Thursday, May 14, 2026

277. Selling Life Insurance to Young Professionals

 

The advisor must be careful in responding

    • Do not make them feel guilty for enjoying their money.
    • Do not talk to them as if they are irresponsible.
    • Do not force them to think like older clients.

Young professionals need a different conversation.

    • They need clarity.
    • They need relevance.
    • They need practical guidance.

And most of all, they need to understand that life insurance is not only for older people.

Sometimes, the best time to prepare is when life still feels light, income is growing, health is good, and responsibilities are still manageable.

Because youth is not a reason to delay.

Youth is an advantage to use wisely.


1. Show Them That Starting Early Is Their Greatest Advantage

Many young professionals think life insurance is something they can buy later.

    • When they get married.
    • When they have children.
    • When they earn more.
    • When they feel more ready.

But the truth is, starting early has advantages.

    • They are usually healthier.
    • They may qualify more easily.
    • Premiums may be more affordable.
    • They have more time to build discipline.
    • They can start small and adjust later.

That is why the advisor should not present life insurance as a burden.

Present it as an early advantage.

A young professional does not need to buy the biggest plan immediately.

But starting early creates a foundation.

It is easier to prepare while the body is healthy, the budget is flexible, and the responsibilities are still growing.

The advisor can say:

“You do not need to wait until life becomes complicated before you start preparing. Sometimes, the best time to build protection is while life is still simple.”

That is a message young professionals can understand.

Because the issue is not age.

The issue is timing.

And good timing can make protection easier.


2. Connect Life Insurance to Their Current Responsibilities

Some young professionals will say:

    • “Wala pa naman akong family.”
    • “Single pa ako.”
    • “Wala pa akong anak.”

And that may be true.

But being young does not always mean being free from responsibility.

Many young professionals are already helping parents.

    • Some are supporting siblings.
    • Some are paying family bills.
    • Some are contributing to household expenses.
    • Some are starting to carry loans.
    • Some are building their own future.
    • Some are already breadwinners, even if they are not yet married.

That is why the advisor must not assume that young means carefree.

Ask better questions.

    • “Do you help your family financially?”
    • “Do your parents depend on part of your income?”
    • “Are you supporting a sibling’s education?”
    • “Do you have loans or obligations?”
    • “If you get sick and cannot work, how long can your savings support you?”

These questions make the conversation real.

Because life insurance is not only about having a spouse or children.

It is also about protecting the people and responsibilities connected to your income.

For some young professionals, their first policy is not just for themselves.

It is for the family that quietly depends on them.


3. Position Insurance as Part of Adulting, Not as a Sales Product

Young professionals often hear about investing, side hustles, travel goals, career growth, and financial freedom.

But sometimes, they forget that financial maturity is not only about earning more or investing more.

It is also about protecting what they are building.

That is why life insurance should be positioned as part of responsible adulting.

    • Not as a product to be sold.
    • Not as something scary.
    • Not as something only parents need.
    • But as part of building a stable financial life.

A young professional should learn how to manage money properly.

    • Emergency fund.
    • Health protection.
    • Life insurance.
    • Debt management.
    • Savings.
    • Investments.
    • Career growth.

These are not competing priorities.

They are connected.

    • Because what is the use of investing if one medical emergency can wipe out the savings?
    • What is the use of earning well if the family has no protection when income stops?
    • What is the use of chasing financial freedom if one unexpected event can push everything backward?

The advisor can say:

“Life insurance is not the opposite of enjoying life. It is part of making sure one unexpected event does not destroy the life you are building.”

That is a mature and balanced message.


4. Make the Plan Simple, Affordable, and Easy to Start

Young professionals may be open to life insurance, but many are afraid of long commitments, complicated terms, and high premiums.

So the advisor must simplify.

    • Do not overwhelm them with too many products.
    • Do not start with technical explanations.
    • Do not present a plan that is too heavy for their current budget.
    • Do not make them feel trapped.

Start with a plan they can understand.

Start with a premium they can sustain.

Start with the most important need.

Start with protection that fits their current stage.

The goal is not to impress them with complexity.

The goal is to help them begin.

    • A small but meaningful plan is better than no plan.
    • A sustainable premium is better than an ambitious policy that lapses.
    • A clear recommendation is better than a confusing presentation.

The advisor can say:

“Let us start with something practical. Something you can maintain. As your income grows and your responsibilities grow, we can review and improve the plan.”

    • That approach feels less intimidating.
    • It respects their budget.
    • It gives them room to grow.

And it teaches them that financial planning is not a one-time decision.

It is a habit built over time.


Final Thought

Selling life insurance to young professionals is not about telling them that something bad will happen soon.

It is about helping them understand that preparation is easier when started early.

    • Do not make them feel old.
    • Help them become responsible.
    • Do not make them feel guilty for enjoying life.
    • Help them protect the life they are building.
    • Do not force them to buy the biggest plan.
    • Help them begin with a plan they can sustain.

Because young professionals are not just earning for today.

They are building the foundation of their future.

    • And the best time to protect a future is not when it is already at risk.
    • The best time is while there is still time, health, income, and opportunity.

So when a young professional says:

“Bata pa naman ako.”

The advisor can gently answer:

“Yes, and that is exactly why this is a good time to start. Not because life is already heavy, but because preparation is easier while life is still light.”


Because life insurance is not only for those who already have big responsibilities.

It is also for those who are wise enough to prepare before responsibilities become bigger.

  • The best financial advisors do not just help young professionals spend, save, and invest.
  • They help them protect the life they are working hard to build.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

276. Selling Life Insurance to Employees With Company Benefits



At first, it may sound like a valid reason to delay buying personal life insurance.

And to be fair, company benefits are helpful.

    • They provide support.
    • They provide some protection.
    • They give employees a sense of security.
    • They can help during sickness, accidents, hospitalization, or death.

So the advisor should not dismiss company benefits.

    • Do not say they are useless.
    • Do not make the employee feel that what the company provides has no value.
    • Do not attack the employer’s benefit program.

That is the wrong approach.


The real question is this:

Are company benefits enough?

And more importantly:

Will those benefits still be there when the employee is no longer connected with the company?

That is where the life insurance conversation begins.


1. Company Benefits Are Helpful, But They Are Usually Not Fully Controlled by the Employee

Company benefits are provided by the employer.

That means the employee enjoys them while qualified under the company’s rules.

But the employee does not fully control them.

    • The employer decides the coverage.
    • The employer decides the insurer or provider.
    • The employer decides the benefit limits.
    • The employer decides whether the program continues.
    • The employer decides whether the benefits change.

The employee may be covered today.

But the employee may not decide how much coverage is enough.

That is why the advisor must help the prospect understand the difference between borrowed protection and personal protection.

Company benefits are often borrowed protection.

    • They are attached to employment.

Personal life insurance is owned protection.

    • It is attached to the person and the family’s financial plan.

The advisor can say:

“It is good that your company provides benefits. That is a blessing. But may I ask—if the company changes the benefit, or if you change jobs, what protection remains personally yours?”

That question is important.

Because many employees feel protected because they are currently employed.

But life insurance planning should not depend only on current employment.

    • Jobs can change.
    • Companies can change.
    • Policies can change.
    • Health can change.
    • Family needs can change.

A responsible financial plan should not be built only on benefits the employee does not fully control.


2. Company Coverage May Not Be Enough for the Family’s Real Needs

Many employees have group life insurance from work.

But the coverage amount may be limited.

    • Sometimes it is equal to one year of salary.
    • Sometimes it is two years of salary.
    • Sometimes it is a fixed amount.
    • Sometimes it is only a basic benefit.

That may help.

But will it be enough?

If something happens to the employee, the family may need money for many things.

    • Daily living expenses.
    • Children’s education.
    • House rental or amortization.
    • Loans and credit obligations.
    • Medical bills.
    • Final expenses.
    • Support for parents.
    • Time for the family to adjust.

The real issue is not whether the employee has company insurance.

The real issue is whether the amount is enough for the people who depend on the employee’s income.

A prospect may say:

“May group insurance naman ako.”

The advisor can respectfully ask:

“That is good. May I ask how much the coverage is, and how long that amount can support your family if your income stops?”

That question changes the conversation.

Because having coverage is not the same as having enough coverage.

  • Having HMO is not the same as having income replacement.
  • Having employee benefits is not the same as having a complete family protection plan.

The advisor’s job is not to criticize the company benefit.

The advisor’s job is to help the employee calculate the gap.


3. Company Benefits May End When Employment Ends

This is one of the most important points.

Many company benefits are tied to employment.

When the employee resigns, retires, is retrenched, changes jobs, or becomes unable to work, the benefits may stop.

And that creates a serious concern.

Because the time when someone loses employment may also be the time when protection becomes more important.

    • What if the employee resigns and the new company has weaker benefits?
    • What if the employee becomes self-employed?
    • What if the employee starts a business?
    • What if the employee retires early?
    • What if the employee develops a health condition before getting personal insurance?
    • What if the employee waits too long and later becomes harder to insure?

That is why relying only on company benefits can be risky.

The advisor can say:

“Company benefits are useful while you are employed. But personal life insurance is meant to protect you even when employment changes.”

This is especially important for young professionals and mid-career employees.

They may feel secure today because they have a good employer.

But careers are no longer always permanent.

    • People move jobs.
    • People shift industries.
    • People migrate.
    • People freelance.
    • People start businesses.
    • People retire.
    • People get affected by company restructuring.

Life insurance should not disappear just because employment changes.

A family’s need for protection does not end when the employee ID is returned.


4. Personal Life Insurance Complements Company Benefits

The best way to sell to employees with company benefits is not to say:

“Your company benefits are not enough.”

A better way is to say:

“Your company benefits are a good foundation. Personal life insurance can complete the protection.”

That is a more respectful approach.

The advisor should position personal life insurance as a complement, not a competitor.

  • Company benefits can help cover certain immediate needs.
  • Personal life insurance can strengthen long-term family protection.
  • Company HMO can help with hospitalization.
  • Critical illness coverage can provide cash when serious illness affects income and lifestyle.
  • Group life insurance can provide initial support.
  • Personal life insurance can provide a bigger, more intentional protection plan.
  • Company benefits can protect while employed.
  • Personal life insurance can continue even after changing jobs, retiring, or becoming self-employed.

The point is not to replace company benefits.

The point is to build protection that the employee personally owns.

The advisor can say:

“Let us not remove the value of your company benefits. Let us simply check what role they play, what gaps remain, and what protection should be personally yours.”

That is consultative.

That is professional.

That builds trust.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice