Serving your clients with life insurance

Commentary September 20, 2012 at 12:02 PM
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Ever since I began focusing on the retirement market in early 2003, my business focus has always been on increasing the assets I manage here at my firm, whether it be assets under management as a fee-based RIA or fixed and indexed annuities.

I had never done much life insurance until 2010. I recognized that there was a client need for life insurance, but I was not entirely sure how to serve that need. I therefore made a commitment to learn how to successfully implement life insurance into my current practice.

I believe that the most effective way to add life insurance to your practice is to work with your current clients. You should have a trust-building relationship with them, and they look to you for advice and direction. It is your job as their advisor to show them their potential risks, and how to solve those risks in their financial plan.

Two significant risks

Most of us are well aware of the risks of inflation and losing money in a bad market. However, most couples face two other significant risks to their lifestyles during retirement. One of those risks is the threat of needing long-term health care. The other is the threat of one spouse significantly outliving the other, and the income loss affecting the surviving spouse.

One of the best ways to address these two risks together is with life insurance. The insurance industry is moving more and more in the direction of providing long-term care benefits that are connected to life insurance, whether it's an accelerated death benefit for long-term care needs, or an asset-based long-term care plan that leverages the death benefit into a much greater long-term care benefit. These benefits can provide our clients with tremendous protection against these two risks.

I also believe it is important to show clients that life insurance is an alternative asset class in their portfolio. While it may or may not be a cash asset, depending on the product chassis you use, it is a valuable insurance asset that can provide for long-term care and/or survivor needs. We should always be communicating life insurance as an alternative asset in their portfolio to help address these risks, and client reviews should include this insurance asset.

My experience has been an eye-opener. While I previously realized many of my clients do have a need for life insurance, the need is much more significant than I originally thought. Furthermore, when used properly, life insurance can provide a significant enhancement to the services you provide for your clients. When implemented successfully, it can help transform your business.

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