Monday, May 11, 2026

275. Selling Life Insurance to People Who Say “Next Time Na Lang”

 

It sounds like the prospect is still open.

  • Maybe not today.
  • Maybe next month.
  • Maybe after bonus.
  • Maybe after promotion.
  • Maybe after the next project.
  • Maybe when life becomes more stable.

But many times, “next time” does not really mean a scheduled decision.

  • It means delay.
  • And delay is one of the most dangerous financial habits.
  • Because the prospect may still be thinking.
  • But life is not waiting.

The advisor must understand this carefully.

  • Do not pressure the prospect.
  • Do not sound desperate.
  • Do not make the client feel guilty.
  • Do not force a decision just to close the sale.

But also, do not allow the prospect to think that postponing life insurance has no consequence.

Because when it comes to protection, waiting is not always harmless.

  • Sometimes, waiting can become expensive.
  • Sometimes, waiting can become impossible.
  • Sometimes, waiting can become regret.


1. Help Them Understand That “Next Time” Is Still a Decision

Many people think that when they say “next time,” they are not making a decision yet.

But the truth is, postponing is also a decision.
    • It is a decision to remain unprotected for now.
    • It is a decision to let the family continue carrying the risk.
    • It is a decision to wait and hope that nothing bad happens before the next conversation.
That is why the advisor must gently help the prospect see the reality of delay.

You can say:

“I understand. We do not need to rush. But may I just clarify one thing? When we say next time, it also means your family remains without this protection until then.”

That statement is not aggressive.

It is honest.

Because the advisor’s role is not only to present benefits.

The advisor’s role is to help the prospect understand consequences.
    • If the prospect delays buying a phone, nothing serious may happen.
    • If the prospect delays a vacation, the family may still be okay.
    • If the prospect delays a luxury purchase, life goes on.
But if the prospect delays life insurance, the risk remains with the family.

That is the difference.

Life insurance is not bought because we expect something bad to happen immediately.

It is bought because we do not control when life changes.


2. Show That Waiting Can Make Protection More Expensive

Some prospects delay because they believe life insurance will still be there when they are ready.

And maybe it will.

But maybe not at the same cost.
    • Age matters.
    • Health matters.
    • Insurability matters.
The younger and healthier the person is, the easier it usually is to apply and qualify.

But as people grow older, premiums may become higher.
    • Health conditions may appear.
    • Medical findings may complicate the application.
    • Certain benefits may become more limited.
    • Some people may still qualify, but at a higher cost.
    • Some may be postponed.
    • Some may be rated.
    • Some may be declined.
That is why “next time” is not always a neutral choice.
    • Waiting can change the price.
    • Waiting can change the approval.
    • Waiting can change the options.
The advisor can explain it this way:

“Life insurance is easiest to apply for when you do not urgently need it yet. The challenge is, when people finally feel they need it, health or age may already make it harder or more expensive.”

That is an important point.

Because many people want to buy insurance only when the need becomes obvious.

But insurance works best when it is secured before the need becomes urgent.

Preparation is easier before the problem appears.


3. Connect the Decision to the People Who Depend on Them

When someone says “next time na lang,” the conversation should not remain only about the product.

Bring it back to the people.
    • Who depends on the prospect’s income?
    • Who will be affected if the income stops?
    • Who will continue the bills?
    • Who will pay the loans?
    • Who will fund the children’s education?
    • Who will support the parents?
    • Who will carry the financial burden?
Because life insurance is not only a decision for the buyer.

It is also a decision that affects the family.

Many people delay because they are thinking only about themselves.

They think:
    • “Healthy pa naman ako.”
    • “Malakas pa ako.”
    • “Kaya ko pa.”
    • “Hindi ko pa kailangan.”
But the real question is not only whether they need insurance today.

The real question is whether the family will need money if something happens tomorrow.

The advisor can ask:

“If we delay this decision, who carries the financial risk in the meantime?”

That question makes the conversation deeper.

Because the issue is no longer just premium.
  • The issue becomes responsibility.
  • The issue becomes family.
  • The issue becomes love with a plan.

4. Make Starting Easier, Not Heavier

Sometimes, people say “next time” because the proposal feels too big.
    • Too expensive.
    • Too complicated.
    • Too long-term.
    • Too heavy for their current budget.
That is why the advisor must listen carefully.
    • Maybe the prospect is not rejecting life insurance.
    • Maybe the prospect is rejecting the size of the recommendation.
    • Maybe the advisor presented a plan that is correct in theory, but not yet comfortable in practice.
A good advisor should not insist blindly.

A good advisor should adjust responsibly.

The question is not:

“How do I force the client to buy this plan?”

The better question is:

“What practical first step can the client sustain today?”
    • Start smaller if needed.
    • Start with basic protection.
    • Start with the most urgent risk.
    • Start with a premium the client can maintain.
    • Start with a plan that can be reviewed and improved later.
Because a modest policy that stays active is better than a perfect proposal that never begins.

The advisor can say:

“If the full plan feels heavy today, we can start with the most important protection first. The goal is not to pressure you. The goal is to make sure you are not completely unprotected while waiting for the perfect time.”

That is a professional approach.

It respects the client’s budget.

It reduces resistance.

It turns delay into action.


Final Thought

When someone says “next time na lang,” do not treat it as a simple objection.

Treat it as a sign that the prospect needs more clarity.
    • Maybe the value is not yet clear.
    • Maybe the urgency is not yet understood.
    • Maybe the plan feels too heavy.
    • Maybe the prospect is afraid to commit.
    • Maybe they are hoping that nothing will happen while they wait.
That is why the advisor must respond with patience and perspective.
    • Do not pressure.
    • But do not ignore the risk of delay.
    • Do not scare.
    • But do not pretend waiting has no cost.
    • Do not force the biggest plan.
    • But help the client take a responsible first step.
Because in life insurance, the best time to prepare is not when life has already changed.

The best time is while the person is still healthy, still working, still earning, still insurable, and still able to decide.

So when a prospect says:

“Next time na lang.”

A good advisor can gently answer:

“I understand. But let us make sure that while waiting for the right time, your family is not left carrying the full risk.”

Because sometimes, the biggest danger is not saying no.

Sometimes, the bigger danger is saying “not yet” for too long.

And when life finally forces the decision, it may no longer be available, affordable, or enough.


All the best my friends!!
#acgadvice

Thursday, May 7, 2026

274. When selling to Someone who says he does not need Insurance


 

Some prospects will say:

“Investor ako. I do not need insurance.”

And for many advisors, that answer can feel intimidating.

Because this is not the usual prospect who has no financial plan. This person may already have stocks. He may already have mutual funds. He may already own property. He may already have a business. He may already be financially literate.

So the advisor must not respond with pride.

The advisor must respond with perspective.

    • Do not argue against investing.
    • Do not make insurance compete with investments.
    • Do not make the investor feel that you are questioning his intelligence.

Instead, help him see that investments and insurance are not enemies.

They simply have different jobs.

Investments build wealth.

Insurance protects the wealth builder.

The issue is whether investing alone is enough.


1. Investments Build Wealth. Insurance Protects the Wealth Builder.

Many investors think that because they have investments, they no longer need insurance.

But investments and insurance serve different purposes.

    • Investments are for growth.
    • Insurance is for protection.

Investments answer the question:

“How can my money grow?”

Insurance answers the question:

“What happens to my family if I am no longer here to grow the money?”

That is a very different question.

    • Because the biggest asset of the family may not be the stock portfolio.
    • It may not be the property.
    • It may not be the business.
    • It may not be the mutual fund account.
    • The biggest asset may still be the person creating the income, making the decisions, and growing the wealth.

So when that person says, “Investor ako,” the advisor can respectfully say:

“That is good. Investing helps you build wealth. May I ask, what protects the person building the wealth?”

That is where the insurance conversation begins.


2. Investments May Not Always Be Ready When the Family Needs Cash.

An investor may have assets.

But not all assets are immediately available.

    • Some investments may be down in value.
    • Some may take time to sell.
    • Some may have penalties if withdrawn early.
    • Some may be tied up in real estate.
    • Some may be inside a business.
    • Some may not be easily accessed by the family.
    • And some may be forced to sell at the worst possible time.

That is one of the dangers many investors overlook.

The question is not only:

“Do you have money?”

The better question is:

“Will that money be immediately available when your family needs it most?”

Because when death, disability, or critical illness happens, the family may not have the luxury of waiting for the market to recover.

    • Bills must be paid.
    • Loans must be settled.
    • Children must continue school.
    • Medical expenses may arrive.
    • The household must continue.
    • The family will need cash, not just assets on paper.

That is why insurance has a role.

Insurance provides liquidity when liquidity matters most.

    • It gives the family time.
    • It gives the family breathing room.
    • It helps prevent forced selling.

It protects the investment portfolio from being broken at the wrong time, for the wrong reason, under the worst circumstances.


3. Having Investments Does Not Automatically Mean the Family Is Protected.

Some investors are very good at building wealth.

But not all investors have clearly separated money for family protection.

They may have money for opportunity.

  • Money for trading.
  • Money for business expansion.
  • Money for retirement.
  • Money for property.
  • Money for future returns.

But do they have money specifically assigned for income replacement?

  • For children’s education?
  • For debt settlement?
  • For estate liquidity?
  • For final expenses?
  • For the family’s adjustment period?

That is the advisor’s role.

Not to question the investor’s intelligence.

But to help the investor organize the purpose of the money.

  • Because money without clear purpose can easily be used for the wrong need at the wrong time.
  • A portfolio may be designed for growth but suddenly forced to become emergency money.
  • A property may be intended for long-term appreciation but suddenly sold to pay family obligations.
  • A business may be meant to expand, but suddenly drained because the owner is no longer around.

That is not good planning.

A good financial plan separates growth money from protection money.

  • Growth money is allowed to grow.
  • Protection money is ready to protect.

That is why insurance should not be seen as an enemy of investing.

It is a partner of investing.

It protects the plan so the plan does not collapse when life becomes difficult.


4. Insurance Should Not Be Judged Only as an Investment.

Many investors reject insurance because they compare it with investment returns.

They say:

“Mas kikita ako kung i-invest ko na lang.”

And sometimes, they are right.

    • A pure investment may provide better returns than an insurance product.
    • But that is not the full comparison.
    • Because the primary purpose of insurance is not to outperform the stock market.
    • The primary purpose of insurance is to transfer risk.

It solves a problem that investments may not solve immediately.

For example:

If a person invests ₱10,000 a month, that money may grow over time.

But if something happens after only one year, the investment fund may still be small.

The family may not have enough.

But with life insurance, protection can be created immediately, even while wealth is still being built.

That is the point.

    • Insurance is not always about getting the highest return.
    • It is about making sure the family is protected before the investment plan has enough time to mature.
    • Because investments need time.
    • But life does not always give us time.

That is why the wise investor does not ask:

“Which will earn more?”

The wiser question is:

“What happens if I do not have enough time to finish building my wealth?”


Final Thought

When someone says, “Investor ako. I do not need insurance,” do not argue against investing.

Respect it.

Acknowledge it.

Then clarify the role of insurance.

Because investing and insurance should not be treated as enemies.

They are not competing ideas.

They are complementary parts of a responsible financial plan.

    • Investments build wealth.
    • Insurance protects the wealth builder.
    • Investments help create the future.
    • Insurance protects the family if the future does not happen as planned.
    • Investments pursue opportunity.
    • Insurance prepares for uncertainty.

So the real question is not:

“Do you have investments?”

The real question is:

“If something happens to you, will your investments protect your family immediately, sufficiently, and without forced selling?”

That is the conversation worth having.

Because the best financial advisors do not tell investors to stop investing.

They help investors protect the person, the family, and the plan behind the investments.

All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice