Some insurers seem to act as if life insurance policies and annuities will just show up in consumers' lives, like paper clips, or rubber bands.
Executives from some other insurers occasionally admit to investors and securities analysts that they still need live humans to persuade other live humans to spend money to protect themselves against mortality, morbidity and longevity risk.
Executives from Prudential Financial Inc. and Lincoln Financial talked about the live human factor earlier this month at investor day meetings.
Here are some glimpses of what they talked about, with respect to live-human advisors, drawn from the event slidedecks.
Prudential Financial
Prudential sometimes seems to be putting more emphasis on its asset management arm, PGIM, than on its insurance operations. But the company provided a major look at its life and annuity operations at its investor day event.
A team of executives emphasized that they believe the company's financial wellness program, which is aimed at the company's retirement plan and group insurance plan enrollees, will help Prudential financial advisors as well as the retirement plan and insurance plan enrollees.
"Financial Wellness complements our existing distribution capabilities by expanding our addressable market," Prudential executives said, in a "key messages" slide.
1. The Market
Only 27% of U.S. households with less than $100,000 in investable assets have financial advisors, the executives said.
About 67% of U.S. households with more than $500,000 in investable assets do have advisors — but 33% don't, Prudential executives said.
2. The Financial Wellness programs
About 3,100 of Prudential's group plan clients now offer digital wellness programs, and about 600 offer employees face-to-face meetings with advisors, according to one slide.
About 20% of the employees who attend the face-to-face meetings become Prudential retail customers, Prudential said.
Prudential said, on another slide, that the financial wellness program now has about 200,000 participants with access to either digital financial wellness tools or face-to-face advisor meetings.
3. The Financial Wellness program-to-advisor funnel
About 2,000 of financial wellness program users have become retail customers.