The Wrong Frame for Retirement Planning
Most conversations about retirement planning start in the same place: returns, balances, and portfolio growth. Those things matter. But for Avient employees who have families depending on them, chasing the best possible return is not the most important goal. The more important goal is building a plan that holds together when something goes wrong.
Job loss, serious illness, a market downturn in the first years of retirement, a long-term care need that arrives earlier than expected. Any of these can unravel a retirement plan that was built for ideal conditions. The families who come through those moments in good shape are not necessarily the ones with the highest balances. They are the ones whose plan was built with the hard scenarios in mind.
At The Retirement Group, we work with Avient employees who have spent decades building financial resources. The planning conversations that produce the most durable results are the ones that go beyond the numbers and ask: what does this plan need to survive?
Five Areas That Determine Whether a Plan Actually Holds
A comprehensive retirement plan for Avient employees covers five interconnected areas. When all five are working together, the plan creates genuine stability. When one is missing or underdeveloped, it creates a vulnerability that the others cannot always compensate for.
| Planning Area | The Core Question | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Income | Where does money come from when you stop working? | Determines day-to-day stability |
| Investments | Is the portfolio structured for the withdrawal phase? | Protects against sequence-of-returns risk |
| Taxes | Are you drawing from accounts in the right order? | Can add years to how long money lasts |
| Healthcare | What happens if a serious health event occurs? | Prevents one crisis from becoming a financial crisis |
| Legacy | What do you want to pass on, and how? | Protects your family and your intentions |
Most Avient employees have done some work in each of these areas. What is less common is a plan that coordinates them deliberately, so that decisions in one area reinforce rather than undermine the others.
Building a Reliable Income Foundation
Income planning for Avient employees starts with identifying what portion of retirement spending will come from sources that do not depend on market performance. Social Security, a pension if one exists, and any annuity income fall into this category. Portfolio withdrawals do not.
The goal is not to eliminate portfolio withdrawals. It is to reduce the pressure on them. When a significant portion of fixed expenses is covered by guaranteed or predictable income, Avient employees can afford to be patient with their investment portfolio during periods of market volatility.
Social Security timing decisions matter more than many Avient employees realize. Claiming at 62 versus waiting until 70 can produce a difference of 75 percent or more in monthly benefit. For a married couple coordinating two claims, the decision affects not just current income but survivor benefits for whichever spouse outlives the other.
Structuring Investments for the Withdrawal Years
During the accumulation phase, the primary investment risk Avient employees face is volatility around a long-term target. During the distribution phase, the risk changes. A significant market decline in the early years of retirement, while withdrawals are being taken, can permanently reduce a portfolio's ability to sustain income even if the market eventually recovers.
This sequence-of-returns risk is why investment strategy in retirement is not simply a more conservative version of the accumulation strategy. It requires deliberate attention to how the portfolio is structured across different time horizons, and how withdrawals will be funded during down markets without forcing the sale of depressed assets.
Avient employees who built wealth by staying fully invested through volatility sometimes need to rethink that approach when the portfolio shifts from growing to distributing. The strategies that build wealth are not always the same ones that protect it.
The Tax Layer Most Avient Employees Underestimate
Tax planning in retirement is an area where Avient employees consistently have more opportunity than they use. The sequence in which accounts are drawn down, the timing of Roth conversions, and the structuring of charitable giving can each have meaningful effects on the after-tax value of a retirement portfolio.
Required minimum distributions force taxable income starting at a specific age, and for Avient employees with substantial tax-deferred balances, those distributions can push total income into higher brackets and trigger Medicare premium surcharges. Strategic withdrawals in the years before RMDs begin can reduce that exposure significantly.
At The Retirement Group, tax planning is integrated into the retirement plan from the beginning, not added as an afterthought. For most Avient employees, the lifetime tax savings from a well-coordinated strategy are substantial.
Healthcare Planning That Accounts for the Real Costs
Healthcare is the retirement expense that most Avient employees underestimate. Medicare covers a meaningful portion of routine care, but it was never designed to eliminate financial exposure entirely. Long-term care, specialized treatment, home health assistance, and extended care in assisted living facilities can generate costs that go well beyond what standard coverage addresses.
For Avient employees who spent decades building savings, the financial risk is not usually catastrophic illness that arrives without warning. It is the slower accumulation of care costs over years, combined with the assumption that existing savings will handle it.
A retirement plan that includes a realistic healthcare reserve, a considered position on long-term care coverage, and income flexibility to absorb higher-than-expected medical costs is significantly more durable than one that treats healthcare as a standard budget line.
Legacy Planning as a Practical Decision, Not a Distant One
For Avient employees with meaningful assets, legacy planning is not just about what happens after death. It is about making decisions now that reduce friction, tax exposure, and family uncertainty later.
Beneficiary designations, trust structures, and estate documents are the foundation. But the planning conversations that produce the best outcomes tend to go beyond the legal documents. How are assets titled? What accounts go through probate and which do not? For families with significant tax-deferred balances, how will inherited accounts be handled under current distribution rules?
Avient employees who have the estate conversation before it is urgent have more options and more time to implement decisions thoughtfully. The ones who wait until a health crisis forces the issue often find that their choices are more constrained than they expected.
What a Plan Built for Stability Actually Looks Like
The households that navigate retirement most successfully are not the ones with the highest balances or the most complex strategies. They are the ones with plans that address the predictable risks clearly, leave room for the unpredictable ones, and get reviewed often enough to stay current with changing circumstances.
For Avient employees, that means treating retirement planning not as a single event but as an ongoing process. It means asking not just what return is this portfolio likely to produce, but what does this plan need to survive a difficult sequence of events?
That is a different question, and it tends to produce a more useful answer. The families who build that kind of plan are the ones whose children grow up without ever having to hear that the financial picture is in crisis. That outcome does not happen by accident. It is the result of deliberate planning, done early enough to matter.
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The families who come through retirement with their financial picture intact are not necessarily the ones with the largest balances. They are the ones who built plans that addressed the real risks, not just the comfortable ones. For Avient employees, that kind of planning is accessible. The question is whether it gets done before it becomes urgent.
Retirement planning for Avient employees must account for protecting spouses and beneficiaries. Without a pension, the 401(k) is the primary vehicle for family protection. Proper beneficiary designations—ensuring spouses or designated heirs receive the balance—are essential. An 401(k) with clear beneficiaries passes outside the will and avoids probate, reaching family members quickly.
Life insurance through Avient—often available as group term or supplemental life—provides an additional layer of family protection. Group rates are typically lower than individual policies, and employer-paid premiums for basic coverage are tax-free. Most employees can convert group coverage to an individual policy upon separation, maintaining protection even after leaving the company. For single-earner households or those with significant family financial obligations, supplementing Avient's group coverage with individual life insurance ensures that survivor income needs are met even if the company's benefit is limited. Finally, coordinate beneficiary designations across all accounts—pension, 401(k), HSA, and life insurance—to ensure that retirement assets flow to intended heirs. Inconsistent or outdated designations can inadvertently redirect substantial sums away from a spouse or children, so regular reviews (at least every 3-5 years or after major life events) are critical.
What is the purpose of Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan?
The purpose of Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan is to help employees save for retirement by allowing them to contribute a portion of their salary into a tax-advantaged account.
How can employees enroll in Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan?
Employees can enroll in Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan by accessing the enrollment portal through the company's HR website or by contacting the HR department for assistance.
What types of contributions can employees make to Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan?
Employees can make pre-tax contributions, Roth (after-tax) contributions, and in some cases, catch-up contributions if they are age 50 or older in Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan.
Does Avient offer a company match on 401(k) contributions?
Yes, Avient offers a company match on employee contributions to the 401(k) Savings Plan, which helps to enhance overall retirement savings.
What is the vesting schedule for Avient's 401(k) company match?
The vesting schedule for Avient's 401(k) company match typically follows a graded schedule, meaning employees earn ownership of the company match over a period of time.
Can employees take loans against their 401(k) accounts at Avient?
Yes, Avient allows employees to take loans against their 401(k) accounts, subject to certain limits and repayment terms as outlined in the plan documents.
What investment options are available in Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan?
Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan offers a variety of investment options, including mutual funds, target-date funds, and other investment vehicles to suit different risk tolerances.
How often can employees change their contribution amounts to Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan?
Employees can change their contribution amounts to Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan at any time, typically through the online portal or by contacting HR.
What happens to an employee's 401(k) account if they leave Avient?
If an employee leaves Avient, they can choose to leave their funds in the plan, roll them over to another qualified retirement account, or cash out, subject to taxes and penalties.
Are there any fees associated with Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan?
Yes, there may be administrative fees and investment-related fees associated with Avient's 401(k) Savings Plan, which are disclosed in the plan documents.



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