Posts Tagged ‘SPWL’

What is The ” Rollover Moment”?

The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is weighing whether it should take on a role in helping Americans manage the $19.4 trillion they have put into retirement savings, a move that would be the agency’s first foray into consumer investments.   The bureau’s core concern is that many Americans, notably those from the retiring Baby [...]


Leaving Something Behind, Or Use It All?

According to a recent article from the Daily Finance entitled “Die Broke — on Purpose: An Unconventional Retirement Plan”, nearly 46% of people die with less than $10,000 to their name.   In the years past, it wasn’t that uncommon to hear about your elders leaving behind a few four, five, or even six figures [...]


How Can I Pay for College

 Those of you who are parents and have clients that are parents eventually come to the topic of paying for college. Whether in a social setting or during the discovery process, it is one the of the highest needs clients are looking to have met.  They can be younger and wanting to grow their money [...]


Retirees Worst Fear

A survey of retirees asked “What is your greatest fear about retirement?” The most common answer given was “out living our money”. This is a major factor in why over 80% of annuities sold in 2010 had a guaranteed lifetime income rider attatched. There are more variaties of these riders today than ever before. This is [...]


Connect to Mature Annuity Customers via Social Media

Many advisors and agents that I speak to INSIST that their older clients simply “aren’t online” or “don’t use Facebook” but this naive statement is just like saying “I know where all of their assets are” or “I have all of their money.”  Our clients, young and old, are using social media on a regular [...]


Required Minimum Distributions: Turning Details into Opportunities

I remember very early on in my insurance career hearing a salesperson say: “Get the money first and straighten out the details later.” Being the type of person that believes the money is in the details, I struggled with this thought process then, and I still do today. I am one of those detail-oriented people [...]


Plan Finances for Surviving Spouse

New surveys show that women continue to trail men when planning for retirement.   That makes it all the more important for most married couples to make retirement-planning decisions with the goal of leaving the spouse with greater longevity — typically, the wife — in good shape financially after the other dies.   After the [...]


GAO’s Advice?

“The risk that retirees will outlive their assets is a growing challenge,” according to a study from the Government Accountability Office scheduled for release today. Increased life expectancies and health-care costs coupled with declines in financial markets and home equity over the last few years have “intensified” workers’ concerns about how to manage their savings [...]


Social Media and Today’s Financial Advisor

Tom Groenfeldt is a contributing writer for Forbes.com and recently wrote this piece regarding today’s Financial Advisor and their use of social media.    Keeping up with social media is not easy, says Sarah Carter, vice president of marketing at Actiance, a California communications compliance firm that was known as FaceTime Communications until January.   [...]


4 lead generation mistakes to avoid

Last week I presented some lead generation mistakes to avoid, including banking on the “one-contact close,” mistaking email for a CRM system and not purchasing qualified leads. Here are three more. 1. Failing to nurture a “colder” lead. Leads need to be nurtured. Difficult economic times slow buying decisions. Those decisions will be made eventually, [...]