Benefits That Attract the Right People, Retain Your Best People, and Don't Destroy Your Budget.
Your benefits package is not just a line item on a P&L. It is a recruiting tool, a retention strategy, a culture signal, and a direct reflection of how you value the people who build your business every day. Pinnacle Financial Group designs group benefits strategies that serve all three goals simultaneously.
The Benefits Landscape Has Changed. Most Employers Are Still Using a 2010 Strategy.
The way businesses fund, structure, and deliver employee benefits has shifted dramatically over the last decade. New plan architectures — level-funded, self-funded, ICHRA — have opened significant cost savings and flexibility for employers who know how to access them. Most businesses have not updated their approach and are leaving meaningful money on the table by defaulting to the same fully insured group health plan they have had for years.
A properly designed benefits package does not require choosing between affordability and quality. It requires the right plan architecture matched to the right workforce — and an advisor with the access and the analytical process to find it.
- Renewal increases of 8–15% annually with no change in benefit design
- No claims experience analysis or workforce demographic review
- ICHRA and level-funded options never evaluated
- Ancillary suite assembled reactively, not designed strategically
- ACA compliance gaps that carry penalties of $2,970 per employee per year
How Pinnacle Financial Group Designs Group Benefits Strategies.
Pinnacle does not approach group benefits as a commodity transaction. We approach it as a workforce strategy problem inside a larger business planning framework.
Employer Fact-Finding and Workforce Analysis
We begin by understanding the full picture: your current plan structure, employee census demographics, current premium spend and renewal history, your workforce's geographic distribution, and your recruiting and retention challenges. We do not quote a plan before we understand what problem the plan needs to solve.
Plan Architecture Design
Based on fact-finding results, we design a benefits architecture — the framework of plan types, funding mechanisms, and benefit layers that fit your workforce. This is where we evaluate fully insured vs. level-funded vs. ICHRA vs. hybrid structures, before any carrier is involved.
Carrier Market Comparison
Once architecture is defined, we conduct a full market comparison across the carriers appointed for each plan type. We evaluate premium rates, network breadth, formulary quality, stop-loss terms, and administrative capabilities — not just the lowest quote.
Ancillary Benefits Integration
Core medical coverage is the foundation, but a complete benefits strategy also addresses dental, vision, group life, short-term disability, and voluntary supplemental coverages through Aflac and Allstate. We design the ancillary suite as an integrated layer — not an afterthought added at enrollment.
Implementation, Communication & Enrollment
We manage the implementation process, coordinate with selected carriers, and assist with employee communication and enrollment. Benefits only produce recruiting and retention value when employees understand and appreciate what they have. We make sure they do.
Ongoing Management & Annual Renewal Strategy
We begin renewal planning 90 days in advance — not 30. We analyze the prior year's claims experience, benchmark the current plan against the market, evaluate whether the architecture still fits the workforce, and develop a proactive renewal strategy before the carrier sends its rate increase.
The Full Spectrum of Group Benefits Offerings.
Pinnacle is independent and multi-carrier across every category below. We have no obligation to recommend any particular carrier or plan type. We match the solution to the employer.
Group Medical — Traditional Fully Insured
The most familiar group health plan structure. The employer and employees share premium costs. The insurance carrier assumes all claims risk. Premiums are fixed for the plan year, providing cost certainty — but offering no upside if the group has a healthy, low-claims year.
Level-Funded and Self-Funded Plans
Level-funded plans occupy the middle ground between fully insured and self-funded. The employer pays a fixed monthly amount covering a claims fund, administrative fees, and stop-loss insurance. If claims come in under the funded amount, the employer receives a refund at year end. Healthy groups consistently outperform their fully insured equivalents.
ICHRA — Individual Coverage HRA
The Individual Coverage HRA is a federally authorized employer benefit that allows businesses to reimburse employees tax-free for individual health insurance premiums. Instead of sponsoring a group plan, you set a fixed monthly reimbursement allowance per employee class. Employees purchase their own individual coverage. The employer bears zero claims risk and has complete cost control.
Ancillary Benefits — Aflac and Allstate Supplemental Plans
Supplemental benefits through Aflac and Allstate provide employees with financial protection for specific events that major medical coverage does not fully address. These products are typically 100% employee-funded through payroll deduction — costing the employer nothing while adding meaningful perceived value to the total benefits package.
| Product | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Accident Insurance | Out-of-pocket costs from accidents: ER visits, fractures, dislocations, ambulance, and follow-up care |
| Cancer Insurance | Diagnosis, treatment, hospitalization, and recovery costs associated with cancer |
| Hospital Indemnity | Daily cash benefit for each day of inpatient hospitalization, regardless of other coverage |
| Critical Illness | Lump-sum cash benefit upon diagnosis of heart attack, stroke, organ failure, or other covered critical conditions |
| Short-Term Disability (Voluntary) | Income replacement for employees unable to work due to illness or injury — separate from group STD |
Group Dental Insurance
Employer-sponsored dental coverage is one of the most consistently valued benefits among employees. We design group dental plans around your workforce's needs, from basic preventive DHMO structures to comprehensive DPPO plans with orthodontic riders.
Group Vision Insurance
Vision coverage is the lowest-cost, highest-appreciation benefit most employers can offer. Annual eye exams, prescription lenses, and frames are covered for a minimal monthly premium — employer-paid or shared — making it one of the highest return-on-investment benefit additions available.
Group Life Insurance
Employer-provided group life insurance — typically offered as 1x, 1.5x, or 2x annual salary — is a tax-deductible employer expense and a meaningful employee benefit. We design base employer-paid coverage alongside voluntary supplemental life options that allow employees to purchase additional coverage at group rates.
Three Structured Comparisons to Guide Your Benefits Strategy Decision.
| Plan Type | How Premiums Work | Claims Risk | Cost Predictability | Typical Group Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Fully Insured | Fixed monthly premium to carrier | Carrier assumes 100% | High — costs known at renewal | 2 to 50 employees |
| Level-Funded | Fixed monthly payment: claims fund + admin + stop-loss | Shared — stop-loss covers excess | Moderate — refund possible if claims are low | 25 to 200 employees |
| Self-Funded | Employer funds actual claims monthly | Employer assumes primary risk (stop-loss required) | Lower — variable with claims activity | 50+ employees |
| ICHRA | Employer sets fixed monthly reimbursement per employee class | None — employer bears no claims risk | High — employer controls total cost ceiling | Any size |
| Benefit Layer | Employer Contribution | Employee Cost | Portability | Underwriting |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Core Medical (Fully Insured) | Typically 50–80% of employee premium | Balance of premium + deductibles/copays | No — tied to employer | Group underwriting |
| Core Medical (ICHRA) | Fixed monthly allowance per employee class | Premium above allowance + out-of-pocket costs | Yes — individual policy owned by employee | Individual market |
| Ancillary (Aflac/Allstate) | Optional — often 100% employee-funded | Full voluntary premium | Portability varies by carrier | Simplified issue or GI at enrollment |
| Group Dental | Typically 50–100% employer-paid | Balance of premium + cost shares | No — terminates with employment | Guaranteed issue |
| Group Vision | Typically 50–100% employer-paid | Balance of premium + copays | No — terminates with employment | Guaranteed issue |
| Group Life (Base) | Typically 100% employer-paid | No cost for base amount | No — typically not portable | GI up to plan maximum |
| Short-Term Disability (Vol.) | Optional co-fund | Full or partial premium | No — group contract | GI during open enrollment |
| Category | Small Business (2–25) | Mid-Market (26–100) | Enterprise (101+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recommended Core Medical | Fully insured group or ICHRA | Level-funded or fully insured | Self-funded or level-funded |
| Ancillary Strategy | Aflac/Allstate voluntary suite | Aflac/Allstate + group STD | Full ancillary platform + EAP |
| Dental | Group DPPO or DHMO | Group DPPO with ortho rider | Self-funded dental or large-group DPPO |
| Vision | VSP or EyeMed group plan | VSP or EyeMed group plan | Large-group vision platform |
| Group Life | 1× salary guaranteed issue | 1× to 2× salary + supplemental | 2× salary + executive supplemental |
| Employer Cost Levers | ICHRA allowance cap, contribution % | Level-fund claims refund, plan design | Stop-loss structure, wellness programs |
| Compliance Complexity | Lower — under 50 FTEs, not ACA large employer | Moderate — ACA applicable large employer | High — ACA reporting, ERISA, COBRA, HIPAA |
Benefits Are Not a Commodity. They Are a Competitive Weapon.
In South Florida's employment market — where physicians, business owners, and professional services firms are all competing for the same talent pool — a well-designed benefits package is not just a nice-to-have. It is a structural advantage in every hiring conversation and every retention decision.
According to Glassdoor, 57% of job seekers rank benefits and perks among their top considerations when evaluating an offer. The Society for Human Resource Management reports that 36% of employees have left a job primarily because of dissatisfaction with benefits.
The retention calculus is equally clear. Replacing an employee costs an estimated 50% to 200% of their annual salary when accounting for recruiting, onboarding, productivity loss, and training. A benefits package that retains one mid-level employee per year pays for the entire benefits program many times over.
Beyond recruiting and retention, the financial case is direct: premium overspend in a fully insured plan that should be level-funded flows directly to the carrier as profit. ACA compliance failures carry penalties of $2,970 per full-time employee per year. A professionally designed benefits strategy is not a cost center — it is a financial performance lever.
Pinnacle vs. the Generic Approach to Group Benefits.
Most group benefits brokers operate as order takers — they quote what the employer asks for, renew what is already in place, and move on. The difference at Pinnacle is the depth of the analysis and the architecture-first approach.
| Planning Area | Generic Broker Approach | Pinnacle Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Needs Analysis | Census submitted, quote requested | Full employer fact-finding: workforce demographics, claims history, renewal history, competitive benchmarking, and business objectives |
| Plan Architecture | Default to fully insured group plan | Architecture-first: evaluate fully insured, level-funded, ICHRA, and hybrid structures before selecting carriers |
| Carrier Access | One or two preferred carriers | Fully independent, multi-carrier comparison across all major group medical, dental, vision, and ancillary markets |
| Ancillary Strategy | Add-on products offered at enrollment | Ancillary benefits designed as an integrated layer of the total benefits package, not an afterthought |
| ICHRA & Emerging Plans | Rarely offered or evaluated | ICHRA, level-funded, and self-funded options evaluated for every employer group above 25 employees |
| Renewal Management | 30-day renewal notification | 90-day renewal strategy: claims analysis, market benchmark, architecture re-evaluation, and proactive alternatives |
| Employee Communication | Carrier enrollment materials only | Enrollment support and benefits communication designed to maximize employee understanding and appreciation |
| Compliance Support | Basic ACA notice distribution | ACA compliance review, ERISA obligations, and COBRA coordination guidance as part of the ongoing relationship |
The Employers Who Benefit Most from Pinnacle's Group Benefits Strategy.
Physician-owned practices, dental groups, and healthcare organizations face a unique benefits challenge: they employ a wide range of staff — physicians, NPs, PAs, nurses, medical assistants, and administrative personnel — with vastly different income levels and benefits expectations. We design tiered benefits architectures that serve the full spectrum of a healthcare organization's workforce while controlling the employer's total benefits spend.
Law firms, accounting firms, financial services companies, and consulting groups compete for credentialed talent in markets where compensation alone is not sufficient differentiation. A well-designed benefits package — particularly one that includes strong ancillary coverage and voluntary benefits — consistently outperforms raw salary offers in retention and offer acceptance decisions within this segment.
The 5-to-100 employee segment is the most underserved in the group benefits market. Groups in this range are too small to attract the attention of large national brokers, yet too large to benefit from the simplest individual market solutions. This is where architecture expertise — knowing when ICHRA beats a fully insured plan, when level-funding is the answer, and when a traditional group plan still makes sense — produces the most significant value for an employer.
Many employers have renewed the same fully insured group health plan for five or more consecutive years without ever evaluating whether a level-funded or ICHRA structure would deliver equivalent or better coverage at lower cost. For groups with healthy, younger workforces, the difference between a well-designed level-funded plan and a comparable fully insured plan can be 20% to 40% in annual premium — with the additional possibility of a year-end claims refund if the group has a good year.
Startups, growth-stage businesses, and companies restructuring after a leadership change frequently need to build a benefits program from scratch or redesign one that no longer fits. We design complete benefits architectures for these situations — starting from the workforce analysis rather than from an existing plan — and implement them with carrier coordination, employee communication, and enrollment support handled in house.
What South Florida Business Owners Say About Their Pinnacle Benefits Strategy.
We had been renewing the same group health plan for four consecutive years, watching our premiums increase every year without any change in benefit quality. Ricky Gonzalez conducted a full benefits analysis and moved us to a level-funded plan that saved us significantly — and when we had a good claims year, we actually received a partial refund. That was a concept our previous broker had never introduced us to.
As our practice grew from 12 to 40 employees, our benefits package stopped making sense. We were offering the same plan we had designed when we were a much smaller operation. Pinnacle redesigned our entire benefits strategy — core medical, dental, vision, and a voluntary benefits suite through Aflac — and we now offer a package that actually helps us recruit the staff we need at the competitive levels we're operating at.

Julio (Ricky) Gonzalez, RMIP™, CMIP®
Ricky Gonzalez is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Pinnacle Financial Group, Inc., a boutique financial planning and insurance advisory firm headquartered in Weston, Florida. Group benefits strategy is one of the foundational services Pinnacle provides to business owner clients. Ricky approaches it not as a product placement exercise but as a workforce strategy problem — integrated with the employer's broader financial planning, executive compensation design, and business succession objectives.
His clients in Weston and across South Florida work directly with Ricky — not with a junior account manager or a call center. The same advisor who understands your benefits strategy also understands your retirement planning, your key person coverage, and your business succession structure. That integration is what separates Pinnacle from a standalone benefits broker.
Serving Business Owners and Employers Across South Florida.
Pinnacle Financial Group is headquartered at 2625 Weston Rd. in Weston, Florida. Group benefits strategy and employer-sponsored benefits design services are available throughout South Florida and beyond.
We are also licensed to serve clients in multiple states beyond Florida. Contact us to confirm availability in your state.
Frequently Asked Questions About Group Benefits Design in Florida.
Your Benefits Package Should Be Working as Hard for Your Business as Your People Work for You.
A well-designed benefits strategy attracts better candidates, retains your highest performers, and controls costs that have likely been growing without meaningful review. Pinnacle Financial Group offers a complimentary, private Group Benefits Consultation — no forms to fill out in advance, no sales process, a direct conversation about where your benefits strategy stands today and what it could look like with the right architecture in place.
Pinnacle Financial Group, Inc. is an independent insurance and financial planning firm headquartered in Weston, Florida. Insurance products and services are offered through licensed insurance providers. Group health insurance, level-funded plans, and ancillary benefit products are offered through multiple licensed carriers. ICHRA plans are subject to federal regulations under IRS Notice 2019-45 and applicable CMS guidance. ACA compliance information provided is general in nature and does not constitute legal advice. Employers should consult their legal and compliance counsel regarding specific ACA, ERISA, HIPAA, and COBRA obligations. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a solicitation or offer to purchase any specific insurance product or plan design. Carrier availability, plan designs, and pricing vary by market and employer group characteristics.
