Wednesday, May 20, 2026

281. Why People Avoid Talking About Death, Illness, and Disability (Part 1)

 


One of the most difficult parts of selling life insurance is not explaining the product.

It is opening the conversation.

Because life insurance naturally leads to topics many people would rather avoid:

    • Death.
    • Illness.
    • Disability.
    • Income loss.
    • Family responsibility.
    • Financial uncertainty.

These are not easy subjects.

That is why many prospects respond with:

    • “Huwag naman nating pag-usapan yan.”
    • “Ayoko muna isipin.”
    • “Malakas pa naman ako.”
    • “Bata pa naman ako.”
    • “Hindi pa siguro mangyayari sa akin yan.”
    • “Next time na lang.”

For the financial advisor, these answers may sound like objections.

But many times, they are not just objections.

They are emotional defenses.

Because the client is not only avoiding the product.

The client may be avoiding the reality behind the product.


People Avoid What Makes Them Uncomfortable

Most people want to talk about growth.

    • Income.
    • Investments.
    • Business.
    • Promotion.
    • Travel.
    • Retirement.
    • The future they want.

But life insurance asks people to also consider the future they do not want.

    • What if the breadwinner dies too soon?
    • What if a major illness happens?
    • What if disability stops the ability to earn?
    • What if the family’s income suddenly disappears?

These questions are uncomfortable because they interrupt the assumption that life will continue as planned.

And most people prefer to live with that assumption.

    • Not because they are irresponsible.
    • Not because they do not love their family.

But because facing uncertainty is emotionally heavy.

It is easier to delay the conversation than to face the possibility.


Death Is Personal

Death is not merely a financial risk.

It is deeply personal.

When a financial advisor talks about death benefit, estate protection, income replacement, or family security, the advisor may be thinking in financial terms.

But the client may be thinking about something much deeper:

    • “What will happen to my children?”
    • “How will my spouse survive?”
    • “Will my family be okay without me?”
    • “Am I ready to accept that I may not always be here?”

These questions can be painful.

That is why some clients change the topic.

    • They laugh it off.
    • They say they are still young.
    • They say they are healthy.
    • They say they will think about it next time.

But behind the avoidance may be fear.

And fear is not solved by a product presentation alone.

It must be handled with empathy.


Illness Forces People to Face Vulnerability

Many people believe they are in control.

    • They work hard.
    • They exercise.
    • They eat well.
    • They provide for the family.
    • They make plans.

But serious illness reminds people that control has limits.

    • Cancer.
    • Stroke.
    • Heart attack.
    • Kidney failure.
    • Major surgery.
    • Long hospitalization.

These are not just medical events.

They can become financial events.

A major illness may affect income, savings, investments, business operations, family lifestyle, and long-term goals.

But because the possibility is frightening, many people choose not to think about it.

They say:

    • “Healthy naman ako.”
    • “Wala naman akong nararamdaman.”
    • “Hindi naman common sa family namin.”
    • “Saka na pag mas matanda na ako.”

The advisor must understand this.

The client may not be rejecting critical illness coverage.

The client may be rejecting the discomfort of imagining himself or herself seriously ill.


Disability Is Often Underestimated

Among death, illness, and disability, disability is often the least discussed.

Many people think only of death.

But disability can be financially devastating because the person may still be alive, but unable to earn the same way.

That creates a difficult situation.

    • Expenses continue.
    • Medical needs may increase.
    • Family responsibilities remain.
    • But income may be reduced or completely stopped.

For breadwinners, this is a serious risk.

Yet people avoid discussing disability because they believe:

    • “Hindi naman ako maaaksidente.”
    • “Office work lang naman ako.”
    • “Malakas pa katawan ko.”
    • “Hindi mangyayari sa akin yan.”

But disability does not only happen to people with dangerous jobs.

It can happen because of accident, illness, injury, or medical complications.

That is why disability planning is not negative thinking.

It is responsible planning.


To be continued

#acgadvice 




Tuesday, May 19, 2026

280. How Advisors Should Handle Objections (Part 2)




3. Advisors Focus on Defending the Product Instead of Clarifying the Client’s Responsibility

When faced with objections, many advisors return to the product.

    • They explain the benefits again.
    • They discuss the riders again.
    • They compare premiums again.
    • They show the illustration again.
    • They emphasize the returns again.
    • They repeat the features again.

But sometimes, the client does not need more product information.

The client needs to reconnect with the responsibility.

Because life insurance is not only about the policy.

    • It is about the people who depend on the policyholder.
    • It is about the income that supports the family.
    • It is about the children whose education depends on continued earning.
    • It is about the spouse who may need time to adjust.
    • It is about the parents who may still need support.
    • It is about debts that may need to be settled.
    • It is about dreams that may stop if income suddenly stops.

The question is not only:

“Do you like this product?”

The deeper question is:

“What happens to your family if the risk becomes real?”

That is why the advisor must bring the conversation back to the client’s life.

    • Not in a frightening way.
    • Not in a manipulative way.
    • But in a responsible way.

For example, when a client says:

    • “Mahal.”
    • The advisor may respond:
    • “I understand. Let us not force a premium that will be difficult for you. But before we adjust the amount, may I ask: if something happens, how much monthly support would your family realistically need?”

When a client says:

    • “May insurance na ako.”
    • The advisor may respond:
    • “That is a good start. May I ask: based on your current coverage, how many years of income replacement will your family receive?”

When a client says:

    • “Next time na lang.”
    • The advisor may respond:
    • “I respect that. May I ask: what would make this more important later than it is today?”

These questions do not push the product.

They clarify the responsibility.

And when responsibility becomes clear, the client sees the recommendation differently.

The premium is no longer just a cost.

The policy is no longer just a document.

The advisor is no longer just selling.

The conversation becomes about protecting what matters.


4. Advisors Push for a Close Before Trust Is Fully Built

Some objections are not about the product.

They are about trust.

The client may be wondering:

    • “Can I trust this advisor?”
    • “Is this recommendation really for me?”
    • “Is this just about commission?”
    • “Will this person still help me after I buy?”
    • “Is the company reliable?”
    • “Am I being pressured?”

If these questions remain unanswered in the client’s mind, even the best presentation may fail.

This is why hard closing can backfire.

When trust is not yet strong, pressure creates distance.

    • The client becomes more guarded.
    • The client gives safer answers.
    • The client delays.
    • The client avoids.
    • The client disappears.

A financial guide understands that trust comes before commitment.

    • Trust is built when the advisor listens well.
    • Trust is built when the advisor explains clearly.
    • Trust is built when the advisor recommends what is suitable.
    • Trust is built when the advisor does not oversell.
    • Trust is built when the advisor gives the client room to decide with dignity.

This does not mean the advisor should be passive.

    • A good advisor still leads the conversation.
    • A good advisor still asks for a decision.
    • A good advisor still helps the client act.

But the close must feel like guidance, not pressure.

The client should feel:

    • “This advisor understands me.”
    • “This recommendation makes sense.”
    • “This plan fits my situation.”
    • “This decision protects my family.”

That is when the close becomes natural.


The Difference Between a Product Pusher and a Financial Guide

    • A product pusher focuses on what to sell.
    • A financial guide focuses on what the client needs to solve.

    • A product pusher memorizes rebuttals.
    • A financial guide asks better questions.

    • A product pusher defends the premium.
    • A financial guide explains the value.
    • A product pusher handles objections to close the sale.
    • A financial guide handles objections to help the client decide wisely.
    • A product pusher may win a transaction.
    • A financial guide builds a relationship.

And in life insurance, relationships matter.

Because the advisor is not selling a one-time purchase.

The advisor is entering a long-term responsibility.

    • The client may need policy reviews.
    • Beneficiary updates.
    • Claims guidance.
    • Additional coverage.
    • Retirement planning.
    • Estate planning.
    • Protection for children.
    • Protection for business.

The sale may begin with a policy.

But the relationship should not end there.


A Better Way to Handle Objections

The next time a client raises an objection, do not rush.

  1. Pause.
  2. Acknowledge.
  3. Clarify.
  4. Then respond.

A simple framework may help:

  • First, acknowledge.
  • “I understand why you feel that way.”

  • Second, clarify.
  • “May I ask what concerns you most about it?”
  • Third, connect.
  • “Let us relate this to your family’s actual need.”

  • Fourth, guide.
  • “Based on what you shared, here is a practical option we can consider.”

This approach changes the tone of the conversation.

  • It becomes less confrontational.
  • Less scripted.
  • Less sales-heavy.
  • More personal.
  • More professional.
  • More advisory.

Because the goal is not to silence the objection.

The goal is to serve the person behind the objection.

All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice