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How Advisors Can Stop Competing Only on Investments

For decades the advisor sales pitch sounded like a broken record: better funds, better performance, better returns. The problem is that every advisor says the same thing, and in a world of index funds and target-date glidepaths, “better investments” isn’t a strategy anymore—it’s background noise.

Plan sponsors don’t wake up worried about alpha. They worry about failed ADP tests, angry employees who can’t get a distribution processed, and whether the Department of Labor will knock on their door. If advisors keep leading with investment charts, they’re solving a problem most sponsors don’t think they have.

The advisors winning business today compete on process, not product. They show sponsors how committee meetings should run, how fees get benchmarked, how participant education actually changes behavior, and how to document decisions so a fiduciary can sleep at night. That’s value an index fund can’t replace.

Think about what really causes sponsors to fire advisors. It’s rarely a fund trailing the S&P by 40 basis points. It’s unanswered emails, confusing payroll files, or a provider team that disappears after the sale. Service is the investment now. Governance is the differentiator.

Advisors need to sound less like portfolio managers and more like risk managers. Talk about cybersecurity. Talk about eligibility errors and late deposits. Bring a calendar that maps out the entire year—testing, notices, fee reviews, education meetings. When you help a sponsor run a better plan, the investments take care of themselves.

None of this means investments don’t matter. They do. But they’re the price of admission, not the reason to hire you. The advisor who wins is the one who walks into a meeting and says, “I’m here to help you be a great fiduciary,” instead of, “Let me show you my five-star funds.”

Stop competing on what everyone can copy. Start competing on what only a real partner can deliver: competence, communication, and a process that protects both the sponsor and the people counting on that 401(k).

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