In the first episode of the Household Investing Pod, Sameer and Elena introduce the show and tackle a big question: should you manage your own investments, use a robo‑advisor, or hire a human advisor? They walk through a seven‑part framework to help serious DIY‑leaning investors choose the setup that actually fits their life, complexity, and temperament.
Welcome to the Household Investing Pod. This show is for busy, high‑earning DIY investors who use index funds, care about taxes and goals, and do not want a second job managing spreadsheets. Sameer (CEO and co‑founder of Enrich Finance) and Elena break down real‑world portfolio decisions in plain language—no hot stock tips, no hype, just practical frameworks and trade‑offs.
In this first episode, they start with the question everyone sneaks around: who should manage your investments? You? A robo‑advisor? A traditional 1% AUM advisor? A fee‑only planner plus tools? Instead of defaulting to whatever you started with in your 20s, they walk through a seven‑dimension decision framework you can use to choose deliberately.
You’ll hear:
The seven dimensions that actually matter when deciding how to manage your money: cost structure, customization and control, time and mental load, behavioral support, complexity, trust and transparency, and holistic scope.
What 1% AUM fees look like in dollars over decades, and how that compares to robo‑advisor pricing and a low‑cost DIY setup using broad index funds.
How much “personalization” most advisors and robos realistically provide, and why many clients still end up in model portfolios.
When a human advisor may add value through planning and behavioral support, and when a one‑time fee‑only plan plus DIY tools may be a better fit.
What a modern DIY approach looks like—defining allocation, rebalancing, monitoring multiple accounts, and handling tax‑loss harvesting at a basic level—and why software can make that work more manageable.
This episode is educational and aimed at DIY‑curious investors—Boglehead‑ish, FIRE‑leaning, and HENRYs who want clarity without sales pressure. It is not personalized investment advice.
Key takeaways
There is no universal “right” answer; the best approach depends on your costs, time, behavior, and complexity.
1% AUM may add up to a significant dollar amount over time; lower‑cost options (robos or DIY with index funds) reduce fees but shift more responsibility to you.
Many “custom” portfolios are really a handful of templates; true customization has to account for all your accounts, equity comp, and household goals.
DIY is more than picking funds; it also involves rules for rebalancing, staying invested during volatility, and updating your plan when life changes.
Account‑aggregation tools that track allocation, drift, and tax‑related opportunities can make DIY more realistic without giving up control or paying AUM.
Listener homework
List how your money is currently managed (DIY, robo, advisor, or mix).
For each of the seven dimensions—cost, customization and control, time and mental load, behavioral support, complexity, trust and transparency, holistic scope—rate your current setup 1–5.
Note one specific change you might explore over the next year (for example, getting a one‑time fee‑only plan, or simplifying toward a lower‑cost structure).
This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalized investment advice. Consider speaking with a qualified professional about your specific situation.