Workplace to Wealth: Transforming Retirement Through Meaningful Action

A strategic alignment within the workplace is an opportunity for financial advisors, employers and retirement savers seeking financial planning advice. See Kevin Murphy’s views on emerging trends in workplace savings.

As I tell my teenage children daily, actions speak louder than words. In the retirement services ecosystem, we hear and read a lot about how advisors are seeking to build a bridge between retirement and wealth. Still, it often feels like a bridge to nowhere.

The connection cannot be made if employers and service providers are not taking meaningful action. In the contemporary landscape of advisory relationships to workplace retirement plans, the paradigm is shifting from a singular focus on retirement planning toward a more comprehensive approach centered around holistic financial planning and advice. This evolution underscores the necessity for financial advisors and their clients to transcend traditional roles and embrace a holistic strategy tailored to the dynamics of modern organizations.

This is not a new concept. In my nearly 25 years in the workplace savings industry, most of those years as a client-facing salesperson or sales leader, a vast majority of advisors specializing in the retirement space were drawn to the segment in the interest of being able to efficiently reach and help more people. The one-on-one enrollment and education meetings were a differentiator for leading advisors willing to invest the time and resources to help ensure the participants under their care were well-positioned for a positive retirement outcome. Enroll in the plan, save more, diversify, and stay the course were many of the themes, and the strategy worked, contrary to a lot of naysayers. But it took hard work, and a lot of it.

Following the Pension Protection Act (2006), we became complacent when auto-everything entered the conversation. As an industry, we convinced ourselves—and it is hard to refute—that auto-everything and defaulting participants to save is the most effective way to help people. Add in the “three F” (fees, funds, fiduciary) movement and the global financial crisis in 2008, and the value proposition of the advisor shifted to protecting the plan sponsor in an ever-increasing litigious society. It was deemed taboo for advisors to engage with participants to avoid the optics of trying to “sell” other services. While we were finding our fiduciary identity as an industry, we forgot about a very important constituent we serve every day: the participant.

What happened to our mission of helping more people?