A new program from the Money Management Institute (MMI) and Wheelhouse Analytics provides broad-based training on managed account solutions to the employees of financial services firms.
The
program was developed in response to requests from MMI member firms for a
scalable, cost-effective way to deliver enhanced employee education on all
facets of the managed accounts business. Phase one of the platform launch
includes seven modules developed by industry subject matter experts, designed
to provide a well-rounded and fast-paced overview of managed solutions.
An introduction to the investment advisory industry;
The evolution and growth of managed products;
Investing basics;
The sales process and client interviews;
Baby Boomer investing;
Data technology supporting managed solutions; and
A close-up look at unified managed accounts.
The
online platform allows advisers and their staff to cover these materials at
their own pace and provides administrative tools that allow management
personnel to monitor and track employee progress.
Marc
Brookman, co-chair of MMI’s educational outreach committee and a managing
director at Morgan Stanley Consulting Group, predicts the eLearning Initiative
will reach thousands of advisers and employees in a much more efficient and
cost-effective manner than many existing education programs.
The
managed account education initiative is being rolled out to MMI member firms this
month. Among its first students will be the incoming class of interns from the Gateway
to Leadership Program, a partnership between MMI and the UNCF that places
students from historically black colleges and universities in summer
internships with MMI member firms.
Participants tend to greatly value their workplace-sponsored
retirement plan, and plan sponsors, too, are very satisfied with their 401(k)
plans, he says. Employers who sponsor a qualified retirement plan in the small-plan
market—particularly those who work with an adviser—expressed widespread
satisfaction with the offering, according to a survey by the Guardian Insurance
and Annuity Company.
Virtually all plan sponsors (98%) surveyed for a recent Guardian report, “The Small Plan
401(k) RetireWell Study: What’s Working and Not Working for Small Businesses,”
are either “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with their 401(k) plan. Advisers are considered
an important component in the successful selection, implementation and management
of group retirement plans, the survey also found.
More than half of plan sponsors (61%) who work with a
financial professional are “very satisfied” with their 401(k) plan overall,
compared with only 40% of sponsors who are “very satisfied” with their plans
and do not use a financial professional.
This quantifies an industry trend anecdotally apparent
for some time, that there is a wide gap in plan satisfaction between sponsors who work with
financial professionals and those who go it alone.
The concept of ERISA expertise is often a
big hurdle confronting advisers, according to Dubitsky, who says advisers often shy away from taking on institutional
retirement plans because they feel they are not expert in the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).
More important than expertise in a specific
area is partnering with the right professionals, Dubitsky counters. An adviser
can work with another provider who has the needed background, products, tools
and services to create a full offering.
ERISA Anxiety
The regulations of ERISA can also make plan
sponsors tense, and even prevent them from offering a retirement plan. “People
throw around the word ERISA, and the complexity is daunting for a
small-business owner,” Dubitsky tells PLANADVISER.
A well-educated adviser can simplify
everything going on in the plan. “This is an important part of the
business owner’s overall offering to employees,” Dubitsky says. “People think the war for talent applies
only to large companies like Citigroup, but it’s true across the business
spectrum—maybe even more so in the small-business market.”
According to the study, nine plan sponsors
in 10 think of their 401(k) plan as a useful recruiting and retention tool. “If
a retirement plan is considered essential, then why wouldn’t you want to offer
it?” Dubitsky says.
Some common issues raised by plan sponsors
as potential disadvantages to offering a plan include out-of-pocket expenses
(43%), potential fiduciary risks associated with offering investments and
advice to participants (44%), the complexity of workplace retirement plans (41%)
and the need to educate employees about managing investments (36%).
These issues are precisely where the
adviser comes in, Dubitsky says. The adviser can simplify a complex process and
a complex product. “We saw in so many cases that the areas that keep people
from offering a retirement plan are the areas an adviser can add value,” he
says.
Thinking Small
Dubitsky points out that most plans are
small plans, and many of them are in motion for a variety of reasons. According to Retirement Research Inc., plans with assets ranging from under $1 million to the $5 million to $10 million range have turnover rates between 7% and 9%, further straining sponsors at small plans.
A
new plan sponsor might need more clarification, he says. Perhaps there is some
dissatisfaction surrounding fees, or the company might be using too complex a
plan. It’s possible a small business never worked with an adviser and needs
someone to work with, and this can be an opportunity to educate the plan
sponsor on issues such as managed accounts or fiduciary services.
The adviser who wants to get started in the
small-plan market should keep three things in mind, Dubitsky says. First, a
small-business owner usually has no benefits group or HR department. The
financial adviser’s job is to alleviate worry and stress by offering myriad
services and providing expertise in these areas.
Next, the adviser does not need to be an
ERISA expert, but must align with those who are. Educate yourself using the
resources offered by partner providers.
Last, bear in mind that the small-plan
market has a lot of opportunity, and that capturing a small plan is worthwhile.
“Don’t think of it as a lot of work for one small plan,” Dubitsky says. “Get
familiar with the products and processes. If you only do something once or
twice a year you’re always going to be anxious about it.”
Dubitsky says a surprise of the survey was
how much people in the business take for granted, and how much confusion exists
that can be alleviated by professional advisers and providers. “It shows what
we’re doing is right,” he says.
The amount of satisfaction was gratifying.
“401(k) plans sometimes get a bad rep in the media,” Dubitsky says. “We’re
seeing that people are overwhelmingly satisfied with their plans. Once you move
past all the noise in the media and competing political entities, the
employer-sponsored retirement plan has been the most effective and efficient
way for people to save for retirement, and people like it.”
The online survey was conducted by Brightwork Partners between
November 12 and December 14, 2013, and is based on interviews with 451 senior
executives from for-profit organizations with 25 to 249 employees that have
been in business three years or more and who are involved in the selection and
evaluation of providers of employee benefits such as health and retirement
plans.