Many life insurance advisors know how to explain coverage.
- They can explain benefits.
- They can explain riders.
- They can explain premiums.
- They can explain returns.
- They can explain policy features.
But one of the most important conversations in life insurance selling is not just about explaining the product.
It is about helping the prospect see the gap.
The protection gap.The difference between what the family needs and what the family currently has.
This is not always an easy conversation.
Because when you discuss protection gaps, you are not only talking about numbers.
- You are touching responsibility.
- You are touching fear.
- You are touching family security.
- You are touching the possibility that the people the client loves may not have enough if something happens.
That is why this conversation must be handled with maturity.
- Not pressure.
- Not fear.
- Not embarrassment.
- Not judgment.
But with respect, clarity, empathy, realism, and responsibility.
- Because the goal is not to prove that the prospect is underinsured.
- The goal is to help the prospect understand what must still be protected.
1. The Prospect Thinks “Having Something” Means “Having Enough”
Many prospects already have some form of protection.
- They may have company benefits.
- They may have HMO.
- They may have SSS or GSIS.
- They may have group insurance.
- They may have savings.
- They may have an old life insurance policy.
Because of this, they feel protected.
And in fairness, having something is better than having nothing.
That is why the advisor should never make the prospect feel that what he already has is useless.
- Do not attack the HMO.
- Do not belittle the company benefit.
- Do not dismiss the old policy.
- Do not make the client feel wrong for starting somewhere.
A better advisor begins with respect.
“That is good. At least you already have a starting point.”
But the conversation should not end there.
Because having something is not always the same as having enough.
- A ₱500,000 policy may sound big until the family needs to pay for funeral expenses, debts, tuition, monthly bills, medical needs, rent, and years of lost income.
- A company benefit may sound comforting until the client leaves the company.
- An HMO may help with hospital bills, but it will not replace lost income.
- Savings may help, but savings can also be depleted quickly when the family faces a major crisis.
The advisor’s role is to help the prospect see the difference between partial protection and sufficient protection.
A good question to ask is:
“That is good that you already have protection. May I ask, if your family receives that amount today, how long will it last?”
That question does not attack.
It clarifies.
And many times, clarity is what creates urgency.
2. The Prospect Does Not Know the Real Financial Impact of Losing Income
Many people underestimate the financial value of their income.
They think life insurance is only about paying final expenses.
But the real loss is often much bigger.
When a breadwinner dies, becomes seriously ill, or becomes disabled,
the family does not only lose a person.
The family may also lose income.
And yet, the expenses continue.
- Food continues.
- Electricity continues.
- Rent or housing loan continues.
- Tuition continues.
- Medical expenses continue.
- Debt payments continue.
- Support for parents may continue.
- Business obligations may continue.
- The children still need to study.
- The spouse still needs financial breathing room.
- The family still needs to live.
This is why discussing protection gaps should not start with the policy amount.
It should start with the consequence.
Do not begin with:
“Sir, you need ₱5 million coverage.”
Begin with:
“If your income stops today, what expenses will continue for your family?”
That question changes the conversation.
- Because now, the client is not looking only at a product.
- The client is looking at his responsibility.
The protection gap becomes clearer when the prospect sees the total financial responsibility, not just the face amount.
The advisor should help the client connect insurance to real life.
- Not to abstract numbers.
- Not to a sales illustration.
- Not to a product brochure.
But to actual family needs.
- Monthly expenses.
- Education.
- Housing.
- Debt.
- Medical costs.
- Family support.
- Emergency needs.
- Income replacement.
Because if the financial impact is unclear, the need will remain vague.
And when the need is vague, the decision can easily be delayed.
3. The Prospect Feels Exposed and Becomes Defensive
This is where many advisors must be careful.
A protection gap conversation can make the prospect uncomfortable.
The client may suddenly realize:
“My family may not be as protected as I thought.”
That realization can create fear.
- It can create guilt.
- It can create embarrassment.
- It can create defensiveness.
That is why some prospects respond with:
- “Okay na ‘yan.”
- “Hindi naman siguro mangyayari.”
- “May savings naman kami.”
- “Next time na lang.”
- “Pag-isipan ko muna.”
On the surface, these sound like objections.
But underneath, they may be emotional defenses.
- The client may not be rejecting the product.
- The client may be protecting himself from the discomfort of the realization.
That is why the advisor must not sound superior.
Do not say:
- “Kulang na kulang po kayo.”
- “Delikado pamilya ninyo.”
- “Mali po ang planning ninyo.”
That approach may create fear, but it can also create resistance.
A better way to say it is:
“This is not about what you failed to do. This is about what we can still improve while you still have time and income.”
That statement is respectful.
It does not shame the client.
It gives the client a way forward.
The advisor must remember that the client’s dignity matters.
- People do not like feeling exposed.
- People do not like feeling judged.
- People do not like feeling careless about their families.
So when discussing a gap, do it gently.
- Show the numbers clearly.
- Explain the risk calmly.
- Let the client process the meaning.
- Then guide the client toward action.
Because the purpose of the conversation is not to make the client feel bad.
The purpose is to help the client prepare better.
4. The Advisor Reveals the Gap but Does Not Offer a Realistic Starting Point
Some advisors successfully show the protection gap.
- The client finally understands the need.
- The client finally sees the exposure.
- The client finally realizes that the current protection may not be enough.
But then the advisor presents a plan that is too heavy.
- The premium is too high.
- The commitment feels too large.
- The recommendation feels too ambitious.
And the client goes back to the usual objection:
- “Mahal.”
- “Hindi ko kaya.”
- “Next time na lang.”
- “Pag-isipan ko muna.”
This is where many sales opportunities are lost.
The advisor was able to create awareness but failed to create a practical starting point.
Remember this:
- The ideal coverage may be the destination.
- But the sustainable plan is the starting point.
Not every client can solve the entire protection gap immediately.
But many clients can start somewhere.
- A smaller policy that stays in force is better than a large policy that lapses.
- A practical first step is better than a perfect plan that never begins.
- A responsible beginning is better than endless postponement.
The advisor can say:
“Your full protection need may be bigger, but we do not need to solve everything in one day. Let us start with what you can sustain, then review and increase later.”
- That kind of language lowers resistance.
- It respects the client’s cash flow.
- It gives the client hope.
- It makes the decision more manageable.
Because when the client feels that the advisor understands his real situation, the client becomes more open to starting.
The Real Purpose of a Protection Gap Conversation
A protection gap conversation is not an argument.
It is not a debate.
- It is not a way to prove that the client is wrong.
- It is a way to help the client see the risk clearly.
The advisor must help the prospect understand three things:
- What the family may need.
- What the family currently has.
What gap still remains.
- But the advisor must do this with care.
- Because the client will not act only because the math is correct.
The client acts when the gap becomes personally meaningful.
- When he sees his spouse.
- When he sees his children.
- When he sees the unpaid loan.
- When he sees the tuition.
- When he sees the household expenses.
- When he sees the family’s future without his income.
That is when the conversation becomes real.
- Not because the advisor scared him.
- But because the advisor helped him understand the responsibility.
All the best my friends!!
#acgadvice
