Making Retirement Plan Tax Credits Too Complicated for the Businesses That Need Them Most

Washington has a remarkable talent for creating programs designed to help small businesses while making them just complicated enough that the smallest businesses never actually use them.

The revival of legislation aimed at expanding startup retirement plan tax credits for micro-businesses is one of those rare moments where lawmakers may actually be fixing a real problem.

Because here’s the dirty little secret: while SECURE 2.0 made startup credits dramatically better, many truly tiny businesses still remain on the outside looking in.

On paper, the tax credits are generous. In reality? The businesses with five employees, eight employees, or a dozen workers often still look at plan costs, administration, payroll integration, fiduciary responsibilities, and provider fees and decide it’s just not worth the headache.

And that’s the problem.

The retirement industry loves talking about coverage expansion, but too often we talk like every employer has an HR department, a payroll specialist, outside counsel, and a CFO who enjoys deciphering tax incentives over coffee.

That’s fantasy.

The neighborhood restaurant doesn’t operate that way. The local plumbing business doesn’t operate that way. The two-partner accounting firm with three employees definitely doesn’t operate that way.

Micro-businesses don’t reject retirement plans because they hate retirement savings. They reject complexity.

That’s why expanding startup incentives makes sense. If Congress wants broader retirement coverage, the answer isn’t another glossy public policy speech about access. It’s making adoption economically and operationally simple enough that a business owner can say yes without feeling like they’ve agreed to launch a satellite.

But let’s not pretend tax credits alone solve everything.

A tax credit helps with cost. It doesn’t solve bad onboarding. It doesn’t fix payroll integration disasters. It doesn’t explain fiduciary obligations. It doesn’t prevent providers from overselling simplicity and underdelivering execution.

Retirement plan expansion happens when small employers believe offering a plan won’t become another operational migraine.

Tax credits help.

Making the system less annoying would help even more.

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Auto-Enrollment Is Easy—Until It Isn’t

Auto-enrollment is one of those retirement plan features that sounds wonderfully simple in a sales presentation. “We’ll automatically enroll employees, boost participation, and help people save.” Great. Everyone nods. Then reality arrives wearing steel-toed boots.

Because auto-enrollment only works when the machinery behind it actually works. That means clean payroll integration, accurate eligibility tracking, timely notices, correct deferral percentages, opt-out processing, and someone actually paying attention. Miss one step, and what looked like a simple feature becomes an expensive correction project.

Take missed enrollment notices. SECURE 2.0 made auto-enrollment even more prominent, but prominence doesn’t equal simplicity. If an employee should have been automatically enrolled and wasn’t, you’re now looking at missed deferral opportunity corrections, potential employer contribution true-ups, earnings calculations, and a whole lot of explaining.

Then there’s payroll. Payroll teams change systems. Fields get mapped incorrectly. Deferral percentages don’t transmit. New hires sit in limbo because eligibility dates weren’t coded correctly. Suddenly the “automatic” part isn’t automatic at all.

And let’s not forget employee communication. Participants notice when money comes out that shouldn’t—or doesn’t come out when it should. Nothing destroys trust faster than employees believing their retirement plan is being run by people making it up as they go along.

Auto-enrollment is a great design feature. I like it. Participation rates generally improve. Employees benefit. But sponsors make a mistake when they think selecting auto-enrollment is the end of the decision-making process.

It’s actually the beginning.

The real question isn’t whether you offer auto-enrollment. The real question is whether your vendors, payroll provider, HR team, and internal processes can administer it correctly every single pay period.

Because in retirement plans, “automatic” is often just another word for “we hope the file worked.”

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Eligibility Rules: Why Something So Simple Became So Complicated

Once upon a time, 401(k) eligibility was easy. Age 21. One year of service. Quarterly entry dates. Everyone understood the assignment.

Then we collectively lost our minds.

Today, eligibility is where simple concepts go to die. Immediate eligibility for deferrals? Fine. Different eligibility for match? Sure. Profit sharing with separate service requirements? Why not? Add long-term part-time employee rules, automatic enrollment mandates, exclusions by class, acquired employees, and multiple entry dates, and suddenly your retirement plan requires air traffic control.

The biggest mistake sponsors make is assuming complexity equals sophistication. It doesn’t. Complexity usually means more failure points.

Daily entry dates sound employee-friendly until someone actually has to administer them. LTPT rules sound manageable until you realize you’re tracking historical hours for employees no one expected to become eligible. Automatic enrollment adds another layer because eligibility timing suddenly matters even more—miss the enrollment window and congratulations, you may owe a correction.

And then there’s acquisitions. Nothing spices up eligibility administration like inheriting employees with prior service histories and mismatched payroll systems.

The ugly truth is that many plan sponsors create complexity without understanding the operational consequences. Someone thought a highly customized eligibility structure sounded clever in a meeting. Then payroll, HR, and the TPA got handed the mess.

My bias? Simpler is better.

Immediate eligibility for deferrals often solves more problems than it creates. Clean match eligibility rules help too. Fewer exceptions. Fewer classifications. Fewer calendar gymnastics.

Because eligibility isn’t just a document provision. It’s an operational process that must work accurately every pay cycle.

And if your eligibility rules require a whiteboard, three vendor calls, and a prayer, they’re probably too complicated.

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Your Payroll Provider Just Changed Something. Why Your 401(k) Team Should Panic a Little.

Few words in retirement plan administration should trigger more anxiety than: “We changed payroll providers.”

Because payroll changes are never just payroll changes.

To HR, it’s a software conversion. To finance, it’s an operational upgrade. To your retirement plan team? It’s the moment everyone should start checking for exits.

Retirement plans live and die by payroll data. Deferral elections. Compensation definitions. Loan repayments. Match calculations. Eligibility tracking. Catch-up contributions. Roth sources. Auto-enrollment percentages. Every one of those depends on payroll feeding accurate information at the right time.

And when payroll changes, bad things happen.

Deferral elections don’t transfer correctly. Compensation codes get remapped improperly. Bonus pay gets treated differently. Loan deductions vanish. Catch-up contributions stop tracking. New hires fail to feed into eligibility reports. Payroll dates shift, breaking deposit timing expectations.

The best part? Nobody notices immediately.

Instead, errors quietly compound for months until a participant asks why their deductions look wrong, an audit uncovers the problem, or testing fails spectacularly.

Then comes the vendor blame Olympics.

Payroll says they implemented what they were told. Recordkeeper says the file specs weren’t followed. TPA says they assumed the data was accurate. The plan sponsor gets to write the correction checks.

This is why payroll changes should be treated like fiduciary events, not administrative housekeeping.

Before changing providers, sponsors should confirm file mapping, compensation treatment, eligibility coding, loan processing, source handling, payroll calendar timing, and parallel testing. After implementation, they should audit the first several payrolls like their sanity depends on it.

Because it does.

The most expensive retirement plan errors are rarely caused by malicious behavior or incompetence.

They’re caused by someone saying, “It’s just payroll.”

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Your Call Center Is Your Brand

Providers love talking about technology.

Modern platforms. Digital enrollment. AI tools. Participant dashboards. Mobile apps.

That’s all nice.

But when participants have an actual problem, they don’t care about your shiny interface.

They call.

And the person who answers that phone becomes your brand.

Not your CEO.

Not your sales team.

Not your marketing department.

That call center rep.

A single bad participant interaction can do enormous damage.

The participant who can’t get a loan processed. The terminated employee confused about a distribution. The person locked out of their account. The widow trying to navigate beneficiary paperwork.

These aren’t abstract service tickets.

These are emotionally charged moments where competence matters.

And too many providers treat participant service like a cost center instead of a reputation center.

Long hold times. Script readers who can’t think. Endless transfers. Representatives who don’t understand plan rules. Generic answers that solve nothing.

Sponsors hear about all of it.

Participants rarely compliment smooth service.

They absolutely complain about bad service.

And sponsors often judge providers based on participant experience far more than providers realize.

A plan committee can tolerate fee increases. They can survive a reporting annoyance. They may even forgive operational hiccups.

But if employees consistently say, “Your provider is impossible to deal with,” that becomes a retention problem.

Because sponsors don’t want angry employees.

Participant service is not some back-office function. It’s frontline brand management.

Every phone interaction tells participants whether your organization is competent, empathetic, and trustworthy—or bureaucratic and indifferent.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth: many providers obsess over winning new business while underinvesting in the exact people participants interact with most.

That makes no sense.

Because nobody says, “We stayed with this provider because their website looked modern.”

They say, “When we had a problem, they helped us.”

Or they say the opposite.

Your call center isn’t operational support.

It’s your reputation with a headset.

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The vendor blame game

Every retirement plan problem seems to follow the same script.

A contribution is wrong. A loan payment disappears. Eligibility is miscalculated. Payroll deductions don’t match elections. A participant calls angry.

Then the finger-pointing begins.

Payroll says the file went out correctly.

The recordkeeper says the data they received was incomplete.

The TPA says they relied on the census provided.

The advisor says they weren’t involved operationally.

The sponsor sits there wondering how everyone can be so confident while everything is still broken.

Welcome to the vendor blame game.

This industry has a bad habit of acting like responsibilities exist in neat little boxes. They don’t.

Retirement plans are interconnected systems. Payroll feeds recordkeeping. Recordkeeping impacts compliance. Compliance relies on census accuracy. Participant servicing depends on operational execution. One bad handoff can infect the whole chain.

Yet when something breaks, too many providers instinctively move into self-preservation mode instead of solution mode.

That’s where trust dies.

Sponsors don’t care whose technical fault it was—not at first. They care that the problem gets fixed. Quickly. Clearly. Competently.

The best providers understand that.

The worst providers immediately start composing defense briefs.

“I think payroll mapped the compensation code incorrectly.”

“That’s outside our scope.”

“We processed what we received.”

“Compliance never raised that issue.”

Congratulations. You’ve successfully proven nobody owns the problem.

Clients hate that.

Providers need to understand something simple: if a sponsor has to coordinate the investigation between multiple vendors, your service model already failed.

Someone needs to quarterback resolution.

Someone needs to own communication.

Someone needs to focus less on blame and more on correction.

Because sponsors remember how problems are handled more than the problems themselves.

Mistakes happen. Files break. Humans miss things. Systems fail.

That’s business.

But the provider who turns every issue into a jurisdictional dispute tells clients something dangerous: when things go wrong, you’re on your own.

That’s how good relationships die.

Not because of the original error.

Because of the response.

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If Your Best People Are Constantly Firefighting, Your Process Is Broken

When I worked for TPAs as an attorney, there were days I felt less like legal counsel and more like a firefighter.

Not the glamorous kind. Not the heroic calendar photo kind. More the exhausted guy showing up because someone ignored the smoke alarm three weeks earlier.

A missed eligibility date. Late deferral deposits. A payroll file that never transmitted. A failed ADP test nobody saw coming because the census was a mess. A plan document provision that operations administered incorrectly for years. A conversion that went sideways because sales promised something that reality couldn’t support.

And there I was, extinguisher in hand.

The problem wasn’t that emergencies happened. In this business, some level of chaos is inevitable. Payroll systems change. Clients make mistakes. Vendors drop balls. Humans are imperfect.

The real problem was when firefighting became the operating model.

If your smartest people spend their days cleaning up preventable disasters, your organization has a process problem—not a staffing problem.

Too many firms mistake crisis management for competence. “Look how quickly we solved that issue.” Great. Why did the issue exist in the first place?

The attorney shouldn’t constantly be interpreting avoidable operational failures. The compliance team shouldn’t be repeatedly reconstructing broken data. Senior service people shouldn’t be spending every day on escalations that should have been prevented upstream.

That’s not efficient. That’s organizational exhaustion disguised as productivity.

The hidden cost is enormous. Burnout. Turnover. Client frustration. Preventable corrections. Reputational damage. Lost growth because your best people are too busy dealing with yesterday’s avoidable disasters.

The best organizations aren’t the ones with the best firefighters.

They’re the ones with fewer fires.

Checklists. Clear ownership. Good onboarding. Sensible escalation paths. Honest communication between sales, operations, compliance, and service. Process discipline.

Because if your most valuable employees are constantly sprinting from emergency to emergency, you don’t have stars holding the place together.

You have structural failure with talented people temporarily masking it.

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I’m still here

There’s a certain kind of victory that doesn’t come with applause. No trophy. No recognition. Just quiet proof that you made it through something that was designed—whether intentionally or not—to break you.

I’m still here.

If you’ve read anything I’ve written before, you already know the story. My mother is a narcissist. That’s not a label I throw around lightly—it’s a conclusion earned over years of experience, disappointment, and finally, clarity. More than 18 years ago, she tried to wreck my marriage and, in many ways, my life.

And she didn’t just leave damage in one place.

She destroyed my father. She destroyed my sister. She destroyed my aunt. She wore down my grandparents. Different people, same pattern. The kind of slow erosion that doesn’t make headlines but leaves lives permanently altered.

I saw it. I lived it. And I understood what staying meant.

I was supposed to be next.

But I didn’t stay.

I’m the one who got away.

Like Andy Dufresne, I tunneled through her crap to get to the other side. It wasn’t quick. It wasn’t easy. It took years. But there is a point where you either accept the life being handed to you or you decide to dig your way out of it.

I chose to dig.

To my mother, I’m dead. And that’s fine by me. Because the version of me that existed within her world—the one constantly navigating chaos, manipulation, and emotional games—that person is gone. What replaced him is someone she never really understood.

That was always the flaw in her thinking.

She used to say she knew me better than I knew myself. At the time, that statement carried weight. When you grow up in that environment, you start to believe it. You question your own instincts. You defer to their version of you because it’s been repeated so often that it feels like truth.

But it wasn’t insight. It was control.

Narcissists don’t know you better than you know yourself—they define you in a way that makes you easier to manage. They assign roles. They tell you who you are, what you’re capable of, what you’ll never do, and what you’ll always need from them. And over time, if you’re not careful, you start living inside that version.

That’s the real damage.

Because once you accept their definition of you, you stop discovering who you actually are.

When I walked away, that was the first thing that broke—the illusion that she understood me. She didn’t. She understood the version of me that existed under her control. The moment I stepped outside of that, I became someone she couldn’t predict, couldn’t manipulate, and couldn’t contain.

That’s why she lost.

Life is a game of cards, and with me, she overplayed her hand. She thought she knew the cards I was holding. She thought she knew how I’d play them.

She was wrong.

She had no idea who I was.

And she could not destroy me.

I was stronger than she ever was.

And here’s the part I understand now, even if I don’t excuse it.

Her narcissism didn’t come out of nowhere. It came from a fracture early in her life. When my grandfather had tuberculosis and my grandmother couldn’t care for two young children, my mother was sent away to live with wealthy relatives for six months. When she came back, she told my grandmother she wasn’t her mother anymore.

That moment mattered.

I believe now that she tasted a different life—one with stability, comfort, maybe even affection—and then had it taken away. In Communist Romania, my grandmother made the only decision she could. It was the right decision.

But choices, even the right ones, have consequences.

And I paid a high price for that history.

I grew up under the rule of someone shaped by that fracture—someone who spent a lifetime trying to control what she couldn’t understand.

So I chose distance. I chose boundaries. I chose peace.

And what came after that decision was everything.

Health. Stability. A real marriage. A real life. The kind of success that doesn’t come from proving someone wrong, but from finally living without their weight on your shoulders.

Recently, I came across something that reminded me how little things change for people who never look inward. My mother reached out to someone she had long ignored—someone she had even disparaged in the past. Not to reconnect in any meaningful way, but to seek attention, sympathy, validation.

But this time, it didn’t go the way she expected.

My name came up because my friend knew the story—and knew exactly how to push her buttons. Not out of cruelty, but out of truth. Just enough to remind her of reality. And just like that, the narrative she was trying to create fell apart.

That’s the thing about living honestly—you don’t have to chase validation. It finds its way back to you.

Our lives are the sum of our choices.

She made hers. She’s unhappy.

I made mine. I’m happy.

And I’m still here.

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Your Recordkeeper Isn’t Your TPA, Even If They Act Like It

Plan sponsors love the idea of simplicity. One provider, one platform, one point of contact. The recordkeeper says they can “handle the TPA work,” and suddenly it feels like you’ve eliminated a layer. Cleaner, cheaper, easier. Until it isn’t.

The problem is that recordkeepers aren’t built to be TPAs, they’re built to process. They take data in, push data out, and rely on how the system is configured. That works great when everything is standard. It falls apart when your plan isn’t. Eligibility nuances, compensation definitions, allocation conditions, these aren’t just data points, they require interpretation. That’s where a real TPA lives.

What I see all the time is sponsors assuming the recordkeeper will catch issues. They won’t. If the payroll feed is wrong, if eligibility is coded incorrectly, if a provision is misunderstood, the system will process it wrong every single time. There’s no second set of eyes reviewing it because the same entity is running everything. Integration doesn’t eliminate risk, it concentrates it.

And here’s the part that gets missed. When something goes wrong, the sponsor owns it. Not the recordkeeper. Not the bundled provider. The sponsor. That means corrective contributions, notices, and time spent fixing something that could have been caught early by independent review.

There’s nothing wrong with bundled services if you understand what you’re getting. But thinking your recordkeeper is acting as a true TPA is where sponsors get into trouble. Processing is not the same as oversight. And in this business, oversight is everything. Continue reading

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When a Good Partnership Ends Over the Wrong Reason

I had a plan provider sponsoring many of my events. It was a great relationship, the kind that works because both sides understand the value. Then in one city, the local salesperson dropped out. Not once, but twice. His reason was that I charge admission. The same admission I’ve been charging since 2018.

The Fee Was Never the Issue

Let’s be honest about what the fee is. It’s not a revenue play, it’s a commitment device. Free events get treated like free. People register, cancel last minute, or just don’t show. When someone has even a small amount of skin in the game, behavior changes. Attendance improves, engagement improves, and the room is filled with people who actually want to be there. That’s been proven over time.

Local Sales Doesn’t Think Like Sponsorship

The disconnect wasn’t the model, it was the mindset. Local salespeople are focused on control. They want to invite who they want, when they want, without friction. A paid event introduces friction. Even if I’ve always said I’ll comp attendees, the fact that it’s not automatic changes the dynamic. It’s no longer fully in their hands.

It Was Never About the Money

What made it clear this wasn’t about dollars was simple. He didn’t want the money back. If cost were the issue, you take the refund and move on. This was about principle, or at least perception. Charging admission didn’t fit how he thought events should work, and instead of adapting, he walked away.

Optics Over Outcomes

There’s also the internal story. It’s easier to explain a free event than one where attendees pay, even if the latter delivers better results. Sometimes decisions aren’t made on effectiveness, they’re made on how they sound in a meeting. That’s where good ideas go to die.

The Lesson

Not every good relationship survives local execution. What works at a higher level doesn’t always translate on the ground. The model didn’t change. The results didn’t change. The only thing that changed was who was evaluating it.

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