by Ed Hinerman | Oct 28, 2010 | diabetes, insurance, life insurance
I’ve had health change surprises come out of nowhere before. I can still remember 30 years ago seeing the doctor for some innocuous thing and he did a blood workup. The result was a diagnosis of Raynauds disease. I was in my late 20’s and felt pretty good....
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 26, 2010 | buy/sell life insurance, insurance, life insurance, over 50 life insurance
You don’t care because you’re dead, right? OK. What if you had to stick around in the rafters and watch and listen to what happens if you didn’t plan for this event. Is your family going to realize a gain from all the years you put in building the...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 25, 2010 | conversion, insurance, life insurance
I recently wrote about kind of running across a new (this year) change in American General Life’s term conversion rules that really stinks for anyone who has had their term policy for more than 5 years. It particularly struck a raw nerve because I was trying to...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 23, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, Sleep apnea
It wasn’t all that long ago that life insurance underwriters would automatically table rate any sleep apnea, obviously having a problem wrapping their minds around the fact that the client would quit breathing several, if not a lot of times every night. The real...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 20, 2010 | bipolar disorder, insurance, life insurance, mortality risk
I’ve been specializing in “impaired risk” life insurance cases for the past 13 years and often find that people are confused about the term. They can get their mind wrapped around the idea that they have an impairment, but when you add the word risk...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 19, 2010 | conversion, insurance, life insurance, West Coast Life
April 14, 2010 was the day that West Coast Life and Protective Life terminated my contract with them. According to Gary Carroll in their compliance department I was terminated “for cause based on your failure to follow company advertising guidelines by posting...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 15, 2010 | conversion, insurance, life insurance
Here we go again! I have a customer that has a 20 year term policy in force with American General. It’s been in force about 6 years and when I called the other day for an annual review he asked what it would cost to convert $100,000 of the policy to permanent. I...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 14, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, no exam, senior life insurance
If you can get life insurance without taking an exam, called simplified issue insurance, without donating blood and urine and blocking out 20-30 minutes of your time, why would anyone buy a traditional term life insurance policy that requires an exam? Seems like a...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 13, 2010 | Anxiety, insurance, life insurance
In a post some years ago I was talking about underwriting of mild mood disorders and made a flip comment that it seemed about time that underwriters take another look since most of America and likely most of them were on Prozac or Zoloft or Wellbutrin. Well, I’m...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 12, 2010 | insurance, life insurance
Whether fee based or fee only, a financial planner doesn’t just give you a plan. They actually follow through and make sure all of the parts are in place. The question often comes up about if it can be done less expensively and the honest answer is...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 12, 2010 | bait and switch, insurance, life insurance
A client left me a message to call over the weekend and when I caught up with him today he had quite a story to tell. He has had a policy in force with me for 7 years, a 15 year term insurance policy. As his story goes he went to the ER about 6 weeks ago with severe...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 11, 2010 | conversion, insurance, life insurance, term insurance
I had this comment on a post the other day from Richard. “Just got off the phone with Lincoln and AM Family Insurance. No conversions on universal life policies. Ours are 15-19 years old, while there is no termination fees, if we cashed, they advise we to treat...
by Ed Hinerman | Oct 1, 2010 | family history, insurance, life insurance
There is almost always an audible let down (sometimes mixed with some expletives) when I ask about family history of heart disease, cancer and diabetes. The typical response goes something like, “How can they hold that against me when my Dad was an overweight,...
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