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You Don’t Have a Bad 401(k) — You Have a Bad Process

Most plan sponsors don’t wake up thinking, “Let’s mismanage the 401(k) today.” Yet bad outcomes happen all the time — excessive fees, underperforming investments, compliance failures, and, eventually, fiduciary exposure.

In my experience, the problem usually isn’t the plan. It’s the process.

A “bad” 401(k) is almost always the result of decisions made without structure, documentation, or follow-through. Committees meet irregularly. Reviews are rushed. Vendors are left on autopilot. Benchmarks are outdated or nonexistent. Changes happen reactively instead of strategically.

ERISA doesn’t require perfection. It requires prudence. And prudence is about how decisions are made, not whether every decision turns out to be optimal in hindsight.

Courts don’t ask whether your plan was the cheapest or the best performing. They ask whether you had a reasoned process: Did you review fees regularly? Did you monitor investments against stated criteria? Did you understand what your providers were doing — and what they weren’t? Did you document your deliberations?

Too many sponsors confuse delegation with abdication. Hiring a recordkeeper, advisor, or TPA does not transfer fiduciary responsibility. It simply changes how that responsibility must be exercised. Oversight is still required. Questions still need to be asked. Decisions still need to be made — and recorded.

A strong process doesn’t require endless meetings or excessive paperwork. It requires consistency. Clear roles. Defined review cycles. Written policies that are actually followed. And the discipline to revisit decisions before they become problems.

If your plan feels “stuck,” “messy,” or risky, don’t start by firing vendors or changing investments. Start by fixing the process.

Because a good process can rescue a mediocre plan. A bad process will eventually ruin a good one.

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