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

Monday, June 15, 2026

291. Stop Saying “Join My Team” Too Soon

 


Recruitment does not begin with a presentation.

It begins with a conversation.

Many people think recruitment is about convincing someone to join. But in reality, good recruitment starts much earlier. It starts with noticing potential, opening the door respectfully, asking the right questions, and helping the person see whether the opportunity fits his life, values, strengths, and goals.

This is especially true in financial advisory.

We are not simply inviting people to sell a product. We are inviting them into a profession that deals with families, dreams, income, protection, discipline, and responsibility.

That is why the way we start recruitment conversations matters.

A weak opening can make a good candidate defensive.

A strong opening can make the right person curious.


1. Start Without Sounding Desperate

One of the common mistakes in recruitment is sounding like we are simply looking for people to fill the team.

We say:

    • “Join my team.”
    • “Do you want extra income?”
    • “We are looking for advisors.”

These statements are not necessarily wrong. But if they are said too early, they can sound transactional. The person may feel that he is being recruited only because the recruiter needs numbers.

And when people feel that they are being sold to, they naturally put up a wall.

A better recruitment conversation should not begin with pressure.

    • It should begin with observation.
    • It should begin with curiosity.
    • It should begin with something personal and sincere.

For example:

“I noticed that you are good with people. Have you ever considered a career where that strength can help families and also create income opportunities for you?”

That kind of opening feels different.

It tells the person, “I see something in you.”

And people are more open when they feel seen, not sold to.

Recruitment should never sound like begging.

It should sound like a respectful invitation to explore a meaningful possibility.


2. Know Who You Are Talking To

Not all candidates should be approached the same way.

    • A young professional may be looking for career growth, mentorship, additional income, flexibility, and a way to build something for the future.
    • A manager may be thinking about leadership, influence, legacy, or a meaningful second career.
    • A teacher may appreciate the service aspect of financial advisory because teaching and advising both involve guiding people.
    • A business owner may understand relationships, referrals, client trust, and the value of a strong network.
    • A parent may connect deeply with the mission of protecting families.

That is why generic recruitment invitations often sound weak.

They do not connect to the person’s life.

Before starting the conversation, the recruiter must ask:

    • What does this person value?
    • What stage of life is he in?
    • What might he be looking for?
    • What strength does he already have?
    • What problem or aspiration can this opportunity speak to?

Recruitment becomes more meaningful when the invitation is connected to the person’s reality.

Because people do not respond only to opportunities.

They respond to opportunities that make sense for them.


3. Ask Before Presenting

Many recruiters talk too much too soon.

    • They explain the company.
    • They explain the compensation.
    • They explain the awards.
    • They explain the trips.
    • They explain the products.
    • They explain the opportunity.

But they have not yet understood the person.

Recruitment is not just about presenting an opportunity.

It is about discovering whether the opportunity fits the person.

That is why questions are powerful.

Good questions slow down the conversation and make it more personal.

You can ask:

    • “What are you looking for at this stage of your career?”
    • “Are you open to building an additional income stream?”
    • “Do you enjoy helping people make important decisions?”
    • “Have you ever thought about doing something more meaningful with your network?”
    • “Are you looking for something that can grow beyond your current work?”

These questions allow the candidate to think.

They allow the recruiter to listen.

They allow the conversation to become less like a sales pitch and more like a career discovery discussion.

The best recruitment conversations are not speeches.

They are guided conversations.

When the recruiter asks well, the candidate begins to realize whether the opportunity is worth exploring.


4. Create Interest Without Overpromising

A recruitment conversation should create interest.

But it should not create false expectations.

There is a difference between making the opportunity attractive and making it sound easy.

Do not say:

    • “You can earn big immediately.”
    • “This is easy part-time income.”
    • “You only need to talk to your friends.”
    • “You can do this without much effort.”

These statements may attract people, but they may attract them for the wrong reasons.

Worse, they can create disappointment when the candidate realizes that the profession requires training, discipline, rejection management, client conversations, follow-up, and consistency.

A better approach is honest and balanced:

“This career has strong income potential, but it requires training, discipline, and the willingness to talk to people seriously about their financial responsibilities.”

That kind of statement is more mature.

    • It respects the candidate.
    • It protects the profession.
    • It attracts people who are willing to work, learn, and grow.
    • The goal is not merely to get someone interested.
    • The goal is to attract the right person for the right reasons.

Because recruitment built on overpromising may produce quick sign-ups.

But recruitment built on truth produces stronger advisors.


The Heart of a Good Recruitment Conversation

Starting a recruitment conversation is not about forcing the opportunity into every discussion.

    • It is about recognizing potential.
    • It is about seeing something in a person that he may not yet see in himself.
    • It is about opening the door in a way that is respectful, sincere, and relevant.

A good recruiter does not begin by saying:

“I need recruits.”

A good recruiter begins by helping the other person feel:

“Maybe this opportunity is worth exploring.”

    • That is the skill.
    • Not pressure.
    • Not hype.
    • Not exaggeration.
    • Not desperation.

Just a sincere conversation that connects a person’s strengths, goals, and values to a profession that can help families prepare for life.

Because in financial advisory, recruitment is not only about building a team.

It is about inviting the right people into a mission.

And that mission deserves to be introduced properly.


#acgadvice