Ask questions. Have the conversation early.
One of the most powerful ideas from this conversation is the importance of a connected advisory team.
Too often, business owners make decisions:
Without consulting their CPA
Without involving their financial advisor
Without considering legal implications
This creates gaps—and those gaps can be costly.
Instead, Denise emphasizes the importance of coordination:
👉 Your CPA
👉 Your financial advisor
👉 Your attorney
👉 Your operational advisors
All working together toward your goals.
Think of it like this:
A business doesn’t succeed with one perspective—it succeeds with a coordinated strategy.
The episode shares several examples of what can go wrong without proactive planning:
Choosing the wrong entity structure and never revisiting it
Transferring assets without understanding tax implications
Failing to plan for ownership transitions or estate needs
Not setting aside estimated tax payments
In one case, a business faced major disruption simply because there was no clear plan in place for leadership continuity.
These aren’t rare scenarios—they’re common.
And they’re avoidable.
Most people plan in 12-month cycles.
But real financial success requires thinking further ahead:
What are you building toward?
Are you planning to sell your business?
Pass it down?
Use it as a retirement vehicle?
“You can’t wait until you need to sell the business… planning should happen years in advance.”
The earlier you begin aligning decisions with long-term goals, the better your outcome.
The good news: you don’t have to do everything at once.
In fact, the best approach is simple:
👉 Start with one conversation
👉 Focus on one area
👉 Build from there
As Jane shared:
“You don’t need to do it all at once… just start somewhere.”
At Hanlon CPA, the focus goes beyond preparing tax returns.
The goal is to help clients:
Understand where they stand
Identify opportunities
Plan ahead with clarity
Make confident financial decisions
This includes working alongside other advisors to ensure your full financial picture is aligned—not just one piece of it.
Tax planning isn’t about complexity.
It’s about clarity.
And the earlier you begin, the more control you have over your financial future.
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