Monday, May 18, 2026

279. How Advisors Should Handle Objections (Part 1)

 


Many financial advisors are trained to answer objections.

  • When the client says:
  • “Mahal.”
  • The advisor prepares a premium explanation.

  • When the client says:
  • “Pag-isipan ko muna.”
  • The advisor prepares a closing question.

  • When the client says:
  • “May insurance na ako.”
  • The advisor prepares a coverage gap discussion.

  • When the client says:
  • “Next time na lang.”
  • The advisor prepares an urgency statement.

And to be fair, advisors need to know how to respond.

But there is a deeper issue.

  • Sometimes, the problem is not that the advisor does not know what to say.
  • Sometimes, the problem is that the advisor answers too soon.

Because an objection is not always a wall.

Sometimes, it is a window.

It gives the advisor a glimpse of what the client is thinking, fearing, avoiding, misunderstanding, or prioritizing.

  • That is why the best advisors do not treat objections as something to defeat.
  • They treat objections as something to understand.

A product pusher hears an objection and prepares a rebuttal.

A financial guide hears an objection and asks:

“What is the client really trying to say?”


1. Advisors Answer Too Quickly Instead of Listening Deeper

One common mistake in handling objections is responding too fast.

    • The client says:
    • “Mahal.”
    • The advisor immediately says:
    • “Actually, mura lang ito kung i-divide natin per day.”

    • The client says:
    • “Pag-isipan ko muna.”
    • The advisor immediately says:
    • “Ano pa po ang kailangan ninyong pag-isipan?”

    • The client says:
    • “May insurance na ako.”
    • The advisor immediately says:
    • “Pero baka kulang pa po ang coverage ninyo.”

These responses may be valid.

    • But if given too quickly, they can sound defensive.
    • The client may feel that the advisor is not listening.
    • The client may feel that every concern will be answered only with another sales line.

This is where the advisor must slow down.

Because many objections are not the real objection.

    • “Mahal” may not mean the client has no money.
    • It may mean the client does not yet see the value.

    • “Pag-isipan ko muna” may not mean the client needs more time.
    • It may mean the client is afraid of making a long-term commitment.

    • “May insurance na ako” may not mean the client is fully protected.
    • It may mean the client does not want to reopen the conversation.

    • “Next time na lang” may not mean the client is not interested.
    • It may mean the client is avoiding an uncomfortable responsibility.

A financial guide does not rush to answer the words.

A financial guide listens for the meaning behind the words.

A good response may begin with:

    • I understand. May I ask what part feels expensive to you?” or
    • I respect that. When you say you want to think about it, what specific concern would you like to think through?” or 
    • That is good that you already have insurance. May I ask if you know how much protection your family would actually receive if something happened?”

These questions do not attack the objection.

They explore it.

And often, that is where the real conversation begins.


2. Advisors Treat Objections as Resistance Instead of Information

A product pusher sees objections as obstacles.

A financial guide sees objections as information.

This is an important shift.

When a client objects, the client is revealing something.

    • Sayang ang premium kung hindi ko magamit.”
    • The objection may reveal a fear.

    • Baka hindi ko kayanin bayaran.”
    • The objection may reveal a priority.

    • Mas kailangan ko muna unahin ang tuition.”
    • The objection may reveal distrust.
    • Baka sales talk lang ito.”
    • The objection may reveal confusion.

“Hindi ko maintindihan ang policy.”

    • If the advisor listens carefully, the objection becomes useful.
    • It tells the advisor where the client is.
    • It tells the advisor what needs to be clarified.
    • It tells the advisor what concern must be respected.
    • It tells the advisor what conversation must happen next.

That is why an objection should not be treated as an interruption.

It is part of the advising process.

The client is not always saying no.

Sometimes, the client is saying:

    • “Help me understand.”
    • “Help me feel safe.”
    • “Help me see why this matters now.”
    • “Help me decide without pressure.”

When advisors understand this, they stop sounding like they are defending a product.

They start sounding like they are guiding a person.

 

To be continued

#acgadvice



Friday, May 15, 2026

278. “Sayang ang Premium” — How to Respond When Clients See Insurance as an Expense

 


One of the most common reactions a financial advisor will hear is this:

“Sayang ang premium kung hindi ko magamit.”

At first, it sounds practical.

The client may be thinking:
    • “Bakit ako magbabayad every month or every year kung wala naman akong makukuha agad?”
    • “Paano kung hindi ako magkasakit?”
    • “Paano kung hindi naman ako maaksidente?”
    • “Paano kung hindi ko naman magamit ang insurance?”
And to be fair, that is a very human way to think.

Because most people are used to buying things they can use, touch, consume, enjoy, or show.
    • A phone can be used.
    • A car can be driven.
    • A house can be lived in.
    • A vacation can be experienced.
But life insurance?
Most of the value is invisible.

Until it is needed.

And that is where the financial advisor must help the client understand the deeper truth.

The premium is not wasted just because no claim was made.
Sometimes, the premium did its job precisely because nothing happened.


Insurance Is Not an Expense. It Is a Transfer of Risk.

When a client says, “Sayang ang premium,” it often means the client sees insurance only as money going out.

But insurance is not simply an expense.

It is a way of transferring financial risk from the family to the insurance company.

Without insurance, the family carries the full risk.
    • If the breadwinner dies, the family carries the loss of income.
    • If critical illness strikes, the family carries the medical cost.
    • If disability happens, the family carries the burden of reduced earning capacity.
    • If an accident happens, the family carries the financial shock.
But with insurance, part of that burden is transferred.
That is what the premium pays for.

The client is not only buying a policy.
The client is buying protection against financial disruption.


The Best Response Is Not to Argue

When a client says, “Sayang ang premium,” the advisor should not immediately argue.

Do not say:
    • “Hindi sayang yan.”
    • “Dapat kumuha ka na.”
    • “Mali ang thinking mo.”
That approach can make the client defensive.

A better response is to acknowledge first.

You may say:

“I understand why you feel that way. Kasi kapag walang nangyari, parang walang balik. But may I share a different way to look at it?”

This response does three things.
    • It respects the client’s concern.
    • It avoids confrontation.
    • It opens the door for education.
In financial advising, the goal is not to win an argument.
The goal is to help the client see clearly.


Reframe the Premium as Protection, Not Payment for a Claim

Many clients think that the only time insurance becomes useful is when there is a claim.

But that is not the whole picture.

Insurance is already useful while the client is protected.
    • A person who has fire insurance does not wish for the house to burn.
    • A person who has car insurance does not wish for an accident.
    • A person who has health insurance does not wish to be hospitalized.
    • A person who has life insurance does not wish for death to happen early.
The goal is not to use the insurance.

The goal is to be protected in case life does not go as planned.

So the advisor can say:

“Sir/Ma’am, ang insurance po ay hindi binibili dahil gusto nating magamit. Binibili natin ito dahil ayaw nating mapilitan ang pamilya na akuin ang malaking financial burden kapag may nangyari.”

That is a more mature conversation.
It moves the discussion from expense to responsibility.


Peace of Mind Has Financial Value

One of the most underrated benefits of insurance is peace of mind.

Many people do not assign value to peace of mind because it is not visible in a bank statement.

But peace of mind has real financial value.
    • When a parent knows that the family will not be financially helpless if something happens, that has value.
    • When a breadwinner knows that the children’s education can continue even if income stops, that has value.
    • When a spouse knows that the family will have breathing room during a difficult time, that has value.
Insurance does not remove grief.
It does not remove pain.
It does not remove uncertainty.

But it can reduce the financial burden during the most difficult moments of life.

And sometimes, that is the difference between a family recovering with dignity or struggling in desperation.


Sayang” Depends on What You Are Trying to Protect

The word “sayang” usually appears when the client looks only at the premium.

But the better question is:

What is more sayang?

    •  Is it sayang to pay a premium for protection?
    • Or is it more sayang for a family to lose its income source without preparation?

    • Is it sayang to allocate money for insurance?
    • Or is it more sayang for savings and investments to be wiped out by one major illness?
    • Is it sayang to protect the breadwinner?
    • Or is it more sayang for children’s dreams to stop because the family did not prepare?

The advisor may ask gently:

“Sir/Ma’am, kung wala pong mangyari, we will all be thankful. But kung may mangyari, would you rather your family receive financial support, or would you rather they depend only on whatever is left?”

That question is not meant to scare.
It is meant to clarify.


Do Not Make the Premium the Center of the Conversation

Many advisors lose the sale because the conversation becomes only about the premium.
    • “How much per month?”
    • “How much per year?”
    • “Can we make it cheaper?”
    • “Can we lower the coverage?”
Of course, affordability matters.
    • A good insurance plan must be sustainable.
    • But the premium should not be discussed apart from the risk being covered.
    • Before talking about cost, clarify the value.

Ask questions like:
    • “If something happens to you, how many years of income would your family need?”
    • “How much would your family need to continue the children’s education?”
    • “How much debt would need to be settled?”
    • “How much emergency fund would your family need while adjusting?”
Once the client sees the size of the responsibility, the premium becomes easier to understand.

Because the premium is not just a cost.
It is the price of protecting something much bigger.


A Practical Advisor Response

Here is a simple way to respond when the client says:

“Sayang ang premium kung hindi ko magamit.”

You may say:

“I understand, Sir/Ma’am. Many people feel that way at first. But the purpose of insurance is not really to make sure we use it. 

The purpose is to make sure that if something happens, your family will not carry the full financial burden alone. 

Kung walang mangyari, that means you lived with protection and peace of mind. 

But kung may mangyari, the plan can help protect your family’s income, education goals, savings, and dignity.”
    • Then pause.
    • Let the message settle.
    • Do not rush.
Sometimes the client does not need more product details.
Sometimes the client needs a better frame.


The Advisor’s Real Job

The advisor’s job is not to make the client feel wrong.
The advisor’s job is to help the client think deeper.

Because when a client says “sayang ang premium,” the real issue may not be affordability.
    • It may be lack of understanding.
    • It may be wrong framing.
    • It may be emotional avoidance.
    • It may be the belief that insurance is only valuable when there is a claim.
A professional advisor helps the client see that insurance has value even before the claim happens.
    • Because it protects the family from uncertainty.
  • It protects the financial plan from disruption.
  • It protects the breadwinner’s responsibilities.
  • And it protects the dreams that depend on continued income.


Final Thought

“Sayang ang premium” is not an objection to defeat.

It is a belief to understand.

Because people do not always reject insurance because they do not care.
Sometimes, they reject it because they have not yet seen what the premium is truly protecting.

So the next time a client says:

“Sayang ang premium kung hindi ko magamit.”
    • Respond with patience.
    • Respond with respect.
    • Respond with clarity.
Because the premium is not wasted when it protects what matters.

The real waste is leaving a family’s future exposed when protection was possible.

All the best!!
#acgadvice