Estimated Reading time: 35 seconds
We started telling people about Critical Illness Insurance in a big way with a radio campaign launched in March 2005. You can listen to some of our ads here.
The subsequent milestones make us feel very proud, and I won’t bore you with them now. They are all here if you care to read them.
Estimated reading time: 55 seconds
Most people don’t like taking tests.
The risk of failure and embarrassment is reason enough to avoid tests, even when fully prepared.
Estimated reading time: 45 seconds
If you call your cable or wireless provider to cancel your service or switch to another company you will automatically be transferred to a member of the customer retention department. Their job is changing your mind.
If you call me to cancel an insurance policy you will automatically be told to get a complete medical first.
Estimated reading time: 45 seconds
I am delighted to announce a new online program we just launched with Manulife Financial to help every Canadian get affordable Critical Illness Insurance protection on a guaranteed basis without a medical.
Most people buy life insurance to protect their family but never consider the possibility of what happens if they get sick.
It’s been said that twenty years from now, in a reflective moment of self-evaluation, it will occur to you that the biggest impact on your own personal growth and development resulted primarily from 2 things: the people you met and the books you read.
I make it a point to ask successful clients, mentors and other people I admire what books made an impact in their lives - and along the way some wonderful gems have reached the summit of my bookshelf.
When people ask me to recommend a good self-help book, I tell them about a great one that was originally recommended to me by a special mentor: "How I Raised Myself from Failure to Success in Selling".
Reading time: 90 seconds
People often ask me why I chose this profession. Truth is, it really chose me.
A short radio ad recorded with my client and friend Gord Stellick tells the story best. Listen here.
There is a 50% probability that you will need some form of long term care (home care or facility care) in your lifetime.
A recent poll by Leger Marketing on behalf of the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association (CLHIA), reported that 74 per cent of Canadians have no financial plan to pay for long-term care.
CLHIA estimates a cost of almost $1.2 trillion ($1,200,000,000,000) to provide long-term care to the baby boomer generation as they pass through old age (those baby boomers started turning 65 last year!)
Despite the fact that everyone knows the importance of having a current and up-to-date will and powers of attorney most people don’t think about their wills until the day before leaving on vacation. A recent survey of 544,000 Canadians with assets exceeding $1.5 Million reported that only 40% have a will and 80% of those wills are not up to date. Where do you fit?
In addition to the will, everyone needs to complete two (not just one) Powers of Attorney:
RSP season must be a delight for the people selling advertising. The ads pitching RSPs are everywhere, online and offline.
We are taught from an early age to save for retirement with annual (or more frequent) RSP contributions, but few people consider the tax consequences of simply getting their own money back. Hint: they have to pay income tax on all the withdrawals at their marginal tax rate. At death, providing there is no spousal roll-over, all contributions are taxed. That means $1M of RSP/RIF income would be subject to $460,000 of tax.
Aside from these ultimate tax liabilities, protecting retirement goals can be very difficult if certain life events occur. For example, what would happen if somebody suffers a heart attack or stroke or gets diagnosed with cancer?
Brett Wilson was the keynote speaker at a luncheon I recently attended in downtown Toronto. The event was hosted by Canoe Financial of which he is a principal. Do you remember Brett from Dragon’s Den? He was the mensch. (His personal website is refreshingly different and really interesting)
He shared his personal story and it turns out he is genuinely a self-made nice guy.
Brett’s advice to university students (and in all likelihood to us mature people J) resonated with me on 3 key messages:
Most people who pay monthly instalments for term life insurance, term or permanent critical illness insurance or long term care insurance don’t realize they are paying expensive financing charges of 8%+ for the “benefit” of paying monthly!
This does not apply to permanent universal life insurance but does apply to whole life insurance.
Consumers are accustomed to paying for their car insurance or home insurance on a monthly basis where the calculation is often a straightforward ‘annual premium divided by 12’.
Happy and HEALTHY 2013
Here’s an update to Jack’s Story, a post from November 19th .
Jack’s three children don’t get along at all. They live in different cities in the U.S. and Europe, with nothing in common but DNA. They are the very model of a dysfunctional family, unable to agree on anything, including the time of day.
It’s no secret: the people who need insurance the most usually can’t get it.
There are many reasons for insurance underwriters to just say no: the applicant is too old, too short for their weight, has a poor personal or family health history, a criminal background, exotic travel, a passion for dangerous sports, etc.
It isn’t discrimination, just sensible business practice for the insurance companies who would obviously prefer to insure very healthy people in excellent shape with perfect genes who are least likely to get sick. They get to choose their risks, knowing they will lose money if they pay out too many claims.
Back in the early 1990s, when I was just getting started in my career, Jack was already a retired entrepreneur and senior citizen.
We met through a mutual acquaintance (my late mother of blessed memory), and soon became friends. Jack was an active widower with grown up children and grandchildren who didn’t live in Toronto.
I remember accompanying him to his bank branch where he introduced me to the bank manager. They added me to the approved list for access to his safety deposit in case something happened.
It’s no secret that I love Critical Illness Insurance (CI), and it continues to amaze me that most insurance advisors in Canada have NEVER sold a policy! In my professional opinion, any insurance advisor who isn’t telling clients about CI is negligent.
When illness strikes, having CI often means the difference between losing a mortgage and losing the family home. It happens all the time.
The statistics are scary - you’ve probably seen them - 1 out of 3 Canadians will get cancer (and that’s just one of about two dozen covered conditions)