Sponsors Don’t Want More Choices—They Want Fewer Problems

There’s a certain strain of thinking in this business that more is better. More funds. More features. More “solutions.” If a lineup has 18 options, someone will suggest 28. If the platform works, someone wants to bolt on three more tools. It feels like progress.

It’s not. It’s clutter.

Plan sponsors don’t wake up in the morning saying, “You know what I need? Another small-cap fund and a new financial wellness widget.” They want fewer problems. Fewer participant complaints. Fewer operational headaches. Fewer things that can go wrong when payroll hits on Friday afternoon.

Every additional choice creates complexity. More funds mean more monitoring, more documentation, more chances that something underperforms and raises questions. More features mean more education, more confusion, more calls from participants who don’t understand what they just signed up for. Complexity doesn’t scale—it multiplies.

And participants? They don’t reward you for it. Give them too many options and they freeze. Or worse, they make bad decisions. That’s not empowerment—that’s abdication.

I’ve seen plans with “robust” menus that look like a Cheesecake Factory binder. Everything’s there. Nothing’s clear. And the sponsor is stuck defending why half the lineup exists.

Simplicity isn’t lazy. It’s disciplined.

A clean, well-structured lineup. A QDIA that does the heavy lifting. Features that actually get used. That’s what works. Not because it’s flashy, but because it’s manageable—and defensible.

Providers love to sell more because more sounds valuable. Sponsors live with the consequences.

So the next time someone pitches you on adding another layer, ask a simple question: does this solve a real problem, or just create a new one?

Because in this business, the best plans aren’t the ones with the most options.

They’re the ones with the fewest regrets.

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You’re Not a Partner If You Don’t Push Back

Everyone loves a “partner” who agrees with them. Until it blows up.

In the retirement plan world, there’s a dangerous kind of service model—the nod-and-smile model. Sponsor says they want a bloated investment lineup? “Sounds great.” Wants to keep a high-cost legacy fund because someone on the committee likes it? “No problem.” Doesn’t want to deal with fees or benchmarking this year? “We can revisit later.”

That’s not partnership. That’s order-taking with better branding.

Real partners push back. Not to be difficult, but to be useful. Because sometimes the right answer is uncomfortable. Fees are too high. The lineup is a mess. The plan design isn’t helping participants. The process—if we’re being honest—is hanging on by a thread.

And here’s the thing: sponsors don’t always know where the risk is. That’s why they hired you. If all you’re doing is validating bad decisions, you’re not reducing risk—you’re participating in it.

I’ve seen this movie before. Everything looks fine while the market is up and no one’s asking questions. Then something happens—a lawsuit, an audit, a participant complaint—and suddenly all those “we’ll let it slide” decisions get put under a microscope. That’s when the silence from providers becomes deafening.

Good providers speak up early. They explain why something doesn’t make sense. They document the conversation. They offer alternatives. And yes, sometimes they make the room a little uncomfortable.

That’s the job.

Because being a partner isn’t about being liked in the moment. It’s about being respected when it counts. It’s about protecting the plan sponsor from risks they don’t see—or don’t want to see.

If you’re not willing to push back, you’re not a partner.

You’re just along for the ride.

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The Implementation Is the Sale

Plan providers think they win the business at the RFP. Nice presentation, polished deck, competitive pricing. Everyone shakes hands, everyone’s excited, and the deal is done.

Not even close.

The real sale happens during implementation. And sponsors remember those first 90 days forever.

Because that’s when theory meets reality. Payroll feeds don’t line up. Census data is messy. The timeline slips. Emails go unanswered for a day too long. What looked seamless in the pitch suddenly feels… clunky. And once that doubt creeps in, it doesn’t go away.

You don’t get a second first impression in this business.

Sponsors aren’t judging you on your capabilities—they’re judging you on your execution. Did you hit deadlines? Did you communicate clearly? Did you anticipate problems before they became fires? Or did the client feel like they had to quarterback their own conversion?

A messy implementation doesn’t just create operational risk. It creates emotional distrust. And that’s the kind of thing that sits in the back of a sponsor’s mind for years, just waiting for the next mistake to confirm their suspicion that they hired the wrong provider.

The irony is that most providers pour their best resources into winning the business, not onboarding it. That’s backwards. The handoff from sales to implementation is where relationships either solidify—or start to crack.

Clean conversions build credibility. Sloppy ones create scars.

If you want retention, referrals, and long-term clients, treat implementation like it actually matters. Over-communicate. Under-promise. Hit your deadlines. Own your mistakes fast.

Because by the time the plan goes live, the sponsor has already decided what they think about you.

And it’s really hard to change that verdict later.

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The Real Risk Isn’t the Market—It’s Your Process

Plan sponsors spend a lot of time worrying about the market. Is it too high? Too low? Are we heading into a recession? Should we swap out funds before the next downturn? It’s a natural instinct—but it’s also the wrong place to focus your fear.

Markets go up and down. That’s not a fiduciary failure. That’s Tuesday.

What actually gets plan sponsors in trouble isn’t performance—it’s process. Or more accurately, the lack of one.

No one gets sued because a target date fund had a bad year. They get sued because there was no documented reason it was selected in the first place. No benchmarking. No monitoring. No discussion in committee minutes. Just a lineup that “looked fine” until it didn’t.

That’s the difference. Fiduciary responsibility isn’t about predicting outcomes. It’s about demonstrating a prudent process.

Did you review your investment options regularly? Did you benchmark fees against comparable plans? Did you document why you kept—or replaced—a fund? Did your committee actually meet, or just exist on paper?

If the answer to those questions is fuzzy, that’s your real risk—not whether the S&P 500 drops 15%.

The irony is that sponsors chase performance like it’s the scoreboard, when regulators and courts are looking at the playbook. They want to see discipline. Consistency. Evidence that decisions were made thoughtfully, not reactively.

A bad process during a good market is still a bad process. You just don’t notice it until the tide goes out.

So stop trying to outguess the market. You won’t win that game.

Instead, build a process you can defend in a conference room, in an audit, or in a courtroom. Because when things go wrong—and eventually they will—it’s not your returns that matter.

It’s your receipts.

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Your Recordkeeper Isn’t Your Fiduciary (Even If They Act Like It)

Plan sponsors love a good illusion. And the biggest one in the 401(k) world is this: if the recordkeeper is doing a lot, they must be responsible for a lot. They’re not.

Recordkeepers are service providers. Very important ones. They handle transactions, participant accounts, websites, statements, and enough moving parts to make your head spin. But none of that makes them a fiduciary—at least not in the way that matters when things go sideways.

The problem is they don’t always look like vendors. They present investments. They show up to committee meetings. They hand you reports with charts and colors that scream “we’ve got this covered.” Over time, it’s easy for a plan sponsor to mentally outsource responsibility. That’s where the trouble starts.

Because when there’s a bad fund lineup, excessive fees, or a participant lawsuit, the recordkeeper isn’t the one in the hot seat. You are.

Unless you’ve formally hired a discretionary fiduciary—like a 3(38) investment manager—the decisions are still yours. Even if the recordkeeper “recommended” the funds. Even if they built the lineup. Even if they said, “this is what most plans do.” None of that transfers liability.

This isn’t about distrust. Most recordkeepers are trying to be helpful. But helpful isn’t the same as accountable. And confusing the two is how sponsors get burned.

A good process fixes this. Know who your fiduciaries are. Define roles clearly. Document decisions. Ask uncomfortable questions. And if you want someone else to take discretion, hire them properly.

Because in the end, when the music stops, the recordkeeper packs up their materials and goes home. The fiduciary? That’s still you.

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The 30% Mirage: Retirement Income Isn’t a Hack—It’s a Plan

Every now and then, the industry rolls out a headline that sounds like it belongs in a late-night infomercial. “Boost your retirement income by 30%.” No extra savings. No extra work. Just one simple tweak.

This time, the hook comes from findings highlighted by TIAA—suggesting that retirees who manage withdrawals themselves, instead of locking into more structured income approaches, can generate meaningfully higher income. On paper, the math works.

But let’s slow down for a second.

Yes, if you change how you withdraw money—timing distributions, taking on more market exposure, maybe spending a little more early—you can increase income in the short term. That’s not innovation. That’s pulling dollars forward.

And when you pull dollars forward, you’re usually pulling risk forward too.

This isn’t free money. It’s borrowed comfort.

Because retirement isn’t about winning in year one. It’s about not losing in year twenty. And that’s where these “boost your income” strategies start to crack. They rely on discipline. They rely on markets cooperating. They rely on participants behaving rationally when things get rocky.

That’s a tough bet.

We all know how participants actually behave. They chase returns when things are good. They panic when things are bad. They sell low and regret it later. Giving them a “do-it-yourself income strategy” and expecting consistent execution is wishful thinking.

The TIAA findings are interesting. But they’re based on models, not emotions.

Plan sponsors shouldn’t be chasing optimization headlines. They should be building systems that survive real-world behavior. Managed accounts. Thoughtful income defaults. Guardrails that protect participants from themselves.

Because retirement income isn’t about squeezing out an extra 30%.

It’s about making sure the money is still there when it actually matters.

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Your Participants Aren’t Stupid—They’re Being Targeted

There’s a dangerous assumption in the retirement plan world: that people who fall for scams somehow weren’t paying attention. That they should have known better.

That’s nonsense.

A 58-year-old woman in Michigan recently lost part of her 401(k) after being approached on WhatsApp about a cryptocurrency investment. She moved money out of her retirement account, scanned a QR code, and just like that—it was gone.

You read that and think, “How does that happen?”

It happens because scammers have gotten very, very good.

They don’t come in looking like villains. They look like opportunity. They show fake gains. They build trust. Sometimes they even let you “withdraw” small amounts early so it feels real. Then they go in for the kill—what’s often called “pig butchering.” They fatten you up before they take everything.

And here’s the part plan sponsors need to understand: your participants are targets.

Not just retirees. Not just the unsophisticated. Everyone.

Because 401(k) plans have become one of the largest pools of accessible wealth in the country. And now, with easier distributions, rollovers, and digital access, it’s never been easier to move that money—sometimes with just a few clicks.

That’s where education comes in.

Not the kind of “education” providers love to sell—webinars no one attends and emails no one reads. Real education. Repetition. Warnings about scams. Clear messaging that no legitimate investment requires urgency, secrecy, or QR codes sent over messaging apps.

And plan sponsors need to be paying attention. If participants are suddenly taking large distributions, asking about crypto rollovers, or moving money in unusual ways—that’s not just a transaction. That could be a red flag.

We spend so much time worrying about fees and fund performance. Meanwhile, someone is trying to steal the entire account.

Fiduciary responsibility doesn’t end at the investment lineup. It extends to protecting participants from risks they don’t even see coming.

Because the biggest threat to retirement security isn’t the market.

It’s the person on the other end of the message.

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Participants Aren’t Lazy—Your Plan Is Just Too Optional

Plan sponsors love to say participants don’t engage. They don’t enroll, don’t increase deferrals, don’t rebalance. The conclusion? Participants are lazy.

No, they’re not.

They’re human.

And humans are wired for inertia. We avoid decisions, delay action, and stick with defaults. That’s not a character flaw—that’s behavioral finance 101. The real problem isn’t participant behavior. It’s plan design that pretends behavior doesn’t exist.

If your plan requires employees to opt in, choose a deferral rate, pick investments, and remember to increase contributions over time, you’ve built a system that depends on perfect behavior. That system will fail. Not occasionally—consistently.

Voluntary systems sound good in theory. Freedom of choice, personal responsibility, all the right buzzwords. In practice, they underperform because they ask too much of people who are busy, distracted, and often financially stressed.

Now look at what works.

Automatic enrollment drives participation. Automatic escalation increases savings rates. Default investments—done right—create reasonable outcomes without requiring constant decision-making. These aren’t bells and whistles. They’re the foundation of a functioning plan.

The data has been clear for years: when you remove friction and make the right decision the easy decision, outcomes improve. Not because participants suddenly got smarter, but because the system stopped working against them.

And yet, too many plans still operate like it’s 1995—optional enrollment, low default rates, minimal escalation. Then sponsors wonder why participation lags and balances fall short.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: if your plan isn’t producing good outcomes, it’s not because your employees failed. It’s because your design did.

Bottom line

Participants aren’t lazy. Your plan is just too optional. Fix the design, and the behavior follows.

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The Most Expensive Words in Retirement Plans: “We’ll Fix It Later”

There are phrases in the retirement plan business that should set off alarms. Not the obvious ones—those usually get handled. It’s the quiet, casual ones that do the real damage. And none is more dangerous than this: “We’ll fix it later.”

It sounds harmless. Responsible, even. A temporary delay. A mental sticky note. But in the ERISA world, “later” is where problems go to grow teeth.

Because retirement plan mistakes don’t sit still. They compound.

The Lie We Tell Ourselves

No one intends to create a failure. Late deposits happen because payroll is tight or someone is out of the office. Notices get delayed because HR is juggling ten other priorities. Operational errors slip through because the system “usually works.”

And the response is always the same: we’ll fix it.

Later.

That word—later—is where the cost begins. Because later doesn’t freeze the problem. It magnifies it. Late contributions aren’t just late—they’re prohibited transactions. Missed notices aren’t just administrative—they’re compliance failures. Operational errors don’t just sit there—they affect participants in real time.

You’re not pausing the issue. You’re letting it age.

The Compounding Effect of Delay

A late deposit today becomes lost earnings tomorrow. Wait long enough, and now you’re calculating corrections, documenting decisions, possibly explaining yourself to regulators. What could have been a small operational fix becomes a fiduciary narrative.

And narratives are what get written up.

The same goes for notices. Miss an EACA notice timing requirement and you’re not just sending it late—you’re dealing with whether your entire safe harbor structure is compromised. Now you’re not fixing a notice. You’re fixing a plan design issue.

All because of “later.”

The Hard Truth: Time Is Not Neutral

We like to think time gives us flexibility. In this business, time is usually working against you. The longer something sits unresolved, the fewer clean options you have.

Early fixes are operational. Late fixes are legal.

That’s a big difference.

A Parallel Nobody Likes—but Everyone Understands

It reminds me of someone who discovers a serious health issue and decides to “take some time” before dealing with it. You can understand the instinct—avoidance, hope, denial—but you also know how that story tends to end.

Retirement plan issues work the same way. The earlier you act, the more options you have. The longer you wait, the fewer—and more painful—those options become.

This isn’t about fear. It’s about reality.

Why This Keeps Happening

Because most plan sponsors don’t have a process problem—they have a prioritization problem. The plan is important, but it’s rarely urgent. Until it is.

And by the time it feels urgent, it’s already escalated.

“We’ll fix it later” is usually code for “this isn’t urgent enough right now.” The problem is that ERISA doesn’t grade on urgency. It grades on compliance.

Process Is the Antidote

The only way to eliminate “later” is to replace it with structure.

Clear timelines for deposits, with accountability. A compliance calendar that isn’t just created, but followed. Defined ownership of notices and filings. Regular reviews that catch issues before they compound.

Not glamorous. Not exciting. But effective.

Because good process doesn’t rely on memory, intention, or good luck. It creates consistency.

The Role of Your Providers

Advisors, TPAs, payroll providers—they should be part of the solution, not silent observers. If something is late or off, the right provider raises the issue immediately, even if it’s uncomfortable.

Because uncomfortable early is a lot better than expensive later.

If your team isn’t pushing you on timing and compliance, they’re not protecting you—they’re enabling delay.

The Ary Rule: Fix It Now or Pay for It Later

There are only two paths when something goes wrong in a retirement plan: fix it now, or pay for it later.

“Later” is always more expensive. More complicated. More visible.

And once it becomes visible, it’s no longer just your problem.

Bottom Line

“We’ll fix it later” isn’t a plan. It’s a warning sign.

In the retirement plan business, small delays don’t stay small. They grow, they compound, and eventually, they demand attention on their own terms.

The sponsors who avoid problems aren’t the ones who never make mistakes. They’re the ones who don’t give those mistakes time to become something bigger.

Because in this business, timing isn’t just important.

It’s everything.

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Timing Isn’t Everything—It’s the Only Thing

You just described one of the most underrated killers of otherwise good ideas: bad timing.

That autograph show didn’t suddenly become worse. Same vendors, same celebrities, same concept. What changed? The calendar. And the calendar is undefeated.

Running on Good Friday weekend, bleeding into Easter? That’s not just a scheduling choice—that’s a self-inflicted wound. People are traveling, with family, distracted, or just not in the mindset to go to a show. You didn’t lose customers—you made it impossible for them to show up.

And that brewery running a 1986 New York Mets reunion on Yom Kippur? That’s not bad luck. That’s malpractice.

The Illusion That “If It’s Good, They’ll Come”

This is the biggest lie in events—and frankly, in the retirement plan space too.

“If the content is strong, people will attend.” No, they won’t. Not if it conflicts with religious observance, major holidays, school breaks, or even competing industry events.

You’re not competing just with other conferences. You’re competing with life.

And life always wins.

Plan Sponsors Are No Different

You want plan sponsors at your event? Then respect their calendar the way you respect ERISA deadlines.

Avoid religious holidays. Avoid long weekends. Avoid major industry conflicts. Avoid quarter-end chaos. Because if you don’t, you’re not testing your content—you’re testing their availability.

And availability is binary. They’re either there or they’re not.

The Ary Rule: Don’t Fight the Calendar—It Will Crush You

You can outwork competitors. You can out-market them. You can out-think them.

You cannot out-schedule the calendar.

The smartest event planners don’t just pick a date—they eliminate bad ones first. They treat the calendar like a minefield, not a checklist.

Bottom Line

Great idea, wrong date = empty room. Average idea, perfect date = full house.

Timing doesn’t enhance success. It determines whether success is even possible.

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