Thursday, June 18, 2026

293. Why Teaching People About Money Is Still a Mission Worth Pursuing

 


Financial literacy is important.

Many people agree with that statement.

But agreeing that financial literacy is important is very different from being ready to listen, learn, and apply it.

That is one of the biggest challenges of financial education.

The problem is not always the lack of information.


Today, financial tips are everywhere.

There are videos, articles, social media posts, podcasts, free seminars, online calculators, and personal finance influencers. Anyone can search for budgeting, saving, investing, loans, insurance, retirement, debt management, or emergency funds in just a few seconds.

But despite the abundance of information, many people still struggle financially.

Why?

Because financial literacy is not only about access to information.

    • It is about readiness.
    • It is about timing.
    • It is about trust.

It is about helping people see the relevance of the lesson before life forces them to learn it the hard way.

Many people become interested in financial education only after they feel the pain.

    • After the debt has become heavy.
    • After the emergency fund is missing.
    • After the hospital bill arrives.
    • After the business runs short of cash.
    • After the family income is disrupted.
    • After an opportunity is lost because there was no preparation.

This is one of the painful realities of financial education.

    • The lesson is most useful before the problem happens.
    • But many people only value the lesson after the problem has already become expensive.

That is why financial literacy advocates must be patient.

  • We are often teaching lessons that people do not yet feel they need.
  • We are explaining consequences that have not yet happened.
  • We are encouraging discipline before the pressure becomes visible.

And that is not easy.

Another challenge is that money lessons can feel very personal.

When we talk about money, we are not just talking about numbers.

    • We are also talking about habits.
    • Priorities.
    • Family obligations.
    • Lifestyle choices.
    • Past mistakes.
    • Unpaid debts.
    • Delayed goals.
    • Pride.
    • Fear.

Sometimes, even a good financial lesson can sound like criticism when the listener is not emotionally ready.

    • A reminder to save may sound like judgment.
    • A discussion on debt may sound like embarrassment.
    • A lesson on insurance may sound like fear-mongering.
    • A conversation on budgeting may sound like restriction.

This is why the tone of financial education matters.

    • People do not want to feel attacked.
    • They do not want to feel small.
    • They do not want to feel that someone is using their financial weakness to prove a point.

Financial education must guide without insulting.

    • It must correct without humiliating.
    • It must awaken without condemning.
    • Because people listen better when they feel respected.


Another issue is the illusion of knowledge created by free online content.

Many people think they already understand money because they have watched videos, read posts, followed influencers, or heard advice from friends.

But knowing financial terms is not the same as having financial judgment.

    • Knowing what an emergency fund is does not mean one has built it.
    • Knowing that debt is dangerous does not mean one knows how to manage it.
    • Knowing that investing is important does not mean one understands risk.
    • Knowing that insurance provides protection does not mean one understands the protection gap.

Information can be free.

But wisdom still requires reflection, discipline, and proper guidance.

    • The internet can provide answers.
    • But not all answers apply to every person.

This is where real financial education becomes important.

It does not simply give information.

It helps people understand what applies to their life, their income, their obligations, their stage, their risks, and their goals.

But even when the message is correct, another challenge remains.

Trust.

People may reject financial lessons not because the lesson is wrong, but because they are unsure of the messenger.

They may ask quietly:

    • Is this really education?
    • Or is this just selling?

    • Is this person here to help me?
    • Or is this institution simply promoting a product?
    • Can I trust the advice?
    • Can I trust the intention?

This is a serious challenge for financial institutions, advisors, educators, and advocates.

Credibility must be earned.

  • The public has become more careful.
  • They have heard promises before.
  • They have seen people use education as a disguise for selling.
  • They have experienced advice that benefited the seller more than the client.

That is why financial literacy must be delivered with sincerity, consistency, and practical value.

  • It must not be a sales talk pretending to be education.
  • It must not make people feel trapped into buying something.
  • It must not use fear without responsibility.
  • It must not use knowledge to impress.

The real mission of financial literacy is to help people make better decisions.

  • To help them avoid costly mistakes.
  • To help them prepare before emergencies happen.
  • To help them understand debt before debt controls them.
  • To help them protect their family before uncertainty arrives.
  • To help them build discipline before opportunity comes.

Teaching money lessons to people who are not ready to listen requires patience.

  • It requires humility.
  • It requires empathy.
  • It requires repetition.
  • Sometimes, the first conversation will not change a person.
  • Sometimes, the first seminar will not move them.
  • Sometimes, the first reminder will be ignored.
  • But a seed is still planted.
  • A thought is still introduced.
  • A question is still left in the mind.
  • And when the right moment comes, that lesson may finally make sense.

Financial literacy is not always immediately accepted.

But that does not make the mission less important.

In fact, it makes the mission even more necessary.

Because the people who are not ready to listen today may be the same people who will badly need the lesson tomorrow.

The role of a financial educator is not to force people to listen.

  • It is to keep showing up with clarity, sincerity, and concern.
  • It is to speak in a way people can understand.
  • It is to teach without arrogance.
  • It is to guide without pressure.
  • It is to remind people that money decisions are not just financial decisions.

They are family decisions.

  • Future decisions.
  • Security decisions.
  • Dignity decisions.
  • Life decisions.

The challenge is not only to teach people about money.

The greater challenge is to help them become ready to listen before the cost of not listening becomes too high.

That is the heart of financial literacy.

Not just information.

Not just education.

But service.

#acgadvice

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

292. Most VUL Complaints Start with Poor Explanation

 


Every week, somewhere in the Philippines, a family signs a VUL application.

They smile. They feel good. They believe they have done something responsible.

And in many cases, they have.

But in too many cases, what they signed is not what they understood.

That gap — between what was sold and what was understood — is the real problem with VUL in the Philippines.


It Is Not the Product's Fault.

VUL — Variable Unit-Linked insurance is a legitimate financial product.

It was designed with a purpose.

    • To provide life insurance protection.
    • To allow the policyholder to participate in investment funds.
    • To offer a structured, disciplined financial commitment.

There is nothing wrong with that design.

In the right hands, presented to the right client, explained properly — VUL can serve a family well.

    • The problem is not the product.
    • The problem is how it is explained — and how often it is not.

What the Client Thinks They Are Buying

Most Filipino clients who purchase VUL believe they are buying two things.

    • Insurance protection for their family.
    • An investment that will grow over time.

This is not wrong.

VUL does both.

But what the client rarely understands is what happens to their premium before it reaches either goal.

    • Before the insurance protection is activated, charges are deducted.
    • Before the investment grows, fees are taken.
    • Before the policy builds real value, the early years are largely consumed by costs.

The client is paying — but not yet fully benefiting.

And if no one explains this clearly, the client feels deceived when they finally discover it.


The Charges That Are Rarely Explained

Inside every VUL premium, there are layers of charges that most policyholders never fully understand.

    • Mortality charges — the actual cost of your life insurance coverage, which increases as you age.
    • Fund management fees — deducted regularly from the investment portion.
    • Administrative fees — for maintaining the policy.
    • Premium allocation charges — a percentage of each premium taken before anything is invested, especially heavy in the first few years.
    • Surrender charges — penalties if the client stops the policy too early.

None of these are hidden in the legal sense.

They are written in the policy contract.

They are disclosed in the illustrations.

But disclosed is not the same as explained.

A document the client does not read is not communication.

A number buried in a chart the client does not understand is not transparency.

True explanation means the client can repeat back to you, in their own words, what they are paying for and why.

If they cannot do that, the explanation has not happened yet.


The Advisor's Responsibility

When a client surrenders a VUL policy after three years and discovers their fund value is far below what they paid in premiums, they feel cheated.

    • They are not wrong to feel that way.
    • Not because they were lied to.

But because no one sat with them long enough to make sure they truly understood.

This is the advisor's responsibility.

    • Not just to present the product.
    • Not just to show the projected values.
    • Not just to collect the signature.

The advisor's responsibility is to make sure the client understands what they are entering.

    • How long is the commitment?
    • What happens if they stop paying in year two?
    • How many years before the investment value becomes meaningful?
    • What is the realistic return — not the optimistic projection?

An advisor who cannot answer these questions clearly has no business recommending the product.

An advisor who can answer them but chooses not to is not serving the client.

They are serving the commission.


The Illustration Is Not the Promise

One of the most misunderstood parts of a VUL presentation is the investment illustration.

    • The advisor shows a chart.
    • At year ten, the fund value looks impressive.
    • At year twenty, it looks even better.
    • And the client's eyes light up.

But what the client does not always hear is the disclaimer beside those numbers.

    • Projected values are not guaranteed.
    • They are based on assumed fund performance — which may or may not happen.
    • Market conditions, fund manager decisions, and economic factors all affect actual results.

The illustration is a scenario. It is not a contract.

    • A responsible advisor presents both the optimistic and the conservative projections.
    • A responsible advisor explains what happens if the market underperforms.
    • A responsible advisor says, "This is what we hope. But here is what you must be prepared for."

Hope is not a financial plan.

Understanding is.


What a Good Explanation Looks Like

A proper VUL explanation is not a one-hour presentation with colorful slides.

It is a conversation — honest, patient, and complete.

It covers:

    • What portion of your premium goes to insurance, investment, and charges — in the early years and in the later years.
    • What the minimum commitment period is for the investment to make sense.
    • What happens if you miss a premium or need to stop.
    • What the realistic range of returns looks like — not just the best case.
    • What the client should do if their financial situation changes.

It also includes questions — not just statements.

    • "Does this make sense to you?"
    • "Can you sustain this premium for at least ten years?"
    • "What would happen to this plan if your income changed?"
    • "Do you understand that the investment portion is subject to market risk?"

When the client can answer those questions with confidence, the explanation is complete.

When the client signs because the advisor seemed trustworthy and the chart looked good, the explanation has not started yet.


VUL Is Not the Villain.

It is important to say this clearly.

VUL has helped many Filipino families build wealth and maintain protection at the same time.

    • There are policyholders who stayed committed for fifteen or twenty years and are now glad they did.
    • There are families who received death benefits at the most painful moment of their lives because a VUL policy was in force.

VUL works — when it is explained properly, matched to the right client, and sustained with discipline.

    • The villain in this story is not the product.
    • The villain is the rushed presentation.
    • The villain is the illustration shown without the disclaimer.
    • The villain is the advisor who moved on to the next prospect before the client truly understood what they signed.
    • The villain is the explanation that never happened.


The Standard We Must Hold Ourselves To

If you are a financial advisor, this post is not meant to make you feel accused.

It is meant to raise the standard.

Because the families who trust us with their premiums, their protection, and their future deserve more than a signature on an application.

    • They deserve clarity.
    • They deserve honesty.
    • They deserve an advisor who will sit with them as long as it takes — not until the sale is closed, but until the client truly understands.

That is not just good practice.

That is the whole point of this profession.

    • We are not here to sell policies.
    • We are here to protect families.

And protection begins with the truth — explained clearly, completely, and without shortcuts.


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice