Responding to Lagging 401(k) Participant Engagement

A lot can be learned about retirement plan investor behavior from the simplest of actions, according to a Putnam Investments analysis.

For many 401(k) savers, the most tangible interaction with retirement savings happens every three months or so, when quarterly statements arrive via email or traditional mail. While relatively few participants utilize Web portals to check account balances daily or even weekly, plan administrators are generally required to supply quarterly statements of investment performance and a breakdown of plan expenses to all participants. So it makes sense to look at interactions with these required 401(k) statements to get a baseline pulse on participant engagement, Putnam contends in a blog post published earlier this year.

In the analysis, Putnam breaks down investor engagement with 401(k) statements based on data gathered both before and after the most recent financial crisis. The first data set is from 2004, when investors were in the second year of recovery following the dot-com bubble. The second data set is from 2014, Putnam says. Today retirement savers are about five years out from the start of the Great Recession, during which investors watched an estimated $5 trillion disappear from retirement accounts, according to Investment Company Institute stats cited in the Putnam analysis.

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The severity of the Great Recession seems to have diminished overall participant engagement with 401(k) plans, Putnam says. When asked whether they opened the most recent statement from their plan provider, just 77% of respondents said yes in 2014, compared with 92% in 2004. And when asked how carefully they reviewed this statement, a full 36% of participants in 2014 said they either “just glanced” at the statements or did not open them at all. That’s a 12 point jump from the 24% who either disregarded or merely their skimmed quarterly statements in 2004, Putnam says.

With decreased engagement Putnam has also observed substantially decreased confidence. In 2004, 68% of workplace investors said they felt confident about their prospects of saving enough money to live comfortably in retirement. Just 55% said the same this year.

The drop in confidence is even more dramatic on the question of predicted macroeconomic performance. In 2004, 26% of retirement savers predicted the economy would grow robustly in the following year, and another 63% predicted weak growth. In 2014 the results have essentially flip-flopped, with 25% predicting the economy could enter another recession in the coming year and 68% saying the economy will grow weakly. Just 7% say they expect strong growth of 3% or more heading into 2015.

According to Ken Hoffman, a HighTower managing director and partner with the consulting firm’s HSW Advisors team, plan sponsors have multiple interests to consider in rebuilding engagement levels post-Great Recession.

“The first and most important interest to consider is the employer’s fiduciary duty,” Hoffman warns. “Part of the fiduciary’s ongoing role is to build and maintain engagement, and to provide participants with adequate resources to manage their accounts in convenient ways.”

Hoffman says section 404 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) specifically mandates that sponsors and other plan fiduciaries provide multiple choices or pathways for participants to engage with their retirement accounts. Fiduciaries are also required to provide sufficient education to allow interested participants to make informed decisions about investments, deferrals and other important plan-related matters, he adds.

“We feel that technology is really becoming the answer for driving better engagement in this environment,” Hoffman says. “The providers that are on top of the industry right now are willing to spend huge dollars to make sure that the technology platforms are in place to allow individual investors to get education on the Web and make important account decisions conveniently through the Internet.

“The ability for the participant to understand what they are doing and to move money around quickly on demand, it’s somewhere between a requirement and a desired outcome in the eyes of the Department of Labor,” Hoffman explains.

The second interest for employers to consider, Hoffman says, is that a healthy defined contribution plan with high engagement levels will result in a happier work force with more even age demographics. When employees can prepare successfully for retirement, it typically means they will be more motivated and productive on the job. Workers will not be forced to delay retirement, he adds, which can help keep health insurance premiums and other expenses down.

In Putnam’s analysis, researchers warn it will take more than a quarterly statement makeover to get retirement savers more engaged in their financial future. Financial communications need to evolve and adopt the online marketing practices that touch savers every day. Retirement plan providers need to be more like Amazon and less like Sears & Roebuck, Putnam contends (see “Pulling Out All the Stops on Retirement Education”).

Plan providers have access to a wealth of data about savers, including age, compensation, and deferral rates. Presenting personalized, actionable messages in the context of lifetime income could provide the “nudge” needed to increase engagement, Putnam argues. Key messages for plan sponsors and consulting resources to impart include the following:

  • Many savers are leaving money on the table by not taking full advantage of their employer’s matching contribution. Sponsors and advisers should actively segment and target these individuals with specific communications, Putnam says, and demonstrate how maximizing the match can lead to greater savings at retirement age.
  • Savers older than 50 are eligible for catch-up contributions to their plan. Plan officials should monitor participants’ birthdays and provide the necessary information to help them take advantage of this feature, Putnam says.
  • Give savers a before-and-after snapshot of their paycheck as they raise their deferral rates. Putnam researchers say this will help savers visualize the tax advantages of increasing their contribution.

Savers need personalized information, delivered at the right time, and in the right format and frequency, Putnam contends. By shifting the education and communication model from broadcast to personalization, savers could become more engaged in their retirement, leading to more successful outcomes.

Graying Groundswell Spawns New Kind of Adviser

Waves of Baby Boomers entering retirement have sparked a new field in financial planning: Financial gerontology addresses issues that encompass aging and its impact on personal finance. 

In a conversation with PLANADVISER, Cyndi Hutchins, director of financial gerontology for Bank of America Merrill Lynch, talks about the different financial needs of Baby Boomers compared with past generations of retirees (hint: it’s a numbers game) and why there is a need for the position of financial gerontologist. (PLANADVISER’s questions are in boldface.)

Do Baby Boomers think differently about retirement?

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For years when we thought about retirees, pre-Baby Boomer, it was thought of as a life of leisure. You had your career; you stopped working; and you never worked again. Not much attention was paid to the aspects of aging that affect retirement.

But Baby Boomers are transformers. The trend is to maybe retire from work temporarily, lead a life of leisure for a couple of years. They exhaust their bucket list, and they think about re-engagement. So financial advisers can talk about the role of work in retirement. Is it just the money or does someone see it as a way to stay engaged connected, stay relevant? Before retirement, people don’t necessarily understand that staying relevant is as important as money. They’re still thinking of a traditional retirement. I use the line, “They don’t know what they don’t know.” We help them to consider the other aspects of working in retirement besides the paycheck.

What retirement costs do Boomers need to think about?

Probably the more glaring one is health care and how to provide for out-of-pocket health care costs. What do I need to consider about long-term care? But the life priority of home is a big one for Boomers: Five out of six want to age in place, in the home where they’ve raised their family. What issues should they consider down the road? If aging in place is a big priority, we can bring to light factors, such as is the home elder-friendly? Will it require renovation to make it elder-friendly? If that’s a concern, we need to quantify that and project when that might have to take place, because that’s an important part of the financial plan.

Consider the community we live in. Does it have adequate medical resources? Is it close to transportation? Does it have senior services that will keep us from experiencing isolation? 

What's the main thing financial advisers should know about Boomers and retirement?

Advisers need to think outside the merely financial picture. When we think about the interaction between my work and my Baby Boomer clients, we are really going out and finding out from them what they want to talk about and what they need to be enlightened on, based on what they want in retirement. My charge then is to enlighten financial advisers about these issues so they can go deeper with their own clients.

How does the retirement of the Baby Boomers affect the retirement industry?

This generation faces two big challenges from a financial and a planning perspective. First, the death of the defined benefit (DB) plan. This is the largest generation to date bearing the responsibility of their financial wellness in retirement almost 100 % individually. They have Social Security, but we know that doesn’t provide a secure retirement income to meet someone’s lifestyle goals. The other big thing is longevity, and how do they live in retirement? Baby Boomers are looking at 20, 30 or 40 years of retirement. How can we help them live the lifestyle they want, and put the financial pieces together?

What makes this generation so different?

From the moment they came into existence, this generation is a generation that has transformed their world throughout their lives. Woodstock transformed music. Blue jeans used to be worn only by farmers; they transformed fashion. The mass exodus out of cities and into the suburbs might not have been done by them, but it was done because of them, to benefit this generation.

What made you decide to go into financial gerontology?

First thing is, I am a Baby Boomer. I have one daughter, age 24, who moved out when she was 20, and I’ve been an empty-nester since. I started as an adviser in 1985, and I was a successful adviser, part of the Circle of Excellence, and I did that for 20 years. In 2005, I changed roles, gave up my practice and became a retirement specialist at Merrill Lynch. This division provides financial advisers with advice and guidance so they can support individuals in retirement. 

I was meeting with a lot of clients, and the topics they brought up continued to be the same. Conversations would go from the financial to more goals- and lifestyle-based conversations. I was starting to sense a paradigm shift. I wanted to learn more about it, and I went back to school with no intention other than to learn.  

I just wanted to learn more about the issues of aging, perhaps with the idea that I could have more meaningful, deeper conversations with my clients if I had a better understanding of the world they were living in.

I got a master’s degree in gerontology from the University of Southern California. When our firm leadership found out I was doing this, it was at the beginning of developing Merrill Lynch Clear, and they saw a need for someone who could connect an individual’s lifestyle desires with their finances. I’ve been in this role for the past nine months, and the focus continues to evolve.

What is most important to Boomers in retirement, and will it change any policies?

An individual’s No. 1 priority is always very personal. The seven life priorities are universal, but the level of importance differs from person to person. A major concern about retirement (72%) is the ongoing cost of health care and how to cover this expense. We might see policy changes, around Social Security and Medicare, and the fact that resources have not kept up with the pace of retirement of this generation. As an example, take the medical field and the number of doctors with a geriatric specialty.  In this country, just 7,500 doctors specialize in geriatric medicine. We need about 75,000. There is a scarcity of resources, and we are trying to catch up. 

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