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The Hidden Problem
Why IT Professionals Must Rethink RSU Concentration
You joined an IT company 10-15 years ago. RSUs started small, felt like a bonus. Promotions came. RSUs grew. Today, 10-35% of your net worth sits in one company's stock.
This didn't happen because of bad planning. It happened because of success. But success created a new problem: concentration.
Concentration Risk in IT Terms
Would you run production on one server? One data center? One cloud region?
No. You'd call it a single point of failure.
Yet financially, many professionals do exactly this:
Career Income
Career income depends on the company
Bonus
Bonus depends on the company
RSU Value
RSU value depends on the same company
If something goes wrong (layoffs, stock decline), everything drops together. This isn't diversification. It's a dependency.
The Numbers Speak
The performance gap between IT services companies and diversified portfolios tells a clear story about concentration risk.
While major IT services stocks declined, broader market strategies delivered strong positive returns.
Why IT Services Lag
1
The Service Model Limitation
IT services companies bill by hours or projects. They add people to grow revenue. This works, but has natural limits. Growth is steady, not explosive.
2
The Product Disadvantage
S&P 500 includes many product companies that build once, sell globally, and scale revenue without proportional headcount.
3
The Gen-AI Factor
For IT services, Gen-AI means faster delivery with fewer people. Clients expect lower billing hours and more fixed-price contracts. Headcount-led growth becomes harder.
For product companies, Gen-AI creates new features, new revenue streams, and premium pricing. They capture more AI value. The gap will likely widen.
Why People Hold On RSUs
Mental Accounting
RSUs feel "earned," not "invested," so they escape review.
Loss Aversion
Selling after a decline feels like admitting a mistake.
Comfort of Inaction
Doing nothing feels safe. Decisions feel risky.
In IT terms: you know the code needs refactoring, but since it runs, you postpone it.
The Critical Question
The Clarity that you need
Ask yourself: If your RSUs converted to cash today, would you invest the entire amount back into the same stock?
If the answer is no, holding it only because it already exists doesn't make sense.
This question is aimed to remove emotion and focus on logic.
This question removes emotion. Only logic remains.

Selling RSUs doesn't mean you doubt your company or exhibit disloyalty to it .
It means you understand uncertainty, want balance, and seek long-term stability.
Even startup founders diversify after IPOs. Not because they lack belief. Because they understand risk.
What Diversification Does
A diversified portfolio reduces single-company risk, spreads exposure across industries, handles tech cycles better, and smooths returns over time.

Think of it as moving from monolith to microservices. Failure in one component doesn't crash the system.
How ShiftAlt Cap Helps
We start by understanding how much is in RSUs, your life goals, timelines, and comfort with volatility.
Reduce Concentration Risk
Capture Global Growth
Balance Safety and Returns
Focus on Long-term Compounding
This is wealth engineering, not trading.
The Cost of Doing Nothing
The biggest risk isn't selling too early.
The biggest risk is holding too long out of comfort
  • letting career risk and investment risk overlap
  • and reacting only after damage happens
Most people realize this late.

Final Thought
Your career success created RSUs. Your wealth strategy should now protect that success.
IT professionals believe in redundancy, scalability, and risk control.
Your portfolio deserves the same thinking.
Diversification isn't clever. It's responsible.