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In this episode of The CTO Show with Mehmet, Mehmet sits down with Stanley Leong, private wealth advisor and author of Engineering Your Finances. The core tension is simple: technical people often apply logic to money, but still make emotional financial decisions.
The conversation reframes wealth planning for engineers, founders, and senior tech professionals as a risk management problem rather than a returns problem. Stanley explains why concentrated employer stock, overexposure to technology stocks, late retirement planning, and AI-generated financial advice can create hidden fragility for high earners.
If you are building, investing in, or leading in enterprise technology, this conversation gives you a sharper way to think about personal wealth, equity compensation, and risk before it becomes expensive.
About the Guest
Stanley Leong is a private wealth advisor and the author of Engineering Your Finances. He holds a master’s degree in electrical engineering from Cornell, previously designed computer chips at IBM, and later moved into financial advisory after being laid off during the tech downturn.
His work focuses on helping technology professionals think through retirement planning, concentrated stock risk, tax-aware savings, behavioral finance, and long-term financial security.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stanleycleong/
Website: https://engineeringyourfinancesbook.com
Key Takeaways
What You Will Learn
Episode Highlights
00:00:00: Why an engineer became a wealth advisor
00:05:30: Tech portfolios often carry hidden risk
00:08:30: Finance overwhelms analytical people fast
00:11:30: Gambling mindset follows engineers into investing
00:17:30: Seven areas make planning more systematic
00:21:30: Logic can disguise emotional money decisions
00:26:30: Stock options create concentrated financial exposure
00:32:30: Late savers need structure before returns
00:37:30: Founders carry risk they cannot diversify
00:40:30: Investing starts with asking what fails
Resources Mentioned
Listen Now
Available on all major podcast platforms and YouTube.
Connect with the Show
Follow The CTO Show with Mehmet for more conversations at the intersection of technology, startups, and venture capital.
By Mehmet GonulluIn this episode of The CTO Show with Mehmet, Mehmet sits down with Stanley Leong, private wealth advisor and author of Engineering Your Finances. The core tension is simple: technical people often apply logic to money, but still make emotional financial decisions.
The conversation reframes wealth planning for engineers, founders, and senior tech professionals as a risk management problem rather than a returns problem. Stanley explains why concentrated employer stock, overexposure to technology stocks, late retirement planning, and AI-generated financial advice can create hidden fragility for high earners.
If you are building, investing in, or leading in enterprise technology, this conversation gives you a sharper way to think about personal wealth, equity compensation, and risk before it becomes expensive.
About the Guest
Stanley Leong is a private wealth advisor and the author of Engineering Your Finances. He holds a master’s degree in electrical engineering from Cornell, previously designed computer chips at IBM, and later moved into financial advisory after being laid off during the tech downturn.
His work focuses on helping technology professionals think through retirement planning, concentrated stock risk, tax-aware savings, behavioral finance, and long-term financial security.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stanleycleong/
Website: https://engineeringyourfinancesbook.com
Key Takeaways
What You Will Learn
Episode Highlights
00:00:00: Why an engineer became a wealth advisor
00:05:30: Tech portfolios often carry hidden risk
00:08:30: Finance overwhelms analytical people fast
00:11:30: Gambling mindset follows engineers into investing
00:17:30: Seven areas make planning more systematic
00:21:30: Logic can disguise emotional money decisions
00:26:30: Stock options create concentrated financial exposure
00:32:30: Late savers need structure before returns
00:37:30: Founders carry risk they cannot diversify
00:40:30: Investing starts with asking what fails
Resources Mentioned
Listen Now
Available on all major podcast platforms and YouTube.
Connect with the Show
Follow The CTO Show with Mehmet for more conversations at the intersection of technology, startups, and venture capital.