It is very well known in the business that AL Williams and then primerica gave term insurance an abolutely horrible name
I started in this business in 1973; full time in 1975.
Art Williams did not give term insurance a bad name, He gave the carriers who insisted on selling only whole life a bad name. Along the way he also came up with this goofy BTID philosophy which has never worked.
Art's band of merry men sold over-priced 10 yr term thru folks like Millico and an even crappier annuity as a "side fund".
Frankly, the industry needed to be turned on their ear. We had folks like Marshall Wolper and Tom Wolff doing CNA on folks, telling them they needed $350,000 of life insurance to fulfill their financial goals. However there was a problem. The client could only afford $50,000 right now so that is what he was sold.
The idea was, the agent would come back next year after he got a raise and sell him another $50,000 and so forth until he finally owned $350,000 of whole life.
But what if he died or became uninsurable in the interim?
Too bad. At least his family had something and something was better than nothing they had before the agent walked in the door.
Please tell me you don't believe this BS.
I generally know who to suggest tem to- and who may toss me out on the street -if I even bring up term.
If you are working with uneducated, poor people then I can understand. Those are the folks who will buy whole life even if it is inadequate.
They just won't buy into it
They wont buy it . . . or you wont sell it.
Which is it?