No-load index funds.
CFPs are strictly there to take your money in fees no matter what they tell you. Ameriprise, EDJones, Fidelity, they're just the Amway of investments. It's a pyramid scheme where they take advantage of folks who don't know how markets and investing work by making it sound ridiculously confusing. I don't mean this in a bad way, but guys like you are bleeding fish in the ocean to these sharks. They want your business BAD.
But...you can have the best of both worlds (ease of management) by telling whoever your CFP is that you want everything in no-load index funds.
No-load means no fees, and index funds are those that mirror one or a combination of the major stock indices. Basically you're limiting risk and volatility because whatever the market as a whole does, your money does. There isn't someone moving your money around trying to make your returns look good and taking a cut every time they make a transaction.
You're "guy" is going to try and guilt trip you by saying something along the lines of, "But, isn't my management worth something to you?" (meaning his fees). No, it's not. because there are many, many studies over the years showing that--after fees--actively managed portfolios do not perform any better (and sometimes worse than) index funds. Burton Malkiel's book, "A Random Walk Down Wall Street" is a great resource for many of these studies and also does a great job debunking the EDJones bros selling snake oil. It's a time-tested book and required reading for a lot of finance majors. You sound like a guy who'd greatly benefit from reading it. There are many good takeaways from it, but the best one is that it's been rigorously shown that throwing darts at the stock page of a newspaper in the long run is just as effective as using a CFP to manage your money after they take their fees.
Resist the guilt trip of CFPs. They're trying to sell fake Rolexes out of their trench coats no matter how nice their offices and vehicles are. You know how they got all that money and those cruises and company vacations? By taking suckers' money. Tell them "no-load index funds" and ignore the sales pitches. They are required by law to act in your best fiduciary interest and they will put your money there if you tell them to. They will give you every lie in the book, and those companies have gone to great lengths paying for "studies" of their own showing how they perform better, but it's BS. Do your own research from publicly-funded academic studies and make your decisions based on that.