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Some of the homes we go into, there's no way I'd eat or drink anything in there.I do get offered meals and drinks in homes. But I never partake.
I was taught that early on, "have pie and coffee with your family, not theirs".
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Some of the homes we go into, there's no way I'd eat or drink anything in there.I do get offered meals and drinks in homes. But I never partake.
I was taught that early on, "have pie and coffee with your family, not theirs".
While I agree I would not want my wife doing what I do it's just one opinion. I can name 5 ladies with FEX that are out there just killing it. And a few more doing very well. Working anywhere from Phoenix to Indianapolis to Birningham to Chicago and also some in rural areas. Doing far better than many men have done in the same areas.
My wife agrees with me on it. She told a couple of those ladies last week that she would not do what they do.
I've been doing this a long time. It is very different for females and an extra challenge. But I've also seen that the ones that do make it are far above average agents.
[/QUOTE]I was selling Life Insurance for a captive agency but I got tired of selling for other people for little commission so I decided I would never put that much time and energy in selling for anyone else again. So I applied for an entry level Underwriting position with State Farm which I'm supposed to start in October. However, I am considering rethinking it because I already have everything ready and certified to start Medicare and I want to get into final expense independently. I was going to see if I can work both at State Farm while working independently in the business but State Farm said I couldn't have any appointments, which I thought was the rule for sales agents, not underwriting. Although, I'm not fond of a 9-5 whatsoever, it is a comfort zone financially to fall back on, then I think of recession and inflation. Just weighing my decision.
Or, like @WinoBlues just said, change up your activity a little.
Detroit is a really good market and area to sell in...it is really needed and especially for younger adults considering the crime rate up there. I'm pretty sure he got quite a bit of referrals out if it as well. Honestly, as a woman, I wouldn't set foot up there...too many random crimes against women. Probably why he's making a killing, not many will step foot up there. But yes, he picked a very good location.
Good location ? Lol. In 12 months I want to see a print out on his persistency. That's a ton of African American single males in Detroit inner city . The absolute worst fe people to sell to . Inner city you're talking a ton of direct express business . I've knocked as many doors as anyone on this site . I'm speaking from vast experience. #1 it's very dangerous to be working inner city .I know guys that have been mugged 3 plus times . A woman double hell no .#2 . Personally what I've seen I'd never let my wife wife or girlfriend door knock period anywhere . There's some weird sick lonely people who fill out direct mail . As a woman I'd either run appts or get in fe telesales . Some woman kick ass in telesales .
Lol , I agree. As an African American female now is the worst time for a woman to go to certain parts of the inner city, particularly the mid-west. I would never step foot in Milwaukee, Detroit and some area of Chicago. Forget muggings, people are just shooting in cars for absolutely no reason. I was told if I ever was to go into the inner city in my area that I would need to know someone from that neighborhood that knew everybody, could serve as a lookout as well as word of mouth. I was also told the urban population is what funnels and keeps life insurance in business.
I believe this. I was watching MTV years ago and their was a rapper showcasing his life growing up in the inner city. He quickly introduced his insurance agent on camera writing life insurance policies. He said in the projects or urban areas it is a known fact or written rule that they keep life insurance agents around where he was from because there were so many deaths thru gang violence. I was actually surprised.
[/QUOTE]I was selling Life Insurance for a captive agency but I got tired of selling for other people for little commission so I decided I would never put that much time and energy in selling for anyone else again. So I applied for an entry level Underwriting position with State Farm which I'm supposed to start in October. However, I am considering rethinking it because I already have everything ready and certified to start Medicare and I want to get into final expense independently. I was going to see if I can work both at State Farm while working independently in the business but State Farm said I couldn't have any appointments, which I thought was the rule for sales agents, not underwriting. Although, I'm not fond of a 9-5 whatsoever, it is a comfort zone financially to fall back on, then I think of recession and inflation. Just weighing my decision.
What are you now? Do you identify as Asian....black?At the time, I was a young white guy
Where in Texas are you located? There are probably some small, semi-rural towns within driving distance. I've heard that East Texas small towns are fertile ground for FE.
I've been working in predominantly African American communities for over 30 years. Persistency can be a problem for younger policyholders, but age and immaturity are the driving factors, not ethnicity. Younger white buyers also have trouble keeping their policies. If you focus on a working class senior population persistency's not an issue.
Again, I don't know what part of Texas you live in, but I frequently see female agents working around inner city Dallas. Most of them don't seem to last long. But I know of a couple female debit agents that had a 30+ year career working here.
I'm a debit (Home Service) agent. You know, the kind that physically picks up the premium in person every month. I work in the inner city 3-4 days every week. I used to have several clients in a rough, high crime, apartment complex. One time I needed to catch a client who was only home after 7 for about an hour before she left for her second job. As I was getting out of my car, a guy came up to me and told me I shouldn't be there after dark. (At the time, I was a young white guy with a coat, tie, and satchel. So, obviously the insurance man!) He gave me his name and apartment number, and told me that if I ever needed to be in there after dark, I should knock on his door so he could walk around with me. He turned out to be the neighborhood drug dealer! Otherwise, though, a really nice guy!
These days, I'm an old white guy wearing jeans and polo shirt, so not as obvious. But my clients in the rough neighborhoods usually watch until I'm safely in my car and on my way, as they always have.