The Future Open-MEP Market

There are two potential pathways for the broad adoption of open multiple employer plans by small businesses, one driven by advisers and the other by recordkeepers.

Legislation in the U.S. House proposes sweeping changes that could disrupt the current status quo in the retirement industry, increase the attractiveness in having a retirement plan for small employers, and result in an archetype shift for the advisers and recordkeeping providers who serve them.

According to the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor statistics, fewer than 50% of private sector employees have access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan. Most without access work for companies with fewer than 100 employees.

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Congress hopes to increase small business retirement plan participation by making multiple employer plans (MEPs) accessible to any business, without requiring businesses to share an industry, geography or affiliation. Currently, federal law restricts participation in MEPs to businesses that have some sort of association, usually by industry or occupation. The emerging “open-MEP” model eliminates many legal barriers, enabling unaffiliated businesses to combine resources, take advantage of economies of scale and lower administrative costs.

Typically, small businesses that sponsor retirement plans rely on a local adviser to manage assets and facilitate the plan design process. Advisers who currently service small businesses rightly wonder what the industry will look like if this new legislation becomes law.

At a high level, there are two main ways the open-MEP market could take shape. One of these would be from the bottom-up and adviser-driven. The other potential approach would be top-down and driven by recordkeepers. The former could mean a wider opportunity for advisers to grow their services across more small businesses. If, on the other hand, recordkeepers or other aggregators grab the market, then it could mean serious disruption for local advisers.

Bottom-up open-MEP market driven by local advisers

One hope of Congress is that open-MEPs would increase access and reduce barriers for small companies to provide retirement benefits to their employees. If successful, there could be a sharp increase in new participants within the U.S. defined contribution marketplace, and new plans may be facilitated by the local adviser. As the first access point to retirement plans for many small businesses, local advisers may have the first opportunity to capitalize on existing client networks.

Advisers may be able to act as a gateway for new and existing small business clients to move to provide retirement to their employees by joining open-MEPs. Advisers will be needed to support participants and to provide education as the number of plans and participants swell.

While there is a likelihood that availability and proliferation of open-MEPs will enhance the opportunity for advisers to interface with a larger number of small business owners, it is likely that their role and compensation will no longer center on plan investment responsibilities.

Regardless of whether local advisers remain the central figures in providing investment advice for small plan investments, they are likely to have a significant role in sales and education regardless of how open-MEPs change the retirement marketplace.

Top-down MEP market driven by leading recordkeepers and other larger retirement services providers

The reality is that the existing MEP market is already serviced by large recordkeepers that bring the scale and experience of managing thousands of plans on complex recordkeeping platforms. Several of the top recordkeepers have developed recordkeeping capabilities to manage MEPs and to deliver the enhanced fiduciary services needed to easily transition to an open-MEP model.

These recordkeepers will have a leg up on creating and growing open-MEPs. Leading payroll services providers are good candidates to take a bite out of this potential market, too; they already have a small business client base and recordkeeping services.

Today, local advisers often provide advice or even discretionary management to plan sponsors regarding plan investments. Under an open-MEP, this approach would belie one of the key benefits of most MEPs—the aggregation and concentration of money into investment sleeves to increase buying power, increase investment policy oversight and lower costs. With the leverage of large asset pools, most open-MEPS will be managed by institutional investment managers. This is a good thing for small-business employees, but not necessarily a good thing for advisers. 

At the same time, the open-MEP market will likely coalesce around a variety of specialized open-MEPs that target specific industries and employer/employee characteristics. For example, current MEPs sponsored by some professional associations offer a wide array of complex investment options. Such offerings may be appropriate for groups such as doctors and lawyers, but may not be appropriate for other industries in which employees are generally not investment savvy. In some open-MEPs, it will make sense to significantly limit or simplify investment options, as many sponsors do today.

Given this potential landscape, the expectation is that many local advisers could primarily serve in a consultative capacity, helping small business owners decide which open-MEP would be right for their unique employee needs. They’ll also serve in an educational capacity, helping employees navigate investment options and the enrollment process.

It’s not clear who will lead

At this stage it’s too early to know for sure how things will play out with the key players and potential growth of the small plan pool. Nevertheless, it looks increasingly likely that open-MEPs will become reality, maybe as soon as this year. A wait-and-see approach won’t work. Advisers must prepare today for potential outcomes, and be ready to capitalize on every opportunity.

*Note from the editor* This feature article is to provide general information only, does not constitute legal or tax advice, and cannot be used or substituted for legal or tax advice. Any opinions of the author do not necessarily reflect the stance of PLANADVISER Magazine or Institutional Shareholder Services.

Female Advisers Lead the Push for Greater Diversity

They believe that the role of advisers has become more holistic, making the profession more appealing and accessible.
Art by Katherine Streeter

Art by Katherine Streeter


Attend any retirement plan advisory industry event and it is strikingly obvious that the profession is dominated by white men.

However, with the role of advisers shifting from investment selection to participants’ retirement readiness and holistic financial well-being, today’s female advisers believe the profession is evolving to appeal to more women. In addition, they also say that retirement planning practices are beginning to realize the importance of diversity and are beginning to actively recruit not only women but people from different ethnic and cultural backgrounds.

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“It is still a man’s world,” says Ellen Lander, principal of Renaissance Benefit Advisors of New York and the 2019 PLANSPONSOR Retirement Plan Adviser of the Year. “There are many organizations still out there in this day and age that are run by very strong-headed men that don’t regard women as their equal.”

Before founding her practice nine years ago, Lander worked in sales in the retirement division at MassMutual and was always the only women in the department. “I grew up in a man’s world,” she says. “However, there were challenges I faced a long time ago that I don’t face anymore.”

Perceived Barriers

What largely keeps women from entering the retirement planning industry is the fear that they have to be rainmakers, to cold call to create a book of business and that their sales numbers will be scrutinized, says Lynn Ballou, regional director at EP Wealth Advisors of Los Angeles.

The profession has changed, says Katherine Mauzy, principal of financial adviser talent acquisition at Edward Jones in St. Louis, Missouri. “Careers in retirement planning have evolved from being transactional to helping clients achieve life goals,” she says. Today’s retirement plan adviser has become a “holistic life planner who conducts complete wealth management discussions. Women aspire to build deeper, trusted relationships that clients really value. The skills today’s adviser needs includes empathy and understanding each client. That is appealing to a lot of women. We as an industry need to reach out to more women to educate them about this opportunity.”

While the role of the retirement plan adviser has become more holistic, Ballou agrees, many practices still value advisers who are sales-focused and who prioritize building out a book of business.

“Women care more about the relationship than the sales numbers,” she says. “That puts us at a disadvantage on the pay platform. Both add value, so firms need to create a way to create some parity.” And Ballou is optimistic this will happen.

“I think the most successful firms in the future will be those that value the loyal relationships that women can build,” she says. “There is no sense in having a business model where you are bringing in new clients but others are walking out the door because you didn’t take care of them. We need to value both—the rainmakers and the relationship-builders.”

As the role of retirement plan advisers has progressed, the skills needed for success have also progressed, says Joan Antoniello, a principal with Mazars USA Wealth Advisers in New York. “While the financial services and retirement planning industries have traditionally been male-dominated, driven by sales performance, that is starting to change,” Antoniello says. “Men are more focused on tangibles—numbers and performance, rather than the goals and objectives that women value.” The change in the profession has definitely benefited female advisers, she says.

In addition, retirement planning practices “have started to realize that with women controlling a third of the wealth in this country, there is a market to serve women, which is creating a tremendous opportunity for women as advisers right now,” Antoniello says. “This realization is changing the DNA of what an adviser had been in the past. Firms are starting to realize that diversity impacts the bottom line.”

Technology has also made it possible for women who are either raising children or taking care of elderly parents, or both, to be more flexible, Antoniello notes.

Attracting Women to the Profession

In order to attract women to the profession, it is important to provide them with mentors and the opportunity to network with and learn from other women in the business, Mauzy says.

EP Wealth Advisors has also created a financial literacy program conducted by its female advisers at high schools in various school districts with different ethnicities, says Erin Voisin, director of financial planning at the practice. “A big focus right now is diversity and inclusion in this industry,” she says.

The hope, Ballou adds, is that “rather than try to attract women to the profession as they make career moves later in life, we can recruit them at the early stages of their lives by showing them the importance of this profession and what a profound difference it can make in people’s lives.”

It is precisely this kind of personal outreach that has enabled Edward Jones to successfully recruit female retirement plan advisers to the point that they now comprise 20% of that workforce. The firm has asked advisers in its 277 regions around the country to actively recruit women to the business and then mentor and support them once they join the firm.

For the women who have joined Edward Jones as retirement planning advisers, the firm holds “Women Helping Other Women” events around the country, where these advisers can share ideas and learn from panel discussions where top women advisers share their thoughts on best practices. Last year, Edward Jones held 55 such events and added a recruitment dinner the night before.

And for the past two years, Edward Jones has invited women advisers from competitors to attend its seminars, with 40% to 50% of these women then deciding to join Edward Jones, Mauzy says.

For the retirement planning profession to become more diverse, to include women and people of various ethnicities, will take time, Ballou predicts. “The change will be multigenerational,” she says.

At Edward Jones, “we are very optimistic that there is a bright future for diversity,” Mauzy says. “It will take time, discipline and consistency, but I know we are up for the challenge.”

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