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Archive for March, 2011

 Perhaps 95% of the consumers and professional advisors I meet with attempt to focus their discussion simply on the insurance policies they own.  Ours is a product focused culture, and our buying decisions are guided by products receiving 5 star reviews, Consumer’s Digest Best Buy recommendations, and / or finding a “good deal”.  The power of product advertising has robbed us of the ability to ask ourselves the larger questions.   Questions like “Why am I buying this product?”

Why buy insurance for your home?  Why buy insurance for your car?  When I ask these questions of my clients, I often receive an expression suggesting puzzlement, annoyance, or both.  To ease both emotions, I ask if the reason is to replace what they own in the event it were damaged or destroyed.  “Of course!” is the most common answer. 

Since the real reason to buy insurance is to replace what we own, why is “Save Money Now” the central theme in most insurance company advertising campaigns? Because advertisers have reminded insurance carriers that consumers respond best to “save money” offers.  To gain market share, they focus their ads on product, making save money the product.  Do consumers ever ask how the savings are being achieved?  Insurance carrier benevolence???  These campaigns are effective, and despite the “savings” provided to some consumers, these carriers earn a profit, content to sell products that often do not provide the desired protection.  All because no one ever asked “Why”.

Carl Richards, Contributor at New York Times Bucks Blog and the author of Behavior Gap, reminds us that in the financial services industry, consumer focus on product is exploited by those who are paid to sell product. Richards is well known for using illustrations that lend clarity to issues that many journalists do not understand. While the lesson of the illustration above is aimed at investors, it is just as relevant to those seeking the right way to protect their homes, cars and other assets from unforeseen loss. Richards explains: “Most of us are trained to think ‘What’ first, because it’s what you hear about all day long. It’s the message you read in financial publications and see on CNBC. But ‘What’ questions should come after we think about ‘Why’ and ‘How’ ….Starting with ‘Why’ means achieving clarity about your personal financial goals and creating a plan.” Thank you, Carl Richards, for reminding us that before we focus on the ‘what’ product solutions, we first need to start with asking ourselves the larger ‘Why’ questions. 

For more about Carl Richards work: http://www.behaviorgap.com/

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This video on You Tube is part of a series that shows in vivid detail the remarkably customer centric protection and world class service available to all who insure their home with Chubb and experience a loss.

The vast majority of those I speak with believe that insurance products are a commodity — able to be differentiated by price alone. Sophisticated consumers know better. Meanwhile, only those who are unfortunate enough to experience a truly large loss have a first hand chance to examine the actual “worth” of the coverage provided by their policy. For claimants fortunate enough to be insured by Chubb, the well chronicled ”Chubb Difference” becomes very apparent, and as you will see, very quickly. This video is eye opening for those who think “all insurance is the same”.

A question: what insurance carrier do you want handling your claim, or a claim for your best client? Watch the video, and send it to those who wrongly think “all insurance is the same”.  

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