by Ed Hinerman | Mar 9, 2010 | insurance, life insurance
“My great concern is not whether you have failed, but whether you are content with your failure.”–Abraham Lincoln Well, Abe was certainly easier to please than me. When it comes to protecting your family future with life insurance, with the very rare...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 9, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, whole life
Yesterday I offered a post about term insurance versus whole life. There was on piece of the puzzle I left out, a particularly disturbing one since, first and foremost a life insurance agent should be all about making sure there is enough death benefit to take care of...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 8, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, term insurance, whole life
Clients being ever vigilant for the fine print or hidden costs occasionally ask how I get paid. The core of the question for them is, of course, any additional cost they might incur above and beyond the premium. How do life insurance agents get paid? This isn’t a...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 5, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, mortality, mortality risk
If there is a common thread through the whole life insurance application/underwriting experience, it’s that those applying tend to underplay their mortality while feeling like underwriters really overplay the whole mortality thing. Life insurance pricing and...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 4, 2010 | Anxiety, insurance, life insurance
Depression is one of those life insurance issues I’ve been hearing about forever. Anxiety, on the other hand, was something I rarely heard about 10 years ago and today it seems anxiety treatment is almost as common as cholesterol treatment. I think I get that....
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 3, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, term insurance
A year and a half ago when everyone’s 401k’s had suddenly turned into 201k’s I threw out the suggestion that people buy 10 year term insurance as a way to kind of fill the bucket back up until things recovered. Now true, it wasn’t an idea to...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 2, 2010 | cholesterol, conversion, insurance, life insurance
Of course that questions begs another question. Has common sense ever been a standard of life insurance underwriting? The real answer is yes. Absolutely yes. Before the big changes that came with the shrinking number of reinsurance companies and before we were...
by Ed Hinerman | Mar 1, 2010 | beneficiary, insurance, life insurance
After some discussion with a client today I thought it was worth expanding the conversation. He had submitted an application for life insurance showing his wife and his two daughters, ages 1 and 3, as equal primary beneficiaries of a $1,000,000 policy. His logic was...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 26, 2010 | heart disease, insurance, life insurance
I’m always on the hunt for innovative underwriting. I like to find those nuggets when a company finally has an “aha” moment and decides that, for instance, maybe there’s some slack that can be applied to family history without risking the risk...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 24, 2010 | bipolar, bipolar disorder, decline, insurance, life insurance
So you just got declined for life insurance and you’ve decided that life insurance companies suck. The truth is you may have just had a goose lay a golden egg for you. So, the good news in a decline? It almost always means that you either had the wrong agent or...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 24, 2010 | AARP, insurance, life insurance, private pilots
Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA) has held themselves out as the private pilot’s friend for a long time, the advocate, the go to organization, the one stop shop for all of your needs. For all I know they may in fact be the shining star they claim to...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 23, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, term insurance
It’s probably been close to a year since I first mentioned the United of Omaha (Mutual of Omaha) lifestyle crediting program for life insurance underwriting called the Fit test. The Fit test provides the underwriter plenty of ammunition to approve a policy at...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 23, 2010 | insurance, life insurance, term insurance
Using a LIMRA study of a few years ago, at that point there were tens of millions of Americans that would fit into a category of “needing” life insurance, but didn’t have any. I know I’ve been down this road before, but is there really a case...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 22, 2010 | diabetes, insurance, life insurance
Just when you think you can count on the life insurance underwriting guidelines, Glaxo SmithKline’s Avandia, becomes a curve ball that no one is sure how to handle. Two US Senators released a confidential study that insinuates a strong link between Avandia and...
by Ed Hinerman | Feb 19, 2010 | heart attack, insurance, life insurance
I know for me that I consider daylight savings time to be a personal attack on my well being, and now there are studies to back it up. There has always been an acknowledged link between sleep deprivation and heart attacks, so it really wasn’t rocket science when...
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