He's a very good adviser, basically. But not for you, or anyone that wants to invest without the company eating up their profits. He's going to try to sell you on things that make money for him and his firm - that's what most advisers do.
That's a front load fund he's pushing, which means you'd be paying UP FRONT to even get into it. And then it has an expense ratio of right around 1%, (ouch!) and it's not a great return on investment.
What you currently have was also front-loaded, and if it only did 20-25% in 2013, then that isn't super. The overall market was up over 30%, so it lagged quite a bit, and I imagine some of your returns were eaten up by expenses as well. It's not terrible, (terrible would be not investing at all or throwing money away on stupid things) but you could do so much better.
You should look into opening a new or moving your existing account to Vanguard or Fidelity, sell off that crap and get into index funds (or at your age, just the one - total stock market index). I prefer Fidelity, because they have some awesome index funds (Spartan series) and great deals on ETF trading, and they have a superior website and customer service, but you won't be wrong choosing Vanguard either. If you do go with Fidelity, make sure you're watching the expense ratios and steering clear of the professionally managed funds. They'll still try to upsell you if you don't know what you're doing, so do some reading and educate yourself on how the stock market works.
Recommended reading:
http://www.mrmoneymustache.com/2011/05/18/how-to-make-money-in-the-stock-market/http://jlcollinsnh.com/stock-series/(this is the best series!)
http://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Main_Page(named for the founder of Vanguard, John Bogle, so they'll lean more towards investing with Vanguard - but great explanation of passive investing and simplification)
You're in a great place to really maximize your savings and investments at your age - so smart that you're getting in on it while you're so young. VERY smart!