This is the second post recounting great discussion from our May Protection Forum focusing on helping mortgage advisers to sell protection products and raising consumer awareness around the importance of protection.
90%
of attendees found the session relevant to their organisation
100%
of attendees found the session usefull to their practice
Would having simpler products help mortgage advisers?
Simple products can be good for advisers who aren’t as comfortable with protection.
A lot of the newer clients we’ve had are younger but still have lots of disclosures around mental health and medical conditions.
It’s about creating a positive company culture. There’s already a lot of flexibility in products, it’s about making sure all advisers are having the right kinds of conversations with clients.
Paul McDowell:
Listening to the conversation so far, I’ve been involved as a mortgage broker in the past. I’ve also worked for a mortgage network in the management team and I work for an insurer. So I think the big thing here is about culture. If you have an organisation that is prepared to organise loans for clients and take the fee and not take the responsibility for helping them stay in their home, that’s fine. That’s your culture. If you have a culture whereby you want to produce a better product and the advice is the product at the end of the day and you want to differentiate yourself with other people, then I think it’s incumbent upon you to find a way of doing that. And whether you do it in a two part sale or however you do it through signposting, that’s not the issue.
I think the issue from the client’s point of view is understanding what they’re getting right day one to set the roadmap out, we talked about signposting. So there’s no nasty surprises. I think most people are happy to go along with what they think they’re getting it’s when they don’t get it or they get something different that you encounter a problem. Simplified products. Yes, they have a place. But actually, I think the products that we have out there already have enough flexibility and choice to give consumers what they need, suiting their budget or suiting their family needs and future needs and so on. So I think there’s enough flexibility in there.
And we talk an awful lot in this industry that products and bolt-ons and whiz bang ideas. But actually, when it comes down to it, the thing that makes the difference is the “how” it’s not the “what” and it’s the conversations that advisers are having, or not having as the case may be, that will drive better sales, more sales and more protected families. And I think the other thing is I hear a lot about mortgage advisers being really, really busy, and that’s fantastic.
But if you’re busy doing half the job as opposed to doing half the customers with a full job, then I wonder whether, again, whether your culture allows it, that’s fine. But if it doesn’t, then how do you get around that? How do you have a compliance department that wants to tick the boxes to say you’ve had a protection conversation and if you can get a sentence in the demands and needs, it says we discussed it, but you didn’t want to do anything at this time. Is that good enough? Well, that lets the adviser off the hook. And does that then lead to an unprotected family later on?
There isn’t enough media/advertising coverage by the industry (insurers together or the FCA Money Pensions Service) encouraging consumers to plan for the future.
A lot of the time advertising for protection involves talking about difficult topics that can be sensitive for consumers and have caused backlash in the past. Consumers also don’t respond well to the insurers doing the advertising as they do to charities, etc. sharing information.
Emma Thomson:
So I mentioned the Aviva piece. To be fair, you might all remember the Paul Whitehouse advert they did, which was actually nearly 10 years ago now. But that was really powerful, too. But the backlash they got specifically from Downton Abbey, which I think they did as a sponsorship deal because it was Sunday night viewing, people didn’t want to be disturbed and whether it was perhaps an inappropriate time that perhaps got that backlash. But I don’t think they necessarily would have won. I’m sure it was about a motorcycle rider, if I remember rightly. It was quite a few years ago now. But, you know, we were all looking at it going, “that’s a really great advertising piece, trying to obviously disturb clients, get them to think about the dangers ahead and the risks involved and what actually the solutions could be.” But ultimately it didn’t particularly wear well with the consumers.
But interestingly, I’m sure at the time there was also a charity advertising about accidents or something, and that didn’t have the same level of backlash. I think it’s just the consumer obviously has issues with insurers and they just see it as trying to make money, claims don’t get paid, that kind of thing. Whereas obviously charity talking about injuries and accidents and that kind of thing, they’re more likely to welcome that as an informative piece. So it’s difficult, as I said, for insurers to kind of get it right, given the type of topics that we’re talking about here.
Insurers do get the backlash because it looks like profiteering a delicate subject, so a unified approach is definitely better.
People don’t watch TV advertisements anymore, stories being incorporated into soaps and TV programs themselves would be better.





