‘I hate annuities’

October 26, 2013 at 12:35 AM
Share & Print

It's a wonderful headline if your goal is to attract the attention of people who are seeking to learn more about annuities. Why? We're all inherently skeptical and looking for reasons that affirm our fears. After all, that financial advisor who just recommended an annuity can't possibly be acting in his client's best interest, can he?

When savvy marketers use a fear-based headline, they are knowingly subjecting their readers to mind games. The process goes like this:

  1. Research what people fear (annuities and their salespeople).
  2. Write a headline to stoke their fears (see, you were right to be afraid).
  3. Either confirm or deny the fear (example: "17 reasons annuities are bad" or "17 reasons annuities are not bad").
  4. Bring fearful readers to desired conclusion (either buy an annuity from me or do not buy an annuity from anyone).

The same approach can be used for annuities (variable, fixed index and fixed), mutual funds, bonds, CDs, life insurance — you name it. A quick trip around Google and you'll find all of these examples in great supply.

But financial products are amoral — neither bad nor good. How effective they are depends on how you put them to use for your clients. There are great resources and also terrible headlines (like the headline for this article) all over the Internet. And your clients and prospects are exposed to them.

Help them consider the source and intent of such resources when drawing their conclusions. Their financial health depends on it.

Sign up for The Lead and get a new tip in your inbox every day! More tips:

Adam Cufr is a founding principal of Fourth Dimension Financial Group, LLC. He is the creator of the web-based coaching program The Life Insurance Blueprint, a prolific blogger, and an expert author on Ezine Articles. For more information, go to http://adamcufr.com/blog.

NOT FOR REPRINT

© 2024 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.

Related Stories

Resource Center