Tuesday, May 26, 2026

284. The Four Questions Every Life Insurance Advisor Should Ask Before Presenting

 

Many advisors present too early.

They explain the product before they fully understand the client. They show the proposal before they understand the pressure points. They compute the coverage before they understand the responsibility behind the need.

That is why these four questions matter.

Before presenting life insurance, the advisor must first uncover the client’s real situation.

Here are the top 4 issues behind this topic:


1. The Advisor Presents Before Understanding the Client’s Real Responsibility

Many advisors begin with the product.

They talk about coverage, riders, premiums, fund values, benefits, returns, and policy features.

But the client is not first thinking about the product.

The client is thinking about life.

    • Family.
    • Income.
    • Children.
    • Debts.
    • Parents.
    • Business.
    • Health.
    • Future obligations.

The advisor must first ask:

“Who depends on your income?”

This question changes the conversation.

Because life insurance is not just about how much coverage the client can buy. It is about who will suffer financially if the client is no longer around, no longer healthy, or no longer able to earn.

Advisor insight:

Do not present before you know who the client is protecting.

Better advisor angle:

“Before I recommend anything, I need to understand who depends on you financially.”


2. The Advisor Does Not Clarify the Financial Impact of Loss

Some advisors ask general questions, but they avoid the harder questions.

They ask about age, income, budget, and existing insurance.

But they do not ask the question that reveals the real protection need:

“If something happens to you, how long can your family continue their current lifestyle?”

This question helps the client see the financial consequence of losing income.

Without this conversation, the need remains vague.

The client may say:

“Important naman ang insurance.”

But if the financial impact is not clear, the urgency remains weak.

The advisor must help the client connect life insurance to real obligations:

    • Monthly expenses
    • Children’s education
    • Housing payments
    • Business loans
    • Medical needs
    • Family support
    • Spouse’s financial breathing room

Advisor insight:

A client who does not see the financial impact will usually delay the decision.

Better advisor angle:

“Let us not talk about insurance first. Let us talk about what your family would need to continue.”


3. The Advisor Recommends Without Knowing the Client’s Existing Protection Gap

Many clients already have something.

    • They may have HMO.
    • They may have SSS.
    • They may have company benefits.
    • They may have savings.
    • They may have an old policy.
    • They may have group insurance.

The mistake is to either ignore these or immediately dismiss them.

A mature advisor acknowledges what the client already has, then asks:

“What protection do you already have, and how much would actually be available to your family?”

This question is important because many clients confuse having benefits with being fully protected.

    • Having HMO is not the same as having income replacement.
    • Having company insurance is not the same as having personal portable coverage.
    • Having savings is not the same as having a long-term family protection fund.
    • Having a small existing policy is not always enough to cover actual responsibility.

Advisor insight:

The advisor should not attack existing benefits. The advisor should clarify the gap.

Better advisor angle:

“That is good. At least you already have a starting point. The question now is whether it is enough for the people depending on you.”


4. The Advisor Does Not Match the Recommendation to the Client’s Cash Flow

Even when the need is real, the plan must still be sustainable.

Some advisors overdesign the first proposal.

They recommend the ideal coverage, ideal riders, ideal premium, and ideal structure.

But the client may be thinking:

    • “Can I sustain this?”
    • “What if my income changes?”
    • “What if expenses increase?”
    • “What if I cannot continue paying?”
    • This is why the advisor must ask:
    • “What amount can you comfortably commit to without hurting your monthly cash flow?”

This does not mean the advisor should reduce the importance of proper protection.

It means the advisor should build from reality.

    • A smaller policy that stays in force is better than a large policy that lapses.
    • A practical starting plan is better than a perfect plan that never begins.

Advisor insight:

A recommendation that ignores cash flow creates resistance.

Better advisor angle:

“The best plan is not only the one with good benefits. It is the one you can sustain.”


The Core Message

Before presenting, every life insurance advisor should understand four things:

    • Who depends on the client.
    • What financial loss the family may face.
    • What protection already exists.
    • What premium the client can realistically sustain.

The advisor who asks better questions gives better advice.

Because life insurance selling should not start with the product.

It should start with the client’s life.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice

Monday, May 25, 2026

283. Most Life Insurance Rejections Are Not Really About the Product

Many financial advisors believe that when a prospect rejects life insurance, the problem is the product.

  • Maybe the coverage is not attractive enough.
  • Maybe the premium is too high.
  • Maybe the benefits were not explained clearly.
  • Maybe the proposal needs more riders.
  • Maybe the presentation needs more numbers, more charts, more computations, and more comparisons.

So the advisor explains more.

    • More features.
    • More benefits.
    • More product details.
    • More illustrations.
    • More reasons why the policy makes sense.

But after all the explaining, the prospect still says:

    • “Mahal.”
    • “Pag-isipan ko muna.”
    • “Next time na lang.”
    • “May insurance na ako.”
    • “Hindi pa priority.”

And the advisor begins to wonder:

“Ano pa ba ang kulang sa presentation ko?”

    • But sometimes, the problem is not the presentation.
    • Sometimes, the problem is that the advisor is trying to solve the wrong objection.

Because most life insurance rejections are not really about the product.

They are about what is happening inside the life of the client.

    • They are about cash flow.
    • They are about uncertainty.
    • They are about lack of urgency.
    • They are about unclear protection gaps.

The product may be the thing being rejected.

But the real issue is often deeper.


1. The Client Has a Cash Flow Problem, Not a Product Problem

When a prospect says, “Mahal,” many advisors immediately hear a price objection.

    • So they defend the premium.
    • They explain the benefits.
    • They compare the cost.
    • They compute the value.
    • They show what the client will receive in return.

But many times, “mahal” does not mean the client thinks life insurance has no value.

Sometimes, it simply means:

“I am already financially stretched.”

The client may be thinking about groceries, rent, utilities, tuition, debt payments, family support, medicine, business capital, or emergency expenses.

    • The client may believe in life insurance.
    • The client may understand the need.
    • The client may even like the proposal.

But the client is quietly asking:

“Can I afford another regular commitment?”

That is why advisors must be careful.

    • Do not make the client feel embarrassed about money.
    • Do not make the client feel irresponsible.
    • Do not make the client feel small because the original proposal is outside the budget.

A good advisor does not force the biggest plan.

A good advisor helps the client start with a plan that can be sustained.

    • Because the best policy is not always the biggest policy.
    • The best policy is the one that is still active when the family needs it most.

Better advisor response:

“The goal is not to force the biggest plan. The goal is to start with a plan you can sustain.”


2. The Client Is Uncertain About the Future

Many prospects are not saying no because they do not believe in life insurance.

They are hesitating because they are unsure about the future.

    • Will my job remain stable?
    • Will my business income continue?
    • Will prices go higher?
    • Will my family need the money for something urgent?
    • Will I still be able to pay this next year?

This is common among employees, freelancers, entrepreneurs, OFWs’ families, and commission-based earners.

The client may understand the value of protection, but uncertainty makes people cautious.

When people are unsure about tomorrow, they become careful about committing today.

That is why the advisor should not dismiss the fear.

    • Do not say, “Kaya mo ‘yan.”
    • Do not say, “Huwag mong isipin ‘yan.”
    • Do not make the client feel that the concern is unreasonable.

The better approach is to respect the uncertainty and design around it.

    • Start with what is manageable.
    • Show practical options.
    • Avoid overdesigning.
    • Review the plan regularly.
    • Upgrade only when the client is ready.
    • A client who feels understood becomes more open.
    • A client who feels pressured becomes more defensive.

Better advisor response:

“Let us design something practical for your current situation, then review and upgrade when your income improves.”


3. The Client Has Not Yet Accepted the Urgency

This is often the real meaning behind “Pag-isipan ko muna.”

    • The prospect may understand the explanation.
    • The prospect may agree that life insurance is important.
    • The prospect may even say, “Maganda nga ‘yan.”

But still, no decision is made.

Why?

Because the need still feels distant.

    • Death feels far away.
    • Critical illness feels unlikely.
    • Disability feels theoretical.
    • Retirement feels too early.
    • Estate problems feel irrelevant.

So the client delays.

Not because the product is bad.

But because the responsibility has not yet become urgent.

This is one of the hardest parts of life insurance selling.

The need is real, but the event is uncertain.

The premium is paid today, but the benefit may be needed someday.

That is why many people postpone the decision.

    • The advisor’s role is not to scare the client.
    • The advisor’s role is to bring the client back to responsibility.
    • Not through pressure.
    • Not through guilt.
    • Not through fear-mongering.

But through a mature conversation about what the client does not want to leave behind.

Life insurance should not be presented only as protection against death.

It should be presented as protection for love, dignity, promises, education, income, family security, and peace of mind.

    • Urgency should not come from fear.
    • Urgency should come from responsibility.

Better advisor response:

“While you are thinking about it, is your family already financially protected?”


4. The Client Does Not Clearly See the Protection Gap

Some prospects reject life insurance because they believe they already have enough protection.

They say:

    • “May HMO naman ako.”
    • “May company benefits naman kami.”
    • “May SSS naman.”
    • “May savings naman ako.”
    • “May insurance na ako.”

These are not always excuses.

Sometimes, the client genuinely believes that these are enough.

That is why the advisor should not immediately contradict the client.

    • Do not attack the HMO.
    • Do not dismiss the company benefit.
    • Do not belittle the existing policy.
    • Do not make the client feel wrong for having some form of protection.

A better approach is to acknowledge first.

“That is good. It is better to have something than nothing.”

Then clarify the gap.

    • How much is the actual coverage?
    • Will it continue if the client leaves the company?
    • Will it replace income?
    • Will it pay debts?
    • Will it fund the children’s education?
    • Will it protect the spouse from financial pressure?
    • Will it provide cash when the family needs it most?

The issue is not whether the client has something.

The issue is whether that something is enough.

Many people are not against life insurance.

They are simply unaware of how exposed their family still is.

    • The advisor’s job is not to embarrass the client.
    • The advisor’s job is to help the client see the gap clearly.

Because awareness comes before action.

Better advisor response:

“That is good. The question is not whether you have protection. The question is whether it is enough for the people depending on you.


Final Thought

Most life insurance rejections are not really about the product.

They are usually about deeper concerns:

    • Cash flow pressure.
    • Uncertainty about the future.
    • Lack of urgency.
    • Unclear protection gaps.

If the advisor only answers the surface objection, the conversation may go nowhere.

But if the advisor understands the deeper concern, the conversation becomes more meaningful.

    • The advisor stops selling from the product outward.
    • The advisor starts advising from the client’s life inward.

That is where trust begins.

That is where better conversations happen.

That is where the client starts to feel understood.

And when the client feels understood, the advisor earns the right to guide.

Because life insurance is not sold by explanation alone.

It is accepted when the client finally sees the need, understands the gap, trusts the advisor, and chooses to protect the people they love before life forces the issue.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice