Every plan sponsor committee has one.
The loudest person in the room. The one with the strongest opinions. The one who “has experience” — usually from a prior employer, a cousin’s plan, or something they once read on LinkedIn.
And far too often, that person is also the least informed about how fiduciary responsibility actually works.
ERISA does not reward confidence. It rewards prudence. Courts don’t care who spoke the most, who dominated the meeting, or who shut everyone else down. They care about whether decisions were made through a reasoned, informed process. Volume is not a substitute for diligence.
The danger isn’t that committee members disagree. Disagreement is healthy. The danger is when one voice crowds out inquiry. When questions stop being asked because “we’ve always done it this way.” When vendors aren’t challenged because someone insists they’re “fine.” When the committee defers to confidence instead of evidence.
Fiduciary decisions should be built on data, benchmarking, expert input, and documented deliberation. That means asking uncomfortable questions. It means slowing down decisions that feel rushed. It means being willing to say, “I don’t know — let’s find out.”
Plan sponsors also need to remember this: fiduciary liability is individual. Being outvoted doesn’t protect you if you sat silently while bad decisions were made. Silence can look a lot like agreement when minutes are reviewed years later.
Strong committees don’t eliminate dominant personalities. They manage them. A good chair keeps meetings structured, ensures every member is heard, and forces decisions back to process, not personalities. Advisors and ERISA counsel should be facilitators, not spectators.
The goal isn’t harmony. The goal is governance.
Because when the loudest voice is wrong, and no one challenges it, the fiduciary risk belongs to everyone in the room.