Imagine one of your clients wants to buy life insurance, but you never get around to sell the product because you had bigger fish (read: "products") to fry. Or what if you knew a client had a large life insurance need, but you never raised the topic because you were just too busy? In both scenarios, did you fulfill your duty as an ethical financial advisor? Consider these statistics:
- According to LIMRA, the number of life agents has plummeted from about 250,000 in 1975 to less than 154,000 last year. Meanwhile, the number of agent recruits has fallen to about 35,000 per year, down from 55,000 in 1975.
- The industry is only selling about 9 million life policies a year, down from 17 million in the mid-1980s. Yet over this time frame, the number of U.S. households with children increased by about 20 percent.
- Fifty percent of Americans say they need more life insurance and 25 percent say they'd buy if given the opportunity. But fewer and fewer are getting that opportunity.
Here are a couple things to try:
- View the possibility of "dying too soon" as a pivotal financial risk. If you're not equipped to handle it, be sure to refer your client to someone who is.
- Recommend life insurance sales as a potential career to the unemployed people you know. Same for the young college graduates who continue to have trouble landing their first jobs.
- If you do a lot of life sales, considering hiring a college intern to assist you. You never know how the seeds you plant today will take root in the future.
- Finally, if you're a member of the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors (NAIFA), make sure they're providing your name to the Agent Locator on www.lifehappens.org. This will give consumers access to one more agent who will answer life's call.
Sign up for The Lead and get a new tip in your inbox every day! More tips:
- 100 best sales & marketing ideas ever!
- The ABC's of prospecting: Attract better clients
- Advisor alert: Do right by your client
Steven McCarty is executive director for the National Ethics Bureau.