
The announcement—a LinkedIn post from Aspire Wealth Partners, written in meticulous, sorrowful prose—came quietly, as these announcements frequently do in the financial industry. The Calgary practice’s founding partner, Craig Baun, died quietly on June 18, 2026, surrounded by his three boys and wife, Luanne. The tributes began to pile up within hours. Hundreds of responses. Numerous remarks from executives, advisors, and longtime Saskatoon friends, all aiming for words that never seemed big enough.
In a time when every diagnosis becomes satisfactory, Baun’s family and coworkers have chosen to keep the specifics of his illness confidential. The tributes do show how his last years were shaped. According to coworker Darren Cooper, Craig had embraced spirituality and the natural world during his healing process, becoming increasingly attuned to music in the latter stages. The phrase “healing journey” has special significance. It typically indicates that the person battled for a long time, tried everything, and refused to let the illness tell the tale on its own.
In recent years, Baun had become less involved in day-to-day client work, but he was still a vital part of the company he helped establish. In retrospect, that timing speaks for itself. He helped families navigate retirements, market crashes, inheritances, and all the unglamorous choices that subtly shape people’s lives for over thirty years. He was listed as one of Canada’s top wealth advisors by The Globe and Mail in 2022, which appears to have come at a time when his health was already requiring more care.
Reading through the memories gives the impression that Baun was a member of a dying breed of advisor—the kind that retained clients for twenty-five years, the kind that knew grandchildren’s names. Businesses like Wellington-Altus have built their pitch in part on maintaining that older, relationship-first model, despite the industry’s trend toward apps and algorithms. It seemed to be embodied by Baun. Friends characterize him as fierce and hilarious in the same breath, equally at home on his Harley, at the hockey rink, or across a boardroom table.
Cooper gave the eulogy and subsequently acknowledged on social media how difficult it was to summarize such a life in a short amount of time. He referred to him as One of One. Another coworker, Gary Mayzes, wrote that Craig inspired him to strive for greater things. This is an inadvertent reference to the company’s name and most likely not a coincidence. It’s difficult to ignore how frequently the word “kindness” is used, from senior executives to long-time acquaintances. It’s hard to fake that kind of unanimity.
The future of Aspire Wealth Partners is still up in the air, but Baun’s partners seem to be upholding the culture he created. With the family’s approval, memorial plans were anticipated to follow. He leaves behind Luanne, Brady, Boden, and Bryn—and maybe a reminder that no one gets to schedule their own in a company that is built on future planning.
