The Royal Treatment

Sponsors using plan advisers receive more features, better oversight and improved outcomes

Reported by PLANADVISER staff
Illustration by JooHee Yoon

2012 Adviser Value Survey: Every year, PLANSPONSOR magazine—PLANADVISER’s sister publication—conducts an exhaustive survey of 7,000 defined contribution plans of all sizes across the country, collecting data about such things as provider satisfaction, implementation of plan features, investment options, plan oversight, use of financial advisers, success measurement and outcomes. Detailed results of plan sponsor responses are featured in the PLANSPONSOR November issue and at plansponsor.com.

This year, we decided to compare responses of plans that use advisers against those that do not, and perhaps not surprisingly to readers of PLANADVISER, the results show that plans using advisers receive better service, have stronger plan oversight procedures and show a corresponding improvement in results.

Information Overloaded. Plan sponsors can face an overwhelming list of choices in terms of features to include in a plan, and to weigh the benefits versus the costs of each is certainly daunting. Advisers can help decide which of these features to use in creating an optimal plan offering for an employer’s unique employee population. Plans using advisers are significantly more likely to have a Roth feature, Safe Harbor provision, automatic enrollment and automatic deferral increases. Vesting schedules, interestingly, are about the same for adviser and non-adviser plans.

Out of Sight. Once the plan’s features are selected, plan oversight can arguably be an even more monumental task, especially for resource-challenged smaller employers. Again, the use of plan advisers is invaluable when it comes to monitoring and reviewing the plan on a regular basis. The survey results show that plans that use advisers more frequently evaluate their providers (and are more likely to switch providers), evaluate their fees and formally evaluate the plan’s investment options. In addition, plans with advisers are more likely to have an investment committee composed of both employees and non-employees of the organization.

Invested Interest. In terms of plan investments, plans with advisers tend to have slightly more investment options in the plan menu—21 on average and a median of 17 for plans with advisers, versus 20 and 16 respectively for plans that do not use advisers—and participants in plans with advisers also hold slightly more options than participants in non-adviser plans. Adviser-utilized plans tend to have fewer of a recordkeeper’s proprietary funds; are more likely to use multimanager and custom target-date funds; are less likely to use revenue sharing, and; are more likely to have non-mutual fund vehicles, such as separate accounts and managed accounts, than plans not using advisers.

Gauging Success. Plan outcomes and success can be measured in many ways and to varying degrees, and plans with advisers are much more likely to use specific ways to gauge plan success. The overall participation rate in a plan among eligible employees is the most commonly used—and obvious—success measurement for all plans. Plans with advisers have higher plan participation—71% on average, versus 68% in plans not using advisers. Another way to measure plan success, in addition to overall participation, is the quality of that participation—i.e., the percentage of participants saving enough to receive the full value of the match offered by the plan. Those plans using advisers have a median of 75% of participants who get the full match, versus 72% of participants in plans not using advisers.

Methodology: From July through late August 2011, approximately 7,000 defined contribution plans responded to the PLANSPONSOR Defined Contribution Survey, consisting of more than 60 questions pertaining to satisfaction with providers, plan design, monitoring/oversight, investment options, outcomes and use of financial advisers for the plan. For purposes of the results published herein, the survey results were analyzed to compare plans using financial advisers with plans not using them. For more information, please contact surveys@assetinternational.com

 

Click HERE to view the complete results of the 2012 Adviser Value Survey.

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Client satisfaction, Practice management,
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