Robo-Adviser vs. Human Adviser

Which plan participants use which service?
Reported by Angela Marinakis

We know that most retirement plan participants need help investing. To get that help, they may turn to any of three options: their plan’s adviser, an automated service through a provider or a private adviser.

Forty percent of those who responded to the 2020 PLANSPONSOR Participant Survey, fielded September 10 through 16, use either a human or a “robo”-adviser for assistance with their defined contribution (DC) employer retirement plan assets.

Thirty percent of respondents with human advisers and 10% with robo-advisers made no changes to their retirement plans in the last 12 months. Fewer participants with a human adviser likely made changes to their plan because their ages were skewed closer to retirement age. Thirty percent of people with a human adviser were 50 or older, while only 15% with a robo-adviser were 50 or older.

Respondents who use a human adviser vs. a robo-adviser expect to retire at a younger age—i.e., 42% vs. 33% plan to retire by 65. They also have higher total retirement savings—48% vs. 35% have saved over $250,000.

Human advisers may find room to grow if they can cater to current market segments that appear to be doing well with robo-advisers. Sixty-one percent of respondents who rely on robo-advisers were ages 23 through 39, vs. 35% who use a human adviser.

Also, a larger proportion of respondents who use robo-advisers are minorities—e.g., 18% Hispanic and 13% Black—compared with 10% and 6%, respectively, who have human advisers. This suggests advisers may have success with Millennial or early Generation Z savers and minority groups. Further, 23% of respondents do not currently work with an adviser but say they plan to in the future.

Use the Services of a Financial Adviser

  • Yes, human adviser
  • Yes, robo adviser
  • No, but plan to
  • No
  • Unsure

Expected Retirement Age

Use a human adviser
Use a robo-adviser
≤60 years
27%
16%
62.5 years
15%
17%
65 years
28%
38%
67.5 years
13%
16%
≥70 years
17%
13%

Retirement Plan Actions Taken in the Last 12 Months

Human Adviser

Robo-Adviser

Increased contribution rate

43%

48%

Changed investments

16%

11%

Rebalanced to match target allocation

15%

24%

Calculated retirement savings needs using online tools

14%

10%

Stopped contributing to the plan

9%

17%

Decreased contribution rate

8%

13%

No changes

30%

10%



Retirement Savings Across All Designated Accounts

Use a human adviser
Use a robo-adviser
<$50,000
27%
16%
$50,000–$250,000
15%
17%
>$250,000
28%
38%
Source: 2020 PLANSPONSOR Participant Survey
Tags
defined contribution plan, retirement plan participant investing, robo-adviser,
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