If there’s one name that every serious life insurance professional should know,
it’s Ben Feldman, the man who sold more life insurance than anyone else in history.
Long before social media, CRMs, or digital leads, Feldman built his empire the old-fashioned way: with a pen, a notebook, and an unshakable belief in the power of life insurance.
He wasn’t flashy like Trump, nor visionary like Jobs.
But he was relentless, disciplined, and deeply human.
If he were selling life insurance in the Philippines today,
he’d still be a legend, because his methods, though old-school, are timeless.
He Believed That Life Insurance Is Love Made Visible
Ben Feldman didn’t see himself as a salesman. He saw himself as a “seller of money.”
When clients told him, “I don’t need life insurance,” he would calmly reply:
“You may not need it. But your family does.”
He knew that people don’t buy insurance because of logic, they buy it because of love.
In the Filipino setting, that’s powerful.
Every parent, every breadwinner, every OFW understands the quiet fear of “Paano na ang pamilya ko kung mawala ako?”
Feldman would touch that emotion with empathy, not pressure. He’d remind clients that insurance isn’t about death, it’s about the continuation of love.
He Made the Intangible, Tangible
One of Feldman’s greatest skills was simplifying abstract ideas.
He once said to a client:
“If you had a machine in your basement that made ₱100,000 a month, would you insure it?”
When the client said yes,
Feldman smiled:
“That machine is you.”
Imagine saying that to a Filipino entrepreneur, a professional, or even a parent.
It reframes insurance from being an expense to being asset protection.
Feldman didn’t sell “policies.” He sold income security.
He made people see themselves as the most valuable asset they owned and insurance as the logical way to protect it.
He Prepared Like a Professional, not a Peddler
Feldman didn’t wing his presentations. He studied his clients. He rehearsed his lines.
He even wrote scripts for every objection he’d face.
He was known to say:
“If you don’t rehearse your presentation, you’re practicing on your clients.”
In the Philippines today, where advisors often rely on digital slides and quick pitches, Feldman would stand out by doing the opposite, being deliberate, thoughtful, and deeply personal.
He’d walk into every meeting knowing the client’s dreams, debts, and family situation, so that his message hits home.
Because for Feldman, selling wasn’t about closing fast, it was about connecting deeply.
He Sold by Asking the Right Questions
Ben Feldman never lectured. He led clients to self-realization.
He’d ask:
“If you had died last night, how much money would your family have this morning?”
It’s direct. It’s disarming. But it’s never disrespectful.
He believed in the power of asking hard questions kindly.
That approach works just as well today, especially for Filipino clients who sometimes avoid financial topics out of fear or “bahala na” mentality.
Feldman would gently push them to see reality, because true service means helping people face what they’d rather ignore.
He Made Every Client Feel Like a Million-Dollar Prospect
Ben Feldman once said:
“Don’t sell life insurance. Sell what life insurance can do.”
He treated every client, rich or not, as someone whose life and dreams mattered.
And that’s what built his legendary reputation.
If he were in the Philippines today, he’d sit down with a tricycle driver and talk with the same respect he’d give to a CEO. Because he knew the core truth: every person who loves someone needs life insurance.
If Steve Jobs sold on purpose and Trump sold on confidence, Ben Feldman sold on conviction.
His secret wasn’t charisma, it was belief.
He believed so deeply in what life insurance could do that he made others believe, too.
And that’s the timeless lesson for us advisors today:
- Believe in what you’re offering.
- Speak from purpose, not pressure.
- Help clients see what life insurance really means, security, dignity, and legacy.
Because as Feldman himself said:
“The only person who can stop you from selling life insurance… is you.”
All the best my friends!!
#acgadvice
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