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    The Business Security Quiz - How Much Do You Know About Business Security?
    Businesses are suffering major losses everyday because of lapse security policies, yet surprisingly enough, many are clueless to just how big of a problem security is becoming. You may think that a security threat isn't high-priority, but the amount of data breaches and data loss has been on the rise for the past several years.Such threats do not only include hackers and scammers, but even one's own staff can put a business at risk. In fact, businesses are losing on average, $3.4 millions dollars per year, because of data breaches that involve internal sources. (1)Lack of security education and data risk policies can toss your company's reputation and business advantage the dumpster.To test yourself, answer these questions to find out just how much you know about business security and data vulnerability issues facing us today.Which of the following is the biggest threat to a company?a) Computer Viruses b) Hackers c) Your employees d) The paper shredderThe correct answer is (c). Many companies spend millions of dollars trying to secure their companies assets from external threats when a large portion of companies suffer losses because of their very own employees. McAfee’s senior director stated that “The harsh reality is that sensitive corporate data can easily end up in the wrong hands — deliberately or accidentally — because of employee behavior." (2)So, exactly how many employees put companies at risk for data loss?a) 10% of employees b) 20% of employees c) 30% of employees d) 40% of employeesThe correct answer is (b). That's 1 out of every 5 employees! These risks include small slip ups like
    afford
    c) being unable to find life insurance anywhere else
    d) having some life event that caused them to think about life insurance
    e) wanting life insurance but not liking to meet with an agent
    f) wanting life insurance but not wanting any hassle (e.g. exam)
    g) wondering if what they have is their best deal (most do this with Term, while ignoring their UL which could be their biggest albatross)
    h) hoping their request will convince their spouse/parent/etc to apply
    i) curiosity

    How do you find that pocket? You will lose them in the first seconds if you don’t approach them from the right angle. I ask for the person by first name, introduce myself by my full name, and say that I am responding to their request for a quote for life insurance from our web site. That intro, done in a friendly, conversational tone, almost always opens the door to a response, and that is the first goal, just to get them to respond.

    If their response is, “I don’t recall filling that out”, I usually ask if maybe their pouse did it for them, and give them a little info about themselves so they know that someone that knew them had to fill out the form (but not their health condition). Any response is good! Any response can lead to a sale. And if their response is no, you can thank them and go on to the next ones who truly want your service and products. You have nothing to apologize for in answering their requests with the best there is to offer!

    Once they respond, pick up your cues from them in chatting for a little while. If they don’t start chatting, I say something like, “I needed a little more information from you in order to find the best quote”. And I start out with something very basic. E.g. if they’ve checked diabetes, I’ll say, “I see you marked that you have diabetes. How old were you when you got that?” I’ll stay on that, being professional but also trying to convey empathy with my tone of voice, until we’ve covered that (or until they give a sign that they don’t want to talk about it any more… you can always go back to it). If no health conditions are checked, I’ll usually start out asking how much insurance they would like me to quote, then go on to risk factors. Be sensitive, respectful, yet direct in guiding them to the details you need to know in order to quote them correctly. We do no one a favor by avoiding delicate questions if the application is later

    Smart Ways To Rocket Launch Your Profits
    If you really want to pull more profits from your business, you really need take some of the actions listed here. 1. Advertise your web site with banner ads that are animated and include a call to action. You must grab people's attention and make them to click. 2. Use pop up windows or advertisements on your web site. They grab your visitors attention because they jump right out at them. 3. Buy internet business books, ebooks, private site memberships, etc. Study and learn all the new web site promotional ideas you can. 4. Analyze all your promotional efforts.Concentrate on the ones that work and drop the ones that don't work. Don't waste your valuable time. 5. Get the most from each one of your visitors. Ask them to subscribe to your e-zine, participate on your message board, bookmark your site, etc. 6. Use text links if your banner ads are not pulling traffic. People don't ignore text links as much as they do banner ads. 7. Trade content with other ezine publishers or web sites. This is a powerful and effective way to place your links on other targeted web sites. 8. Keep your product available to your customers at all times. If you have to backorder it, they may end up canceling their order. 9. Use content on your web site so people can skim through it easily. Most people have little time so try using lists, short tips, short articles,etc 10 Add a message board or chat room to your web site. If people enjoy it, they will revisit your web site to participate regularly. Test different actions, you can find out which ones pull more sales for you. Then you drop the uneffective ones, keep the good ones. You
    I started selling life insurance on the internet in January of 2001. Online direct response marketing was a fairly new concept at that time, so gradually I’m becoming a person people go to when they are trying to decide whether to get into this career. Recently, someone went so far as to ask me for ten practical steps to establishing a successful online life insurance business. Ten steps. How does one convey the vision it takes to succeed, in ten steps? How can the steps be practical without becoming drudgery?

    I started subbing on a bowling league in January of 2005. Some simple tips offered by my teammates helped me discover the thrill of making strikes. Whether those ten pins scatter like buckshot, or trickle down like dominoes, strikes make you feel great. I found myself excited to repeat the steps that enabled me to bowl strikes. And suddenly, my ten-pin/ten-step analogy was born.

    Making life insurance sales online feels at least as exciting as making strikes, and has the added bonus of making you money! Having a goal that rewards you emotionally is what will enable you to follow, with enthusiasm, these ten steps to success. So here are ten pins to get down to experience the thrilling achievement of consistently making “strikes” in the direct response market.

    1) Understand the game. Selling life insurance online is not the same as selling in an office. I have heard many traditional life insurance agents say that the hard part used to be getting someone in the door, the easy part was making the sale. The easy part of selling online is getting the client “in the door”; the hard part is making to the end of the process with a check in your pocket.

    So what are online leads like? That can depend on how they came to you. If they were using a search engine that led them to a web site where they filled out requests for a quote or application, they are most likely motivated to buy. They are already your customers, and you had best serve them efficiently and expediently, because they will go on to the next web site, if you don’t!

    Perhaps your leads were prompted to request a quote as the result of reading or hearing an ad. Others are “incentive” leads, which means they’ve filled out a quote request form as a hoop to jump through in order to get some type of other reward. You may think that kind of lead is not serious, and some aren’t. However, most are asked to give enough info that the truly uninterested ones will usually bow out before their form is submitted.

    You’ve got to put yourself in their shoes to understand how to approach them. If you don’t answer leads promptly, they may get the feeling the ad or form was insignificant, and blow you off. Some will see the ad or form as a “nudge”; you’ll want to assure them that you can easily help them get the coverage they have been putting off. Some incentive leads will hear you out because they know every prize has a price. They may be pleasantly surprised to find that they’ve received a good insurance price along with their other prize!

    It takes some conversation to get to know your leads and to build their trust. But you also have to respect their time, because people use the internet to save time and fuss. Unless they have complicated needs, it’s best to start by offering the simplest solutions possible. No matter how your leads came to you, they did ask. So you have every right and every chance in the world to make that sale. And you WILL make strikes with internet leads.

    2) Know the rules. You’ve got to have knowledge of all the products being offered at your fingertips to be successful in online life insurance sales. Leads often aren’t willing to wait for answers, so you have to give them as much as you can on the first call. If you need to delay the quote due to needing medical records or having to first obtain a preliminary offer based on their health, it’s important to explain that if anyone else is giving them a quote without that step, that quote will most likely be wrong and could end up with a blot on their MIB.

    Ordinarily, you will find the best quotes for those with perfect health from about 3-5 competitive carriers (rated at least A by AM Best) that use traditional underwriting. Likewise, the best quotes for those with health problems will come from about 3 impaired risk carriers. You’ll want to know which 3 instant issue carriers offer the best rates for those of good health, and about 3 simplified or guaranteed issue carriers for those of poor health. Those choices will more than satisfactorily meet almost every need, and anyone can learn the underwriting guidelines, ratings, etc. of a dozen carriers. This also helps you approach your leads from a point of wisdom, building their trust in you and enabling you to serve them most responsibly.

    Along with understanding the underwriting guidelines, you need to get familiar with how each carrier works, i.e. whether they require a preliminary offer, whether the app can be filled out online, etc. You also need to know what health conditions are best met by what carriers. This sounds like a lot, but within 6 months, you’ll have it down. Knowing the rules of the game will help you get many more strikes.

    3) Have good equipment. Good bowlers know they will get more strikes with the right ball, shoes, etc. It is essential to getting sales to have a well equipped office. An all in one fax machine (fax, copier, and scanner) is great for a small office. A phone headset is a must with today’s online apps. It’s nice to have an auxiliary color printer, but mainly using a black laser printer will save cost. I don’t waste one sheet of paper on a lead that isn’t at least somewhat interested. Therefore, a good computer and some way to organize leads is essential. It’s to your advantage if your lead provider offers software designed to manage your leads. If not, My Documents, an online calendar, and/or Mail Merge can help. It’s important to get a system set up to systematically keep track of your leads, because it takes lots of leads to make lots of money, and otherwise you’ll get overwhelmed.

    I would have business cards and stationery printed for the apps you send out by mail, and to include with policies. You have very few chances to make an impression, and your mail is one way to make one. Use a phone with Voice Mail. Have a toll free phone and fax number. Be sure you have Adobe Acrobat Professional. Try to have an email address that identifies you with insurance. Have a web site, if possible. Good equipment is not only practical, but identifies you as professional, and that is a big part of consistently making strikes.

    4) Invest in the game. You have to go bowling to get strikes, and you have to work leads to make sales. That means setting aside the time and/or money to work at least several leads per day. It will take at least 2 months before commissions start coming in, and about 6 months until you start getting some good stats. But at that point, you need to start keeping close track of how much time/money you are spending and earning, per lead. You will continually increase your profits if you commit to increase your lead volume as you are able, increase your average premiums and application placement rates (this will come with experience), and control your expenses.

    Most good agents hire assistants after a while, because they see that they can make much more by SELLING more. Assistants free you up to sell. You can get to the point where you don’t want to do anything but sell in this business, because your time so literally, is money. However, you’ve got to be able to follow up on the leads your have, keep track of your commissions, fix your computer, pay your bills, and all that other stuff that goes with your own business. So keep your finger on that other stuff, but have someone else do as much as possible, and aim for those strikes.

    5) Start off on the right foot. Bowlers disagree as to whether to approach the lane on the left or right foot, and online agents disagree whether to first contact your lead by email or phone! But if an introductory email is sent to your leads as soon as they are assigned to you, there is no doubt that a phone call is the best action to take after that. Your leads are expecting a call, and you become a person to them so much faster by phone than email. You can ask the questions that enable you to give a valid quote, and ideally, you will make the sale on that very first phone call, app and all.

    If a lead won’t answer the phone within 24 hours, I go ahead and send an email, telling them I tried to call and would like to visit with them to find out their wishes and give them an accurate quote. If there is no response to that email or subsequent phone call attempts, I’ll send them a second email with a guess at a quote, based on what info they gave. That is usually the email that will draw out leads who will only respond by email; they generally won’t respond to later emails if they don’t respond to that one.

    Calling can go on longer, because you might just keep missing people, and eventually catch them at home. However, you’ll want to make a rule of thumb as to how many messages you’ll leave, because after that they might see your efforts to contact them as harassment. Getting a hold of your leads by phone within minutes of receiving their contact information is ideal, and the very best approach to getting strikes.

    6) Come from a good angle. You get a strike by aiming at the strike pocket. Internet leads have many motivations that can form that pocket. Some are:

    a) looking for a competitive price on life insurance
    b) looking for a price they can afford
    c) being unable to find life insurance anywhere else
    d) having some life event that caused them to think about life insurance
    e) wanting life insurance but not liking to meet with an agent
    f) wanting life insurance but not wanting any hassle (e.g. exam)
    g) wondering if what they have is their best deal (most do this with Term, while ignoring their UL which could be their biggest albatross)
    h) hoping their request will convince their spouse/parent/etc to apply
    i) curiosity

    How do you find that pocket? You will lose them in the first seconds if you don’t approach them from the right angle. I ask for the person by first name, introduce myself by my full name, and say that I am responding to their request for a quote for life insurance from our web site. That intro, done in a friendly, conversational tone, almost always opens the door to a response, and that is the first goal, just to get them to respond.

    If their response is, “I don’t recall filling that out”, I usually ask if maybe their pouse did it for them, and give them a little info about themselves so they know that someone that knew them had to fill out the form (but not their health condition). Any response is good! Any response can lead to a sale. And if their response is no, you can thank them and go on to the next ones who truly want your service and products. You have nothing to apologize for in answering their requests with the best there is to offer!

    Once they respond, pick up your cues from them in chatting for a little while. If they don’t start chatting, I say something like, “I needed a little more information from you in order to find the best quote”. And I start out with something very basic. E.g. if they’ve checked diabetes, I’ll say, “I see you marked that you have diabetes. How old were you when you got that?” I’ll stay on that, being professional but also trying to convey empathy with my tone of voice, until we’ve covered that (or until they give a sign that they don’t want to talk about it any more… you can always go back to it). If no health conditions are checked, I’ll usually start out asking how much insurance they would like me to quote, then go on to risk factors. Be sensitive, respectful, yet direct in guiding them to the details you need to know in order to quote them correctly. We do no one a favor by avoiding delicate questions if the application is later

    Chiropractic Office Billing and Patient Relationship Management Software
    Return patients generate approximately 80 percent of clinic's revenue. Patient Relationship Management (PRM, also known as CRM, for Customer Relationship Management outside of healthcare) can enhance financial performance of the clinic by helping retain current and attract new patients. Effective PRM uses integrated data using patient travel card (SOAP notes), frequency recommendations (care plan), and billing (charges, payments, and balance).PRM is a data-driven and patient-focused methodology to strategic practice building and effective patient relationship development. PRM helps identifying new service needs and then designing care programs and office and billing processes to meet the needs.PRM also helps providing timely, patient centered, and efficient care, emphasizing preventive instead of reactive care. A basic PRM system captures patient information during entire period of the care plan in terms of functional health improvement, care plan implementation, and billing. Patient Relationship Management Principle PRM includes a travel card (TC), treatment frequency measures, and billing balance. PRM system tracks changes in the travel card, in Frequency Recommendation summary, and in billing balance, and generates reports to alert office management about lists of patients reaching important thresholds. The office manager or the doctor can review such reports and respond according to practice development strategy, using call centers, Internet, direct mail, or personal conversations during office visits. Electronic Travel Card An electronic equivalent of a paper travel card (Electronic Travel Card, or ETC) contains complete information
    nfo that the truly uninterested ones will usually bow out before their form is submitted.

    You’ve got to put yourself in their shoes to understand how to approach them. If you don’t answer leads promptly, they may get the feeling the ad or form was insignificant, and blow you off. Some will see the ad or form as a “nudge”; you’ll want to assure them that you can easily help them get the coverage they have been putting off. Some incentive leads will hear you out because they know every prize has a price. They may be pleasantly surprised to find that they’ve received a good insurance price along with their other prize!

    It takes some conversation to get to know your leads and to build their trust. But you also have to respect their time, because people use the internet to save time and fuss. Unless they have complicated needs, it’s best to start by offering the simplest solutions possible. No matter how your leads came to you, they did ask. So you have every right and every chance in the world to make that sale. And you WILL make strikes with internet leads.

    2) Know the rules. You’ve got to have knowledge of all the products being offered at your fingertips to be successful in online life insurance sales. Leads often aren’t willing to wait for answers, so you have to give them as much as you can on the first call. If you need to delay the quote due to needing medical records or having to first obtain a preliminary offer based on their health, it’s important to explain that if anyone else is giving them a quote without that step, that quote will most likely be wrong and could end up with a blot on their MIB.

    Ordinarily, you will find the best quotes for those with perfect health from about 3-5 competitive carriers (rated at least A by AM Best) that use traditional underwriting. Likewise, the best quotes for those with health problems will come from about 3 impaired risk carriers. You’ll want to know which 3 instant issue carriers offer the best rates for those of good health, and about 3 simplified or guaranteed issue carriers for those of poor health. Those choices will more than satisfactorily meet almost every need, and anyone can learn the underwriting guidelines, ratings, etc. of a dozen carriers. This also helps you approach your leads from a point of wisdom, building their trust in you and enabling you to serve them most responsibly.

    Along with understanding the underwriting guidelines, you need to get familiar with how each carrier works, i.e. whether they require a preliminary offer, whether the app can be filled out online, etc. You also need to know what health conditions are best met by what carriers. This sounds like a lot, but within 6 months, you’ll have it down. Knowing the rules of the game will help you get many more strikes.

    3) Have good equipment. Good bowlers know they will get more strikes with the right ball, shoes, etc. It is essential to getting sales to have a well equipped office. An all in one fax machine (fax, copier, and scanner) is great for a small office. A phone headset is a must with today’s online apps. It’s nice to have an auxiliary color printer, but mainly using a black laser printer will save cost. I don’t waste one sheet of paper on a lead that isn’t at least somewhat interested. Therefore, a good computer and some way to organize leads is essential. It’s to your advantage if your lead provider offers software designed to manage your leads. If not, My Documents, an online calendar, and/or Mail Merge can help. It’s important to get a system set up to systematically keep track of your leads, because it takes lots of leads to make lots of money, and otherwise you’ll get overwhelmed.

    I would have business cards and stationery printed for the apps you send out by mail, and to include with policies. You have very few chances to make an impression, and your mail is one way to make one. Use a phone with Voice Mail. Have a toll free phone and fax number. Be sure you have Adobe Acrobat Professional. Try to have an email address that identifies you with insurance. Have a web site, if possible. Good equipment is not only practical, but identifies you as professional, and that is a big part of consistently making strikes.

    4) Invest in the game. You have to go bowling to get strikes, and you have to work leads to make sales. That means setting aside the time and/or money to work at least several leads per day. It will take at least 2 months before commissions start coming in, and about 6 months until you start getting some good stats. But at that point, you need to start keeping close track of how much time/money you are spending and earning, per lead. You will continually increase your profits if you commit to increase your lead volume as you are able, increase your average premiums and application placement rates (this will come with experience), and control your expenses.

    Most good agents hire assistants after a while, because they see that they can make much more by SELLING more. Assistants free you up to sell. You can get to the point where you don’t want to do anything but sell in this business, because your time so literally, is money. However, you’ve got to be able to follow up on the leads your have, keep track of your commissions, fix your computer, pay your bills, and all that other stuff that goes with your own business. So keep your finger on that other stuff, but have someone else do as much as possible, and aim for those strikes.

    5) Start off on the right foot. Bowlers disagree as to whether to approach the lane on the left or right foot, and online agents disagree whether to first contact your lead by email or phone! But if an introductory email is sent to your leads as soon as they are assigned to you, there is no doubt that a phone call is the best action to take after that. Your leads are expecting a call, and you become a person to them so much faster by phone than email. You can ask the questions that enable you to give a valid quote, and ideally, you will make the sale on that very first phone call, app and all.

    If a lead won’t answer the phone within 24 hours, I go ahead and send an email, telling them I tried to call and would like to visit with them to find out their wishes and give them an accurate quote. If there is no response to that email or subsequent phone call attempts, I’ll send them a second email with a guess at a quote, based on what info they gave. That is usually the email that will draw out leads who will only respond by email; they generally won’t respond to later emails if they don’t respond to that one.

    Calling can go on longer, because you might just keep missing people, and eventually catch them at home. However, you’ll want to make a rule of thumb as to how many messages you’ll leave, because after that they might see your efforts to contact them as harassment. Getting a hold of your leads by phone within minutes of receiving their contact information is ideal, and the very best approach to getting strikes.

    6) Come from a good angle. You get a strike by aiming at the strike pocket. Internet leads have many motivations that can form that pocket. Some are:

    a) looking for a competitive price on life insurance
    b) looking for a price they can afford
    c) being unable to find life insurance anywhere else
    d) having some life event that caused them to think about life insurance
    e) wanting life insurance but not liking to meet with an agent
    f) wanting life insurance but not wanting any hassle (e.g. exam)
    g) wondering if what they have is their best deal (most do this with Term, while ignoring their UL which could be their biggest albatross)
    h) hoping their request will convince their spouse/parent/etc to apply
    i) curiosity

    How do you find that pocket? You will lose them in the first seconds if you don’t approach them from the right angle. I ask for the person by first name, introduce myself by my full name, and say that I am responding to their request for a quote for life insurance from our web site. That intro, done in a friendly, conversational tone, almost always opens the door to a response, and that is the first goal, just to get them to respond.

    If their response is, “I don’t recall filling that out”, I usually ask if maybe their pouse did it for them, and give them a little info about themselves so they know that someone that knew them had to fill out the form (but not their health condition). Any response is good! Any response can lead to a sale. And if their response is no, you can thank them and go on to the next ones who truly want your service and products. You have nothing to apologize for in answering their requests with the best there is to offer!

    Once they respond, pick up your cues from them in chatting for a little while. If they don’t start chatting, I say something like, “I needed a little more information from you in order to find the best quote”. And I start out with something very basic. E.g. if they’ve checked diabetes, I’ll say, “I see you marked that you have diabetes. How old were you when you got that?” I’ll stay on that, being professional but also trying to convey empathy with my tone of voice, until we’ve covered that (or until they give a sign that they don’t want to talk about it any more… you can always go back to it). If no health conditions are checked, I’ll usually start out asking how much insurance they would like me to quote, then go on to risk factors. Be sensitive, respectful, yet direct in guiding them to the details you need to know in order to quote them correctly. We do no one a favor by avoiding delicate questions if the application is later

    Careers In Information Brokering
    Information brokering is fast becoming a great way to make money. All you need to be in business is a computer, Internet connection and the right knowledge for finding and researching all sorts of topics.For the most part, information brokers can find a lucrative niche in the information marketing industry. Believe it or not, there is an entire business industry that specializes in finding, packaging and marketing information. It’s a sub-set of direct marketing. Information marketers primarily sell books, newsletters, reports, audio tapes and CD’s, videos and DVD’s and seminars on just about every topic under the sun.Just about every business you can think of can sell information products. Now, with the advent of the Internet, a lot of that information is offered in digital format. But it still comes down to the same thing. Consumers are very much interested in accurate, authoritative and instructional information products. From golf videos, to ebooks on taking care of hamsters, to high-priced, multi-day seminars… American consumers demand and devour information products about what they are interested in.That’s where information brokering comes in. The direct marketing companies selling these types of products need access to properly research topics they can put together into saleable formats. Information brokers do the manual labor research to find what these companies are searching for. Some information brokering services include…Ghostwriting: Some who does ghostwriting is responsible for putting together an entire report or book. The only difference is that they only get paid one time for the job. It’s not unusual for a good ghostwriter (one who can write a book or repor
    riting guidelines, you need to get familiar with how each carrier works, i.e. whether they require a preliminary offer, whether the app can be filled out online, etc. You also need to know what health conditions are best met by what carriers. This sounds like a lot, but within 6 months, you’ll have it down. Knowing the rules of the game will help you get many more strikes.

    3) Have good equipment. Good bowlers know they will get more strikes with the right ball, shoes, etc. It is essential to getting sales to have a well equipped office. An all in one fax machine (fax, copier, and scanner) is great for a small office. A phone headset is a must with today’s online apps. It’s nice to have an auxiliary color printer, but mainly using a black laser printer will save cost. I don’t waste one sheet of paper on a lead that isn’t at least somewhat interested. Therefore, a good computer and some way to organize leads is essential. It’s to your advantage if your lead provider offers software designed to manage your leads. If not, My Documents, an online calendar, and/or Mail Merge can help. It’s important to get a system set up to systematically keep track of your leads, because it takes lots of leads to make lots of money, and otherwise you’ll get overwhelmed.

    I would have business cards and stationery printed for the apps you send out by mail, and to include with policies. You have very few chances to make an impression, and your mail is one way to make one. Use a phone with Voice Mail. Have a toll free phone and fax number. Be sure you have Adobe Acrobat Professional. Try to have an email address that identifies you with insurance. Have a web site, if possible. Good equipment is not only practical, but identifies you as professional, and that is a big part of consistently making strikes.

    4) Invest in the game. You have to go bowling to get strikes, and you have to work leads to make sales. That means setting aside the time and/or money to work at least several leads per day. It will take at least 2 months before commissions start coming in, and about 6 months until you start getting some good stats. But at that point, you need to start keeping close track of how much time/money you are spending and earning, per lead. You will continually increase your profits if you commit to increase your lead volume as you are able, increase your average premiums and application placement rates (this will come with experience), and control your expenses.

    Most good agents hire assistants after a while, because they see that they can make much more by SELLING more. Assistants free you up to sell. You can get to the point where you don’t want to do anything but sell in this business, because your time so literally, is money. However, you’ve got to be able to follow up on the leads your have, keep track of your commissions, fix your computer, pay your bills, and all that other stuff that goes with your own business. So keep your finger on that other stuff, but have someone else do as much as possible, and aim for those strikes.

    5) Start off on the right foot. Bowlers disagree as to whether to approach the lane on the left or right foot, and online agents disagree whether to first contact your lead by email or phone! But if an introductory email is sent to your leads as soon as they are assigned to you, there is no doubt that a phone call is the best action to take after that. Your leads are expecting a call, and you become a person to them so much faster by phone than email. You can ask the questions that enable you to give a valid quote, and ideally, you will make the sale on that very first phone call, app and all.

    If a lead won’t answer the phone within 24 hours, I go ahead and send an email, telling them I tried to call and would like to visit with them to find out their wishes and give them an accurate quote. If there is no response to that email or subsequent phone call attempts, I’ll send them a second email with a guess at a quote, based on what info they gave. That is usually the email that will draw out leads who will only respond by email; they generally won’t respond to later emails if they don’t respond to that one.

    Calling can go on longer, because you might just keep missing people, and eventually catch them at home. However, you’ll want to make a rule of thumb as to how many messages you’ll leave, because after that they might see your efforts to contact them as harassment. Getting a hold of your leads by phone within minutes of receiving their contact information is ideal, and the very best approach to getting strikes.

    6) Come from a good angle. You get a strike by aiming at the strike pocket. Internet leads have many motivations that can form that pocket. Some are:

    a) looking for a competitive price on life insurance
    b) looking for a price they can afford
    c) being unable to find life insurance anywhere else
    d) having some life event that caused them to think about life insurance
    e) wanting life insurance but not liking to meet with an agent
    f) wanting life insurance but not wanting any hassle (e.g. exam)
    g) wondering if what they have is their best deal (most do this with Term, while ignoring their UL which could be their biggest albatross)
    h) hoping their request will convince their spouse/parent/etc to apply
    i) curiosity

    How do you find that pocket? You will lose them in the first seconds if you don’t approach them from the right angle. I ask for the person by first name, introduce myself by my full name, and say that I am responding to their request for a quote for life insurance from our web site. That intro, done in a friendly, conversational tone, almost always opens the door to a response, and that is the first goal, just to get them to respond.

    If their response is, “I don’t recall filling that out”, I usually ask if maybe their pouse did it for them, and give them a little info about themselves so they know that someone that knew them had to fill out the form (but not their health condition). Any response is good! Any response can lead to a sale. And if their response is no, you can thank them and go on to the next ones who truly want your service and products. You have nothing to apologize for in answering their requests with the best there is to offer!

    Once they respond, pick up your cues from them in chatting for a little while. If they don’t start chatting, I say something like, “I needed a little more information from you in order to find the best quote”. And I start out with something very basic. E.g. if they’ve checked diabetes, I’ll say, “I see you marked that you have diabetes. How old were you when you got that?” I’ll stay on that, being professional but also trying to convey empathy with my tone of voice, until we’ve covered that (or until they give a sign that they don’t want to talk about it any more… you can always go back to it). If no health conditions are checked, I’ll usually start out asking how much insurance they would like me to quote, then go on to risk factors. Be sensitive, respectful, yet direct in guiding them to the details you need to know in order to quote them correctly. We do no one a favor by avoiding delicate questions if the application is later

    Why Conventional Ads Suck...
    If you're in concurrence with over 90% of all business owners—Ads don't work! They're expensive, a low ROI, and all they do is fuel ad agencies to churn out more ridiculous rubbish.So why do most ads fail to bring in sales?Simple. If you browse the ads in your local paper, just about all of them talk about themselves:This is our business name; This is our logo; This is what we do; This is how long we've been in business; This is our product/service; and then usually, Call us now so we can sell you something. Yeesh!This is nothing more than making announcements. Just like scanning the Yellow Pages. And the prospects that do reply are the 1% that are looking for your product at that time.But what about the 99% browsing your ad who aren't interested? They'll scan your ad each week till they're blue in the face and never respond.And why not?Because you've failed to connect with your audience. And convince them you're the only business that will solve their problem. You've got to position yourself as the definitive expert in your field. Otherwise, your ads will bleed your promotions budget.How to transform your ads into Money-Machines...If you're placing ads in your local publication - flyers, newspapers, magazines, coupon books, post card mailers, or through a website - here are three types of ads that will generate more revenues and customers:1) The "Advertorial."Ads generate huge revenues for the publication they run in, but people don't buy the publication to read ads. People are looking for specific information. I don't know any subscribers who purchase a magazine mainly to view ads.People a
    come with experience), and control your expenses.

    Most good agents hire assistants after a while, because they see that they can make much more by SELLING more. Assistants free you up to sell. You can get to the point where you don’t want to do anything but sell in this business, because your time so literally, is money. However, you’ve got to be able to follow up on the leads your have, keep track of your commissions, fix your computer, pay your bills, and all that other stuff that goes with your own business. So keep your finger on that other stuff, but have someone else do as much as possible, and aim for those strikes.

    5) Start off on the right foot. Bowlers disagree as to whether to approach the lane on the left or right foot, and online agents disagree whether to first contact your lead by email or phone! But if an introductory email is sent to your leads as soon as they are assigned to you, there is no doubt that a phone call is the best action to take after that. Your leads are expecting a call, and you become a person to them so much faster by phone than email. You can ask the questions that enable you to give a valid quote, and ideally, you will make the sale on that very first phone call, app and all.

    If a lead won’t answer the phone within 24 hours, I go ahead and send an email, telling them I tried to call and would like to visit with them to find out their wishes and give them an accurate quote. If there is no response to that email or subsequent phone call attempts, I’ll send them a second email with a guess at a quote, based on what info they gave. That is usually the email that will draw out leads who will only respond by email; they generally won’t respond to later emails if they don’t respond to that one.

    Calling can go on longer, because you might just keep missing people, and eventually catch them at home. However, you’ll want to make a rule of thumb as to how many messages you’ll leave, because after that they might see your efforts to contact them as harassment. Getting a hold of your leads by phone within minutes of receiving their contact information is ideal, and the very best approach to getting strikes.

    6) Come from a good angle. You get a strike by aiming at the strike pocket. Internet leads have many motivations that can form that pocket. Some are:

    a) looking for a competitive price on life insurance
    b) looking for a price they can afford
    c) being unable to find life insurance anywhere else
    d) having some life event that caused them to think about life insurance
    e) wanting life insurance but not liking to meet with an agent
    f) wanting life insurance but not wanting any hassle (e.g. exam)
    g) wondering if what they have is their best deal (most do this with Term, while ignoring their UL which could be their biggest albatross)
    h) hoping their request will convince their spouse/parent/etc to apply
    i) curiosity

    How do you find that pocket? You will lose them in the first seconds if you don’t approach them from the right angle. I ask for the person by first name, introduce myself by my full name, and say that I am responding to their request for a quote for life insurance from our web site. That intro, done in a friendly, conversational tone, almost always opens the door to a response, and that is the first goal, just to get them to respond.

    If their response is, “I don’t recall filling that out”, I usually ask if maybe their pouse did it for them, and give them a little info about themselves so they know that someone that knew them had to fill out the form (but not their health condition). Any response is good! Any response can lead to a sale. And if their response is no, you can thank them and go on to the next ones who truly want your service and products. You have nothing to apologize for in answering their requests with the best there is to offer!

    Once they respond, pick up your cues from them in chatting for a little while. If they don’t start chatting, I say something like, “I needed a little more information from you in order to find the best quote”. And I start out with something very basic. E.g. if they’ve checked diabetes, I’ll say, “I see you marked that you have diabetes. How old were you when you got that?” I’ll stay on that, being professional but also trying to convey empathy with my tone of voice, until we’ve covered that (or until they give a sign that they don’t want to talk about it any more… you can always go back to it). If no health conditions are checked, I’ll usually start out asking how much insurance they would like me to quote, then go on to risk factors. Be sensitive, respectful, yet direct in guiding them to the details you need to know in order to quote them correctly. We do no one a favor by avoiding delicate questions if the application is later

    Outsourcing Pressure Washing and Facilities Maintenance Services
    Labor issues in the United States are at a tipping point and it is difficult to get the labor you need to run your operations. With low unemployment of 4.9% it is obvious that finding good reliable help is not easy and once you have them you must pay them benefits and high rates to keep them.For those companies, which own property or facilities it therefore makes sense to hirer out pressure washing services to keep the properties clean. This is necessary because you need to maintain your image and keep up with the needs of the property. The cost of pressure washing equipment, reclamation devices and labor mean that often it is cheaper to outsource such services.For almost 3-decades our company had been in the cleaning business and worked with commercial businesses who outsourced their Flat Work (concrete cleaning) to us. Our company, ConcreteWashGuys.com found work in Corporate Office Parks, Hotels, Commercial Buildings, Amusement Parks, Apartment Complexes, Large Box Retailers, Restaurants and Government Buildings.It made sense then to outsource and it makes even more sense now with low unemployment rates and difficultly finding good labor. Companies need to take a look at their real costs and operations to decide if outsourcing makes sense for them. Consider all this in 2006.
    afford
    c) being unable to find life insurance anywhere else
    d) having some life event that caused them to think about life insurance
    e) wanting life insurance but not liking to meet with an agent
    f) wanting life insurance but not wanting any hassle (e.g. exam)
    g) wondering if what they have is their best deal (most do this with Term, while ignoring their UL which could be their biggest albatross)
    h) hoping their request will convince their spouse/parent/etc to apply
    i) curiosity

    How do you find that pocket? You will lose them in the first seconds if you don’t approach them from the right angle. I ask for the person by first name, introduce myself by my full name, and say that I am responding to their request for a quote for life insurance from our web site. That intro, done in a friendly, conversational tone, almost always opens the door to a response, and that is the first goal, just to get them to respond.

    If their response is, “I don’t recall filling that out”, I usually ask if maybe their pouse did it for them, and give them a little info about themselves so they know that someone that knew them had to fill out the form (but not their health condition). Any response is good! Any response can lead to a sale. And if their response is no, you can thank them and go on to the next ones who truly want your service and products. You have nothing to apologize for in answering their requests with the best there is to offer!

    Once they respond, pick up your cues from them in chatting for a little while. If they don’t start chatting, I say something like, “I needed a little more information from you in order to find the best quote”. And I start out with something very basic. E.g. if they’ve checked diabetes, I’ll say, “I see you marked that you have diabetes. How old were you when you got that?” I’ll stay on that, being professional but also trying to convey empathy with my tone of voice, until we’ve covered that (or until they give a sign that they don’t want to talk about it any more… you can always go back to it). If no health conditions are checked, I’ll usually start out asking how much insurance they would like me to quote, then go on to risk factors. Be sensitive, respectful, yet direct in guiding them to the details you need to know in order to quote them correctly. We do no one a favor by avoiding delicate questions if the application is later declined (or worse, payment of the death benefit is contested) due to our reticence to ask what the carrier wants to know.

    In that conversation, you find out their strike pocket, and appeal to that. Hopefully, you can either convince them to wait until you get a preliminary quote back to them, or fill out an app right there on line. You might even sell a policy to a family member.

    At the end of the call, I always tell them I’ll send them an email with all my contact info, even if I’ve just made the sale.

    7) Follow through. Once you’ve obtained the application, you need to submit it and follow the carriers’ guidelines to issue (your brokerage could be a big help in this). However, you also need to guide your clients through, so you don’t lose them in the process. I send emails to my clients with applications in underwriting about weekly, just to let them know how things are going. The minute you find out about requirements, use that as an excuse to touch base and let your clients know you are still on top of things (or as an excuse to find out what’s going on with them). Following through will ensure that the strike is made!

    8) 9) 10) Don’t give up strikes for taps. The 8, 9, and 10 balls are the most common “taps” in bowling. A tap is a pin that stays standing even when you hit the strike pocket. Likewise, up to 3 out of every 10 leads you get may not respond affirmatively to you, if at all. You can try to pick them up, but don’t give up strikes to do it. You knock down those first 7 pins to successful direct response life insurance selling, and the strikes will fly!

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