2014 RPAY – MHK Retirement Partners

PA: How is your team/process/structure unique?

MHK Retirement Partners: MHK Retirement Partners is unique because of our “boardroom to break room” approach to engaging with our retirement plan sponsors and their employees. Our focus is not only on increasing participation and deferral rates, monitoring investments, consulting on plan design and hosting a fiduciary vault—but, most importantly, on why the retirement plans exist: income replacement in retirement.

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Our boardroom services begin with a fiduciary training program that enhances the knowledge level of the sponsor in fiduciary roles and responsibilities, running a successful participant education program, benchmarking providers, as well as providing tools for success. Too often we find that most reasons a plan fails to succeed are due to the lack of knowledge and understanding of the sponsor’s duties. There is an assumption that simply having a plan, provider and adviser is enough to fulfill the duties of the sponsor. It is equally as important that plan sponsors recognize their responsibilities and are better equipped to understand and implement prudent processes to manage their liabilities and ultimately serve their fiduciary duties more effectively.

To make our investment committee meetings more efficient, and allow us to spend more time on plan success measures, we developed a customer-centric dashboard. This effectively tracks and benchmarks metrics related to plan fees, investment performance and plan design issues, as well as committee action items and participant success measures. Through this reporting mechanism, we shift the focus to the items that are most important to participant retirement success.

Our participant education and retirement-readiness programs make us truly unique. A plan sponsor can have the best plan design, investment options and lowest fees, but until the employees know how to use that program to replace their income needs in retirement, the plan cannot be successful. Our break room services team engages with participants through regularly scheduled on-site meetings, one-on-one meetings with advisers, direct participant contact programs and a dedicated participant services representative available through MHK’s participant service line.

We proactively schedule group presentations that are customized to the plan, to sponsor goals and to the company’s culture, using industry-specific imagery and focusing on the employees’ level of understanding. We feel the greatest impact is made with individual meetings; through these, we are able to help each person in his retirement planning at the individual level. It is important to focus on the reality of each employee’s retirement situation—including spouses and any assets outside of the retirement plan that the employee will use to generate income in retirement.

To do this, MHK uses a proprietary software called Standard of (k)™—or So(k)™—that helps develop an action plan to replace sufficient income throughout their retirement years. The program not only illustrates an assessment of the participant’s current outlook but allows our advisers to implement that plan with him by adjusting contribution rates, retirement age or lifestyle, driving the asset allocation back to his specific risk tolerance.

The one-on-one interactions supply participants with a projection of how long their savings will provide income in retirement. Through So(k)™, MHK is able to document each participant’s individual plan while allowing for the conversation to continue with each subsequent meeting.

Between individual meetings, MHK engages directly with participants through our Participant Outbound program. Because of this, we’re able to reach out to every employee and help participants stay on target to achieving their goals. Outbound is unlike other education outreach initiatives because it is customized to the individual and engages participants directly with an MHK adviser.

Through our boardroom to break room approach, MHK aims to set a new standard that gives plan participants the means to generate sufficient income throughout their retirement lifetime.


BUSINESS AT A GLANCE

Plan assets under advisement: $417 million

Median plan size (in assets): $4 million

Total plans under advisement: 65

Total participants in plans served: 7,956

2014 RPAY – The Kieckhefer Group

PA: How is your team/process/structure unique?

The Kieckhefer Group: Our backgrounds and extensive knowledge of different parts of the industry help our plan sponsors and participants. Rob Kieckhefer has a background in engineering design and statistical analysis, which he has used to create model portfolios, unique asset utilizations and retirement-readiness forecasts. At the recommendation of the Wisconsin department of the Treasury, Rob was appointed by the governor to sit on the College Education 529 Plan board, which has more than $3.5 billion in assets and 250,000 participants. After taking the 529 plan out for bid, selecting a new recordkeeper and a new low-cost investment menu, Rob has been actively involved in monitoring the plan.

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John Persa, a certified financial planner (CFP), is an attorney with more than 40 years of experience in the financial services industry. Prior to joining The Kieckhefer Group, John helped build a mutual fund business for a nonprofit organization. After the business grew into a multi-billion-dollar operation, John joined a prominent Milwaukee mutual fund firm and helped to establish its 401(k) business.

Janet Ganong was trained by the largest 401(k) plan providers on back-office processes, procedures and relationship management. She was later promoted to the field for participant education. She also is a member of the American Society of Pension Professionals & Actuaries (ASPPA) legislative affairs committee.

Our three key partners bring their diverse skills and backgrounds to the team and, in turn, bring the benefit of multidimensional knowledge and experience to plan sponsors and participants. Retirement plans are our primary focus. We have not used the 401(k) plans to build a wealth management practice. We have a cost-effective way for participants to save for retirement. Our plans offer some of the best and most diverse investments, at arguably the lowest costs available.

PA: What have you done in the past year to improve participants’ retirement readiness?

TKG: We have changed our conversation with the plan sponsor. Plan health has been measured by participation and deferral rates. Now we are enlisting the plan sponsors to take ownership for helping their participants become aware of retirement readiness and income replacement. Using retirement income calculators and other recordkeeping tools, we have taken our education program to new levels. Reaching a successful retirement means setting and attaining intermediate and long-term goals for participants. For the highly compensated, we introduced nonqualified deferred compensation (NQDC) plans and cash balance plans.

PA: How have you been able to lower fees for clients?

TKG: We help reduce fees primarily with four steps: First, while taking on the role of negotiator, we proactively challenge the recordkeeper over its fees and revenue sharing and proactively cap our own fees. Second, we regularly take plans out for bid in order to identify service improvements and fee reductions. Third, we use index funds and collective trusts. Fourth, we build custom portfolios, using the core investments, without additional fees.

When Rob served as moderator at the 2013 PLANADVISER National Conference (PANC) panel on the topic of low-cost 401(k) plans, he shared our approach and incorporated our four steps into the presentation.

PA: Describe any particularly noteworthy investment initiatives you have led with your customer base in the past 12 months.

TKG: We proactively initiated an in-depth review of target-date funds (TDFs). We established a process and 10-step procedure for analyzing and screening the funds. We condensed the 120-page report into an executive summary to use with our plan sponsors. To help other plan sponsors and advisers, we wrote an article for PLANSPONSOR magazine outlining the process, which was published in the NewsDash then picked up by Retirement Weekly and numerous other media outlets, including a feature article in USA Today’s Money section on January 7. As a result of our TDF screening process’ publicity, we have been in a position to actively encourage the use of index funds to reduce the internal expense ratios. We also have been a big proponent of using TDF collective trusts.


BUSINESS AT A GLANCE

Plan assets under advisement: $910 million

Median plan size (in assets): $5 million

Total plans under advisement: 51

Total participants in plans served: 10,000

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