How DC Plan Sponsors Can Engage Diverse Participant Personas

Millennials often say their biggest challenge is being lumped into one category, as if everyone’s needs and aspirations are identical. Plan participants have a similar problem of being bucketed too broadly. But just because they share the same retirement plan doesn’t mean their backgrounds—and investment savvy—are homogenous.

Every participant is different. But despite their differences, participants can still be grouped into three personas, according to our research, Inside the Minds of Plan Participants. If fact, based on responses to 14 investment-related statements, three groups have consistently emerged: Capable, Eager and Conservative. We think plan sponsors can boost engagement and confidence by engaging each persona on its distinctive terms (Display).

Defining Three Distinct Investor Personas

The three groups—roughly of equal proportions based on years of surveys—have specific characteristics beyond demographics. Each persona reflects an investment style, learning preference, engagement level, risk profile and other qualities:

  • Capable – Confident, knowledgeable investors who score high on our financial literacy test and have higher plan account balances
  • Eager – Younger participants with greater enthusiasm and confidence but lower literacy scores, and—likely because they skew younger—lower account balances
  • Conservative – Cautious, diligent savers with lower confidence and investing acumen, yet they may know (or need) more than they realize

Stronger Engagement Requires Targeted Outreach

Broad-reaching plan communications are a good start, especially if the messaging is straightforward, uses storytelling visuals and always includes a call to action. But the path to better retirement planning engagement, and outcomes, also requires hands-on messaging.