Best Ways to Find Life Insurance Leads
Best Ways to Find Life Insurance Leads
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Company
Life Insurance Leads
- Third-Party
Leads
- Finding
Prospects on LinkedIn
- Networking
With Other Professionals
- Example
of a Professionals Networking Group
- The
Bottom Line
The hardest part
of the business for a life insurance agent is finding good
leads. No matter if you know life insurance inside and out and can explain
the nuances of your product with impeccable clarity, you cannot survive as an
agent without leads.
Additionally, if
finding leads was not challenging enough, there is the fact the life insurance
market is notoriously saturated. Hundreds upon hundreds of agents compete for
the attention of precious few qualified prospects. Getting in front of these
prospects before your competition finds them is vital if you want a lucrative,
long-term career in this business.
The following
methods represent the best ideas to consider for finding life insurance leads.
Below each method is a description of how it works, along with its pros and
cons.
Company
Life Insurance Leads
Perhaps the
easiest way to assure yourself of a steady lead flow as an agent is to
work for a company that provides its reps with leads. Many life insurance agencies use the
promise of leads to entice prospective agents during the recruiting process.
While the idea of not having to prospect for business on your own is alluring,
the pictures companies paint about their lead programs are almost always more
attractive than the reality.
Working for a
company that provides sales leads offers several benefits.
- First, you do
not have to risk your own money on leads that might not convert to sales.
Companies that offer leads typically do so without charging agents
up-front fees.
- Second, not
having to compare lead providers and lead costs frees up more of your day
to do what actually makes you money: contacting prospects and selling them
life insurance.
- Lastly, because
your employer is the one spending money on these leads, it has a vested
interest in your closing as many of them as possible. This means the
company is much more likely to provide support and assistance if you
encounter difficulty in the sales process.
However, the fact
that company leads have no up-front charges does not mean you do not pay for
them. When you receive leads from your employer, the company almost always
lowers your commission in exchange.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- In the
competitive field of insurance, one of the most challenging parts of
being an agent is finding good leads.
- Signing new
customers is crucial to having a successful career in the insurance
industry.
- LinkedIn is
one way to find new leads, but it takes engagement and hard work to
penetrate this robust networking website.
- Different lead generation methods will work depending on the
agent's sale style, local market, knowledge, and specialty.
If you are just
starting out and you have shaky sales skills, this might be a good deal for
you; paying for leads on your own could cause you to burn through your money
quickly before earning any significant commissions. For good salespeople,
however, company leads tend to cost more in forfeited commissions than what
they would pay upfront for third-party leads.
The company leads
also has a reputation for being old and worked to death. The turnover rate at
most life insurance agencies is astronomical. The average new agent lasts less
than 90 days. When an agent quits, the company reclaims his leads and often
redistributes them to the next batch of new agents. By the time you get your
hands on a company lead, it is possible that it has been called already by a
half-dozen or more ex-agents.
Third-Party
Leads
If your company
does not provide leads, or if it does but you are not happy with the quality,
third-party companies exist whose sole business is selling leads to life
insurance agents. The way it usually works is you give the company your zip
code, how far you are willing to travel to meet with prospects, and how many
leads you want to order. You pay upfront, and the company gives you a stack of
leads within your specified geographic boundaries.
The biggest
benefit of buying third-party leads is the lead provider, unlike an employer
that provides leads, does not take a hefty chunk of your commissions in
exchange. For a salesperson with a high closing rate, the lead cost becomes a
small fraction of the commissions he earns.
Another
benefit offered by most lead generation companies is the ability to specify
lead attributes such as age, income, and desired benefit amount.
Some companies
offer the choice between exclusive leads, which means they are only sold to
you, and nonexclusive leads, which means they also get sold to other agents.
Exclusive leads are much more expensive, but you have less competition for
their business.
The main drawback
of third-party leads is the risk you will experience. You pay for them upfront,
which means if you do not sell any of them, you effectively have a negative
paycheck for the week. New agents who have not yet honed their sales skills are
particularly susceptible to this risk.
Finding
Prospects on LinkedIn
To acquire new
customers from LinkedIn, you have to know how to use the site to its full
capabilities.
Make
Your Profile Robust
You want your
profile to stand out. By the time a person is done reading it, he should feel
like he knows you as a person and a professional, even if he has never met you.
First, upload a picture that exemplifies you as a professional. This means no
beach pictures, no pictures with friends and certainly no selfies. While you do
not need a glamour shot or a top-dollar photographer, you should pay the small
fee to have a professional headshot from a reputable studio.
Next, take the
time to write a thoughtful summary. Your summary section should provide rich
details about your professional background. This is where you tell visitors who
you are, why you got into life insurance sales and what you have accomplished
in the field. Without a thoughtful summary, many visitors do not continue
scrolling to read the specifics of your job history.
Speaking of job
history, do not simply list job titles and dates of employment. This section
should read like a resume, with bullet points highlighting your accomplishments
in each position, but make your writing more casual and conversational. This
does not mean devolve into text-speak, but you want your visitors to feel like
they are having a conversation with you over coffee, not reading a boring
rundown of your professional accomplishments.
Do
Not Simply Join Groups, Engage
The site's group
search function allows you to find groups related to your industry, your
college and even your hobbies. Simply joining these groups is not going to
build your network or get you leads.
By joining the
discussion and contributing thoughtful comments, you gain the trust of others
in the group and establish yourself as an industry expert. When you are
considered an expert, professionals in related fields feel confident sending
business your way; having someone like you in their network makes them look
good by extension.
Offer
Your Knowledge for Free
The LinkedIn forums provide a place where you
can offer industry advice to those searching for it. Make use of this function,
but do not come across like a pushy salesman. As you answer more questions and
contribute more knowledge, you can expect people to contact you for help based
on the expertise you have shown.
Maintain
Relationships With Your Contact List
If the only time
you contact the people on your list is when specifically asking for leads
or referrals, you are doing LinkedIn wrong. Reach out to those on your list
when they need help with something, or simply to say hello, wish a happy
birthday or congratulate on a recent promotion.
When these
contacts have life insurance businesses to refer to, they are most likely to
send it to the agent with whom they enjoy the most active and meaningful
relationship.
Watch
for Important Life Changes
Sometimes a
seemingly trivial social media post can provide an important clue that a person
needs your services as a life insurance agent. Take the ever-present
sonogram picture, for example. A new arrival signals a huge increase in a
person's financial burden over the next 18 years. This is an ideal time to
reach out to this contact, once again in a non-pushy tone, congratulate him on
the big news and let him know you are there for anything he needs.
Networking
With Other Professionals
Networking with
other professionals provides a great way to procure life insurance leads
without cold calling, relying on overworked company
leads or spending your own money.
Most cities
have networking groups where professionals
from different industries meet on a weekly or monthly basis to socialize,
trade marketing strategies and refer
business to each other.
Example
of a Professionals Networking Group
These groups are
often diverse. Your networking group might feature a personal injury lawyer, a
tax accountant, a chiropractor, a personal
trainer, a plumber, a physical therapist, and you, a life insurance agent.
Suppose the
personal trainer in your networking group is guiding a client through a set of
bicep curls when the client makes an offhanded comment about a recent medical
scare and then says his kids would not be able to afford college if he were
gone.
The tax accountant might be helping a
client with retirement budgeting when the client casually mentions his savings
are insufficient for a proper burial. If the networking group functions like it
is supposed to, both of these professionals have your business card on hand and
use the opportunity to recommend your services to their clients who obviously
need them.
In exchange, when
one of your clients comments about needing a plumber or wanting to get in
shape, you return the favor by recommending a group member.
The
Bottom Line
The good news is
numerous methods exist for finding life insurance leads. As for which of these
methods is best, the answer depends on the individual agent. Different lead
generation methods are going to work better for you than others based on your
local market, level of competition, sales style, and the niche you are
targeting.
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