Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Tuesday Morning Minutes

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Family finances, lies, and warning signs

We expect a certain amount of discretion when discussing financial matters: How much money you make, how much you paid for those earrings, and so forth. But there should be no secrets between spouses, right?

Well, sometimes there are. A survey by the Denver-based National Endowment for Financial Education found that among couples, 31 percent have deceived their partner about money. More than 50 percent admit to hiding cash or minor purchases, and 34 percent said they’d lied about either their income or their debt.

The consequences can be severe: 16 percent of survey participants said their dishonesty about money resulted in divorce. NEFE advises partners to watch out for these warning signs:
  • Reluctance or anger around discussing finances
  • Major purchases made without discussion
  • Bills or charges for purchases you weren’t aware of
  • Lines of credit secretly opened in your partner’s name—or yours

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Tuesday Morning Minutes


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A dad’s lesson in integrity

A father who had been laid off from his job had been watching expenses closely for months. But he’d made a promise to his two sons—twins—that he’d take them to a nearby amusement park for their 10th birthday.

When the day came, the father withdrew some money from his savings, and he took his two sons on the bus to the amusement park. When they reached the front gate, he saw a sign:

  • “General admission: (ages 10 and up) $10.”
  • “Children under 10: $5.”
If he’d come a day earlier, the father realized, he could have saved 10 dollars—five for each of his twin sons. But with a sigh he led the boys up to the ticket window and said, “Three general admission tickets, please.”

The woman in the booth looked them over and smiled. “How old are your boys?”

        “I’m 10 years old today,” said one son.
        “So am I,” said the other. “We’re twins!”

The woman leaned forward. “You know,” she whispered, “you could have asked for two ‘Under 10’ tickets, and I never would have known.”

“Yeah,” said the father, “but they would have.”

Monday, September 12, 2011

Excuses, Excuses Web Movie!


Which of the following best explains why you don’t have more life insurance?
  • I’m as healthy as an ox!
  • My employer provides it, so I don’t need more.
  • My family could manage just fine without me … er … I think?!
  • Uh, life insurance … it’s on my list of things to do, but …
  • I already have enough … thank you very much! 
 

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Tuesday Morning Minutes

 

Maintain your energy level to stay on the fast track

People who succeed usually have lots of energy. They’re hardworking, focused, and willing to put in whatever effort is necessary to achieve their goals. But maintaining a high energy level all day every day can be difficult. Here’s how to keep going without resorting to pills or other dangerous options:
  • Wear bright colors. Projecting a positive, energetic attitude through your wardrobe can bring out enthusiasm and good spirits in others. A positive response from people around you will stimulate your own motivation.
  • Eat a power snack. A little chocolate can give you a slight endorphin buzz, along with a mild jolt of caffeine. When your energy flags in the afternoon, a modest snack of mixed nuts, dried fruits, granola, and/or some yogurt can rejuvenate you better than a calorie-filled candy bar.
  • Stand on tiptoe. One good stretch when you’re feeling tired is rolling up and down on your tiptoes a few times. This can get your circulatory system moving, sending oxygen and glucose through your body for a burst of energy.
  • Smell some citrus. Citrus scents like lemon, grape­fruit, and lime can enhance your alertness. Try it.
  • Drink some water. Dehydration can sap your energy, so make sure you get plenty of water throughout the day. And when you feel tired, splash a little cold water on your face to wake yourself up.
  • Change your socks. This is an offbeat little tip, but it sounds like it might work: About halfway through your day, take a little time to put on a fresh pair of socks. Experts say that it can make you feel refreshed and ready to tackle the rest of your day, especially if you spend a lot of time on your feet.

Friday, July 1, 2011

P.S. I Love you!

Looking to get surprised by a huge piece of business coming out of "left field"?  Then I would highly recommend sending out a dozen, handwritten thank you cards every week.  It's about 30 minutes worth of work and it will pay for itself... not 100 times over... but 1,000 times over.  I know.  I've done it.

Thanking people isn't just a nice thing to do... it will generate lots of new business for you.  If you don't think so, try it for 3 months and then tell me I'm wrong.  It's cheap to do, so it won't cost you much to try and prove me wrong.  And I'm not wrong, this works.

"But, I don't have anything to thank people for!"


Did you really just say that?  I hope not!  You have every single one of your clients to thank for your business.  You have every single one of your client's accountants to thank for doing a great job for your clients (same goes for their attorneys). You have every single one of your prospects to thank for their interest.  And believe me you have plenty more people to thank!

"What a waste of time!"

I have had many an agent tell me that he doesn't have time to do this.  OK, it takes 30 minutes a week with a mailing cost of say $10 for cards, postage and envelopes for a dozen cards.  I can tell you in no uncertain terms that this will generate tens of thousands of dollars of INCOME, not production, but INCOME if you do it for a year.
What other marketing takes you 2 hours a month (30 min. X 4), costs $40 a month, and can generate huge amounts of income for you?

Put Your Thank You on Steroids

On the bottom of your thank you note, add a P.S.

Do you have a new product or service you wish everyone would know about?  Here's where you want to put it.  Add one of these P.S. ideas to the bottom of your thank you note:

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Iowa Draws Line in the Sand for Advisors

By Linda Koco @ InsuranceNewsNet.com

The Iowa Insurance Division has drawn a line in the sand regarding permitted activities for advisors who hold only an Iowa insurance license or only an Iowa securities license.
Insurance Bulletin 11 -4 and Securities Bulletin 11 1, issued today by Iowa Insurance Commissioner Susan E. Voss, outlines what these advisors can and cannot talk about with consumers, says Jim Mumford, first deputy insurance commissioner and securities administrator in Iowa.
The Bulletin focuses on two categories of advisors: insurance-only and securities-only.
It defines an insurance-only person as one who holds only a life and annuities license, with no additional Iowa license as an investment adviser, securities agent or investment adviser representative under Iowa securities law. It defines a securities-only person as one who holds an Iowa securities license, but not also an Iowa life and annuity license.
The eight-page document then lines out numerous “permissible” and “forbidden” activities for each type of advisor.
For instance, it says insurance-only persons “may discuss with the consumer the consumer’s risk tolerance, financial situation, and needs.” But they may not discuss “risks specific to the consumer’s individual securities portfolio.”
As for securities-only persons, it says they may discuss “risks specific to the consumer’s individual securities portfolio” but not “the benefits or negatives of insurance, its cost versus benefits, in specific terms relating to the consumer’s individual or group insurance policies.”
The Bulletin also offers guidance for “unlicensed persons and entities” who are permitted to give limited insurance-only advice, as well as for advisors who have both insurance and securities licenses.

The purpose
“The purpose is to let advisors know where the line is between talking about insurance and securities, and to encourage them to think about what they are saying to clients so they don’t cross that line,” says Mumford.
These are guidelines, he stresses. “They are designed to be non-threatening. They are not regulations with teeth.” For instance, while the Bulletin identifies what is and is not permissible, it does not stipulate consequences for advisors who do not adhere to the guidelines.
“If you mention threats, attention always goes to that. Without the threats, we think the guidelines will get the attention.”
If an advisor does cross the line, however, and if the Iowa Insurance Division finds out about it, “we’d do a cease-and-desist order,” says Mumford. “If the situation is bad enough, we’d take the advisor’s license, too.”
 
Source of funds
Industry professionals consider the Bulletin to be a regulatory effort to help resolve the so-called “source of funds” issue that has sprung up around the country.
The source of funds debate zeros in on financial transactions funded by withdrawals from another type of financial product (the source of funds) about which the recommending advisor has no license to talk or to provide advice.
For example, some securities-licensed reps have complained that insurance-licensed advisors have been advising clients to pull money out of securities products for deposit into insurance products, such as indexed annuities, even though the insurance advisor does not have the securities credentials to advise on securities. Some insurance-licensed advisors have voiced similar complaints about securities-licensed advisors, saying these advisors have recommended that clients make withdrawal and other decisions about insurance products without having the credentials to advise on insurance.
The new Iowa Bulletin does not mention “source of funds,” but the introductory words make clear that the boundaries for advice depend on licensure.
Questions about where the line is drawn between providing insurance advice and securities advice are what spurred the Division to develop the guidelines, indicates Commissioner Voss in the introduction to the Bulletin.
These questions have cropped up, she says, ever since Iowa adopted its annuity suitability rule, which she says is “substantially similar” to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ Suitability in Annuity Transactions Model Regulation of 2010 (NAIC 2010).
State and federal suitability laws have reached the point where any recommendation to a consumer of either an insurance product or a securities product “requires an extensive financial analysis of the consumer’s financial affairs and a discussion of broad financial trends,” Voss continues.
In addition, consumer information is applied differently depending on whether it is an insurance or a securities transaction, she says. This is “because of the differing requirements of insurance and securities laws.”
 
More guideline examples
The Bulletin gives seven points for what is permissible and what is prohibited for insurance-only and then securities-only advisors. Here are a few more examples:
An insurance-only person may “discuss with the consumer the stock market in general terms including market risks and recent or historic economic activities that are generally known to the public and regularly discussed in public media.”
However, insurance-only advisors are prohibited from “providing advice regarding the consumer’s specific securities or securities investment performance, or comparing the consumer’s specific securities or securities investment performance with other financial products, including annuity contracts or life insurance policies.”
Also, insurance-only advisors may not recommend the liquidation of specific securities, or identify specific securities that could be used to fund an annuity or life insurance product.
A securities-only person may “discuss insurance with the consumer in general terms in the context of managing risks and recent or historic insurance activities that are generally known to the public and regularly discussed in public media.”
However, securities-only advisors are prohibited from “providing advice regarding the consumer’s specific insurance policy performance, or comparing the consumer’s specific insurance policy performance with securities.”
In addition, securities-only advisors may not recommend the liquidation of an insurance policy, the lapsing of an insurance policy, the taking of policy loans, withdrawals, or surrenders, or otherwise provide any insurance advice or recommendations related to purchase of a security.
The Bulletin also has a word of caution for insurance producers who also obtain investment advisers licenses so they can advise clients about selling a security in order to purchase an insurance product. Such producers “could be subjecting themselves to the jurisdiction of state and federal securities regulators for violation of securities rules pertaining to fiduciary requirements,” it says.
The Iowa Insurance Division announced its intention to issue the guidelines early this year.
According to Deputy Commissioner Mumford, the Division sought input from a number of industry sources. The insurance industry sources include members of the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors (NAIFA) and its state affiliates, the National Association for Fixed Annuities, the American Council of Life Insurers, and the Insured Retirement Institute.
Advisors are particularly happy with the outcome, he says. “They love it because it recognizes that, although insurance and securities professionals must collect the same types of financial information about a customer, they look at the information differently based on whether they are in insurance or securities. The guidelines let them know where the lines are between the two.”
The Iowa Insurance Division can issue Bulletins for both insurance and securities advisors, because the division oversees both insurance and securities. Mumford says Iowa is one of a handful of U.S. state regulators that combine financial regulation in this manner.
The Bulletin will be posted on the Iowa Insurance Division website the week of June 27, Mumford says. The website is http://www.iid.state.ia.us. State Regulators Developing ‘Source of Funds’ Guidelines

Sunday, June 5, 2011

The Money Tree Movie

There is money all around you. It's sitting there waiting for you to take it. But sometimes we walk right past it and don't see it. And other times we look right at it and we still don't see it. Although it rarely manifests itself as free money on a tree. It's usually disguised in a 4 letter word called, "work." No wonder why so many people pass it up! What will you do when you see a money tree?

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

The Collapse of The Pension System of Old

In the good old days our parents and grandparents had a 3 legs of their retirement income stool to keep plenty of income coming in while in retirement.

Now we’re faced…out of necessity more than anything, to look for financial alternatives to provide for our retirement.

Why?

Simple the 3 legged stool is crumbling. Here’s the deal.

The 3 legged retirement was made up of
1. Pension plans from companies, governments, etc.
2. Social Security
3. Private Savings

Lets look at each one for a second.

1. Pensions from your jobs.
We’ve all seen these disappear over the years because they are so incredibly expensive for companies, and governments alike.

Elizabeth Warren, Law Professor at Harvard said:
“There’s no business in America that isn’t going to figure out a way to get rid of these benefit promises.”

and she was right. Just today in the Wall Street Journal Mary Walsh wrote

“Policy makers are working behind the scenes to come up with a way to let states declare bankruptcy and get out from under crushing debts, including the pensions they have promised to retired public workers.”

States across the country have over extended themselves, are in massive debt, and are looking for any way possible to get out from under it, and now like many of the large companies have already done, they are looking to avoid paying the pensions of past workers.

So the pension leg has long been broken, the next leg you probably already know is busted up is 2. Social Security.

Michael J. Astrue, the commissioner of Social Security Said in a letter recently
“In 2016 we will begin paying more in benefits than we collect in taxes. Without changes, by 2037 the Social Security Trust Fund will be exhausted and there will be enough money to pay only about 76 cents for each dollar of scheduled benefits. We need to resolve these issues soon to make sure Social Security continues to provide a foundation of protection for future generations.”

need I say more?

Depending on Social Security for retirement might not be the smartest thing to do either…

So that leaves us with the last leg; 3. personal savings.

We can cover this, and how to set yourself up to have a guaranteed income for life, that you can never outlive. Call us for a confidential appointment.

To work with a licensed agent who can help you build an income for life, click here.