“That’s not an easy subject for people to talk about,” said Todd Fancher, president of the American Family Life Insurance Company. “You’re really talking about buying death insurance.”
Life insurance companies must overcome other significant barriers. Life insurance, for one, is optional, and most people do not think about buying it until marriage, the birth of a child or another significant event. When it comes time to make a decision, insurance’s complexity and people’s misperceptions about how much they need and what it costs can drive people away.
Over the last several decades, the percentage of households in the United States that own life insurance has fallen. Seventy percent of American households now own life insurance, down from 83 percent in the 1970s, according to Limra.
Anek Belbase, a researcher at the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College who helped conduct a recent study on life insurance purchase decisions, said people generally shied away from making the difficult financial calculations required to determine how much life insurance they needed. He said they resorted instead to mental shortcuts when budgeting for life insurance, which could distort how much coverage they thought they should buy.
Mr. Silverhart of Limra said that for a 20-year, $250,000 term life insurance policy, about 80 percent of consumers overestimated the annual cost, making it seem less affordable.
Howard Kunreuther, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania who studies insurance and behavioral economics and who has written a book on the subject, said another barrier to selling any kind of insurance was that people thought of it as an investment rather than a protective measure.
“The hardest thing to convince people on an insurance policy is that the best return on a policy is no return at all,” he said. “The whole idea is to try to convince people that insurance is a form of protection.”
But that kind of thinking can make life insurance a tough sell. Why buy protection now for an event that is uncomfortable to think about anyway?
“It is really about building relationships with customers,” said Telisa Yancy, vice president for marketing for American Family Insurance, which tries to connect with local communities through civic groups and religious organizations.
Some companies also try to persuade consumers to buy life insurance through advertising campaigns that deliberately have nothing to do with mortality.
There have also been missteps. Nationwide Insurance, for instance, ran an ad during the Super Bowl last year to promote a program to make homes safer that featured a young boy lamenting the things he would never be able to do because he had died in a preventable accident. The ad was criticized as being too dark.
Maybe worse, few marketing efforts by life insurance companies are memorable.
No comments:
Post a Comment