Your clients likely know they should be saving for their golden years.
But, setting aside money for retirement in addition to the many other financial demands of life, can lead to competing priorities and challenging trade-offs.
As a financial professional, you have undoubtedly encountered this fiscal juggling act with your clients. You have also probably seen first-hand how insurance options – particularly some of the lesser-known voluntary offerings – are frequently over-looked as a helpful planning tool until it is too late.
In many ways, they are a retirement plan's humble and unappreciated hero, failing to get the credit and attention they rightfully deserve.
In addition to retirement, health care is another pressing priority that pulls at the family budget. With premiums, deductibles and coinsurance payments on the rise, individuals are faced with increased medical bills for out-of-pocket expenses. This makes certain voluntary insurance products even more valuable, particularly critical illness, hospital indemnity, disability and accident insurance.
With these demands constantly tugging at their wallets, employees aren't always thinking of how to protect the very assets that will sustain them today and through retirement.
For example, establishing an easily-accessible emergency fund with three to six months of income can be essential for the "just in case" scenarios of job loss, extended illness or other unexpected financial burdens. Yet, many struggle to build that safety net into their strategy. If such an event were to happen, they may be forced to dip into their retirement savings as the only answer. This is never an ideal option and it can take a big bite out of one's future retirement security.
One relatively easy and cost-effective way to prepare for this risk is through insurance. Life insurance can help protect a family in case of death, while voluntary insurance can protect a family if something unexpected occurs and a medical plan does not cover all of the costs. Proceeds from either can be used so that your nest egg stays well insulated.
A real-world scenario
To illustrate how voluntary insurance coverage could help, take for example, the impact of a stroke. At first glance, a medical plan with a $1,250 deductible and a $2,500 out-of-pocket maximum payment seems reasonable. To cover the costs, an employee can dip into an emergency fund or perhaps squeeze it into the budget.