Retirement Outlook? Bad. Can the Web Help?
Retirement Outlook? Bad. Can the Web Help?
New Research Identifies Which Retirement Firm Web Sites Are Making Retirement Planning and Saving Easier.
New York, NY (PRWEB) July 12, 2006 -- Most Americans are woefully behind on their retirement savings. In theory, the web should offer some hope. The web should allow people to become better informed about retirement planning. The web should make it easy to get started with the right kind of retirement account, thus making saving easier. Unfortunately, the web sites of most firms offering retirement solutions make learning about retirement options much harder than it needs to be.
According to new research released today by Change Sciences Group,
more than 50% of sites offering retirement solutions make it hard to
find the retirement section of the site, let alone make use of it. For
people that make it to the retirement section of the site, about half
of the sites do not provide the most basic information about retirement
fundamentals, such as finding clear, easy to read definitions of
account types, or getting a clear definition of "tax deferral".
What about Full Service?
Most full service brokerages, while sometimes providing helpful content, make it extremely difficult to set up an account, forcing people who may just want to roll over funds to request a printed form, fill it out and fax it back. Most banks don't do much better.
To jump to report details visit:
http://changesciences.com/cgi-bin/reports.html
"Most sites are either cluttered up with too much content that's not written for the web, or too Spartan to be of any use," said Steve Ellis, a Change Sciences partner. "For brokerages, full service or discount, not having a meaningful retirement web strategy simply turns away a wide range of prospects."
There are some bright spots. A handful of sites have taken
significant steps toward making their retirement sites easy to use and
informative. The best site is more than three and a half times better
than the worse site, and more than two times better than the average
site. The three best retirement sites overall are:
1. Vanguard
2. Wells Fargo
3. TD Ameritrade
Other sites covered in the report include: A.G. Edwards, AIG SunAmerica, AIG VALIC, American Century, Ameriprise, AXA Advisors, Bank of America, Charles Schwab, Chase, Citibank, E*Trade, Edward Jones, Fidelity, Key Bank, Marshall & Ilsley, Merrill Lynch, MetLife, Morgan Stanley, National City, Piper Jaffray, PNC Investments, Prudential, Scottrade, Smith Barney, SunTrust, T. Rowe Price, TD Ameritrade, TIAA-CREF, US Bank, Vanguard, Wachovia, WaMu Financial, Washington Mutual, Wells Fargo Advantage Funds, and Wells Fargo.
For a detailed research overview including more findings, sample
data, the report table of contents, and the complete ranking of all 35
sites visit:
http://changesciences.com/cgi-bin/reports.html
About Change Sciences
Change Sciences was founded in January 2000 to help companies improve
online business by basing decisions on how people use technology while
they live, work, and play.
If you would like more information about this topic or would like to talk with Steve Ellis, please call Kathy Berona at 888-864-1160.
Contact:
Kathy Berona
Change Sciences Group, Inc.
888-864-1160
www.changesciences.com
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