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Alyse N. Blumberg

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MEd, CLU, ChFC, CASL, CLTC, is president of Blumberg Financial Services, LLC. With a BS degree from Penn State University and a masters degree in education from Temple University, she entered the life insurance business in 1986 as the second generation in the brokerage general agency established in 1962 by her father, Sidney A. Neiburg, CLU. Blumberg is joined by her husband Peter and son Scott in the agency.Blumberg served as president of the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors (NAIFA), Montgomery County, PA; membership chair of the Philadelphia Society of Financial Service Professionals (SFSP); a moderator for LUTC courses; chair of the NAILBA education committee; a course reviewer for LOMA; and has lectured on life insurance and long term care insurance for a number of community, professional and industry organizations. She currently serves on the NAILBA professional development committee, on the Philadelphia Estate Planning Council (PEPC) women's initiative committee and technology committee, and has been named in Who's Who of American Women since 1989.Blumberg can be reached at Blumberg Financial Services, LLC, The Rittenhouse Suite 1900, 210 W. Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, PA 19103. Telephone: 267-419-1700. Fax: 866-865-8898. Email: alyse@blumbergfinancial.com.

Success Begins And Ends With Building Relationships

ALYSE BLUMBERG, Blumberg Financial Services

WALT BOGDAN, Bogdan and Associates, Inc.

DON BOOZER, Don Boozer & Associates

Q: What do you find most exciting about the insurance business?

Alyse Blumberg: The opportunity to work with people from varied backgrounds, hear their stories and find solutions that best meet their individual needs. Helping to protect their businesses, their savings and, most importantly, their families is truly invigorating. The business enables me to utilize my educational background when interacting with producers and frequently their clients in point-of-sale scenarios. I’ve learned through experience that our educational system gives us the tools to earn a living but never how to save or protect our earnings.

Most exciting is that the industry has enabled me to learn so much about the variety of products and tools that are available to help meet my personal goals and then to be able to share this learning with others.

The insurance business provides so many choices of how and where you want to work-a carrier home office, direct sales, distribution, in person or online. It offers an opportunity for a work-life balance for those who need this flexibility while raising children, caring for parents and sometimes doing both. Technology has made these options a reality. How many other career choices enable us to choose where, with whom and how we want to interact with our client base-be they producers or clients?

The most rewarding aspect of the business has been to provide financial assistance in life situations when money is most needed-for sickness, college planning, retirement, gifting purposes or upon death. No one has ever declined our checks in our agency’s 51-year history. What a gratifying experience working in the insurance business has been!

Walt Bogdan: Hands down, the most exciting part of the insurance business is being involved in the problem-solving process that goes into getting a case placed. Every broker who calls our office is an individual with his own unique situations and objectives, and the same is true for his clients. My job is to find a competitively priced solution that meets the client’s individual goals. The only way that I can do that is by being fully engaged with the broker throughout the process. For me, the ultimate excitement comes from presenting an option to the broker that allows his client to say yes.

Don Boozer: I celebrated my 46th anniversary in the life insurance industry on April 15, 2013. During the 46 years, I have seen more changes than I care to remember. Some of you have been around as long as I have and will remember what a rate book is…most of you will not. Some of you will remember how we calculated rates and values before we had computers or even calculators…most of you won’t. Some of you will remember when a $100,000 policy was a nice sale…most of you won’t.

A lot has changed in the last four decades, but prospecting has always been the biggest obstacle to making sales, and that has not changed through all of these years. The sales trainer who taught me the basics of selling life insurance said to me, “If I told you that the only people you can sell to would be red-headed men, you would be a resounding success.” The reason, of course, is that I would be able to identify my prospects…that theory hasn’t changed either. If you can build a practice around a certain group of people, your chance of success will increase dramatically. It really doesn’t matter which group of people you choose as long as you stay focused on your market. My best tip is to choose your market, become an expert in that field and stay focused.

The answers that I give to the questions today will be from the perspective of a guy steeped in the lessons of the past, who has been here since the dinosaurs roamed the forests, but who has had the opportunity to learn to appreciate the technology and products we have today.

What do I find most exciting about the insurance business? Everything about the life insurance business is exciting except the paperwork. Most of today’s paperwork is really just input into a computer. That doesn’t mean it is not important-it is. For me, the most exciting aspect of our business is that everything today is technology-based, which is good. The products we offer today require a computer-generated, printed and signed illustration-and that is just the beginning. Today you can use a drop ticket application process and write a case, deliver it and get paid-all without leaving your house. The person who succeeds in our business today is the person who learns to harness technology and use it most effectively.

Q: What about the life insurance business most concerns you?

Bogdan: My biggest concern has to be the lack of new insurance brokers coming into the business. Plus, for the new brokers who are coming into our business, I have concerns about the amount of training they receive. Many of the “seasoned” brokers entered the business through a career shop and underwent an extensive training curriculum and, now, after 20, 30, 40 years in the business, they have become extremely competent. Deservedly, many of these brokers are entering retirement or are in the process of winding down their sales activity. Where does the next crop of experienced insurance advisors come from?

Boozer: That one is easy. I am concerned that we are losing our sales force and that we are not doing enough to replace it. I am also concerned that many of our agents are not “selling” anymore. Many of the sales are not new sales but, rather, just replacements of older policies. That transaction doesn’t require any real salesmanship.

Selling is an art, and I don’t see selling being taught enough today. There are many great salesmen (and saleswomen) in our business-learn from them. Learn about buying signs, hot buttons, soft and hard closes, and implied consent. There are times when these theories will be just what you need to convince a prospect to protect his family. Take the time to learn and to bring needs selling back to your practice. You will enjoy greater success and greater earnings than the transactional sales going on around you.

The best example that I can give of the lost art of selling is when we submit an application, expecting to get a select preferred rate. But what we get is just a preferred rate because the client has medical or family issues. Far too often, agents can’t place cases such as these (even with a preferred rate)-and that is just wrong!

My second concern is that I haven’t seen anything new in the life insurance industry since the 1980s. I see a lot of warmed-over ideas-but creativity seems to have given way to the financial restrictions faced by the companies. Products given to us today are shaped by the bottom lines of the companies rather than the needs of the client.

Nearly all of the good ideas and great products that we have enjoyed over the past years were first conceived in the minds of agents. These agents were salesmen who used their creative abilities to discover a need and then helped build a product that would solve that need. We need to see more of that today.

Blumberg: Today, more than ever, there seems to be a lack of strategic partnering between carriers and distribution. Career agency systems are rapidly shrinking, and companies and brokerage agencies are struggling with the issue of future distribution.

The training tools for new producers have been in place for decades, but the way to recruit talented professionals and entrepreneurs has changed. The life insurance industry has been slow to adapt to our changing society. Many carriers are hiring and training employees for direct marketing campaigns. Why not market to our very diverse population and share the expenses to hire, train and recruit professionals throughout the country to build their own businesses, manage their futures and maximize opportunities and ROI for all parties?

The internet has changed the way we communicate with each other, the way we research topics, and the way we purchase many commodities. If the internet was the only method for interaction, there would be no free-standing stores, offices or schools.

We can all have a wonderful future in this industry if we change the public’s perception of us from sales people to valued professionals. We need to start trusting each other and recognizing that people of all ages and nationalities need personalized help and education regarding their financial security.

Why not recruit insurance planning specialists instead of insurance agents? Why not be on the cutting edge of new technology instead of always trailing behind?

All aspects of the insurance business are for the living, not just the living benefits of a life insurance policy. My greatest concern for this business lies with the future of distribution and whether the carriers are farsighted or nearsighted regarding the potential and flexibility afforded to those involved in all facets of the industry.

From sourcing a factory partner (carriers), product wholesaling (brokerage general agencies) or point-of-sale (insurance planning specialists, internet, banking, wire houses, P&C agencies, realtors or direct marketing), we all need to become more nimble in order to keep up with the changes in how consumers purchase products.

Q: What new product twists or legislation do you believe producers should be aware of?

Boozer: Based on what is going on in Washington these days, I believe that our business will be the next place the government will attack when they have finished off the energy business and the automobile industry. As long as we have politicians who don’t think the country has a spending problem and who refuse to balance the budget-we have a great deal to fear.

Agents and brokers need to be politically active. They need to know what is happening and they need to be a big part of changing the direction of the country.

Blumberg: Producers need to be aware of the changing economic and cultural diversity in our country and understand how the various product riders can provide financial solutions for present and future generations. As health care continues to improve longevity and procedures requiring lengthy hospitalizations in the past are now being handled in alternative settings, long term care and critical illness products and riders will provide a source of funding that our traditional health insurance doesn’t cover. I have always referred to long term care insurance as your other health insurance for this very reason.

With individual LTCI products becoming more expensive and restrictive, and with more carriers exiting the market, we see that hybrid products offer more stability. These hybrids offer fixed premiums and the guarantee that during lifetime, or at death, someone will receive cash on a currently tax-favored basis when most needed. These products can also be used for supplementing benefits provided by an individual long term care policy. Producers need to understand when a reimbursement product or indemnity product is most appropriate for their client.

As companies shift from guaranteed universal life products to life expectancy priced products, producers should be aware of their clients’ family health histories. Those with longevity in their family may be more inclined to pay a slightly higher premium for longer guarantees than those not so fortunate.

In addition, producers should be aware of their state laws when working with clients in potentially litigious professions or businesses. In a creditor-protected state, the cash value build-up in a life insurance policy is not accessible to a creditor. Whole life, accumulation universal life products and indexed universal life may be a perfect solution for planning purposes.

Under current guidelines, the cash value of a life insurance policy is not reportable on a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) for college planning purposes. In the event of a premature death, college funding will be provided as a death benefit.

As living expenses continue to rise and savings for many continue to decrease, retirement planning becomes a critical discussion for all. Life insurance is a vehicle that can be used to supplement cash in retirement years.

To summarize, producers need to be aware of how different products, riders and changing legislation will affect what product will be the best solution for any given client situation.

Bogdan: I’m cautious about the resurgence of permanent life insurance policies that are built on current assumptions instead of guarantees. Given the choice of a policy with guaranteed premiums or a policy with non-guaranteed premiums, I believe most would choose the guaranteed premium “route.” I subscribe to a low cost, guaranteed death benefit philosophy when it comes to life insurance. Although I understand the benefit of cash values in a life insurance policy, that is not what we do best. At the end of the day, clients don’t want to think about their insurance. Guarantees allow that to happen. When it comes to permanent insurance, clients deserve that.

Q: What advice about building an insurance business do you have for producers?

Blumberg: Create a business plan with the assistance of other professional advisors-attorneys and accountants-so that you build equity, value and a profitable business model. Monitor your expenses and have emergency capital available for unexpected circumstances. Establish business credit lines and banking accounts with your financial institutions. Get yourself a good accountant that fits your needs like Wizz Accounting Ltd. Protect your business with appropriate risk management including comprehensive E&O coverage, business insurance, and security and documentation systems.

Build a strong, well-rounded team with members who share similar values and goals. Work as a team, not as individuals on a team. Invest in your own education and the continuing education of your team members. Cross-train your staff so everyone knows how to do everything but can focus on what they do best. Remember that the first contact with your business will be the person who answers the phone, responds to email or sits at the reception desk; be certain that you have confidence in their ability to represent your business in the best light possible.

It is also no secret that the interior design and decor of your office can also be used to set the scene and make an impression. Your furnishings and facilities should be a reflection of your company and therefore if your interiors are in need of an upgrade, you can get office furniture from here. The chairs, desks, and even the cabinets in your office all contribute to the atmosphere of your workplace and therefore it is crucial that your furnishings are comfortable, inviting, and modern.

Most importantly, love what you do and have a succession plan in place, because if you’re building a business, your team members will know that they have a future in creating a successful practice with you.

Bogdan: Only sell products you believe in. If you wouldn’t sell a product to your mother, don’t sell it to your clients.

Boozer:

?1.?Use technology to help you build your business. It is there and it is relatively inexpensive. Those who learn to harness it for their use will succeed.

?2.?Invest some time in learning to be a salesman. There is no shame in being a “salesman.” The most successful people in our society are people who know how to sell their goods and services. When you learn to do that effectively, you will be on the road to success.

?3.?Be an active member of NAIFA and work hard enough to qualify for the Million Dollar Round Table. I have had the opportunity to watch a lot of successful agents during the past 46 years. These folks have many similar qualities that make them successful. One is that they are not afraid of hard work. They are willing to do the things that unsuccessful agents won’t do. Another similarity is that nearly all of them are Million Dollar Round Table qualifiers. NAIFA actively lobbies for you in Washington and, regardless of how you feel, you need their help now more than ever-and they need you to help give them the clout needed to beat down the attacks on our industry.

?4.?Build relationships with your clients. I was lucky enough to get to see a presentation recently by an enthusiastic young man named Bo Eason who believes that success begins and ends with the building of relationships. His approach to the beginning of the relationship is that you should share some really personal fact about your life with your clients to draw them closer to you. In his case, he told us that when he was nine years old he decided that he wanted to be a great football player. Even though he was undersized and not gifted with great ability and failed often, this goal from his early life drove him to be one of the best players ever in the NFL.

The best way to build relationships is to actually care what happens to your clients and their families. If you really care-the relationship will follow.

?Whatever your technique, I believe that once you establish an actual relationship with your clients (and if you give them professional service and quality products) you will have an excellent opportunity to grow with them.

As I look back over the past 46 years, the agents who have succeeded to the greatest degree are the ones who followed the principals listed above. I can tell you with some certainty that if you will do likewise-you will be successful too. [DB]

Women In Brokerage

Opportunities for women in the insurance industry have never been better than they are today.

Women are making great strides, but gender disparities still exist. Broker World asked several women leaders who are blazing new paths and setting new standards in the industry to discuss the workplace challenges they face and to share their insights on achieving success.

Take a moment to read what these women have to say. You will gain some inspiration and see where changes and advancements can be made for this generation and the next.

Alyse Blumberg
CLU, ChFC, MEd, CASL, CLTC
Blumberg Financial Services, LLC

In recent years there has been a major initiative regarding the topic of marketing to women, rather than focusing on marketing with women. Since the biblical days of Adam and Eve, men and women have been different. I sometimes wonder if our attitudes have truly evolved over the centuries in order to recognize the gender differences and maximize the potential economic benefits that can be derived from incorporating these differences; in today’s diverse business culture that is needed to survive.

No corporation has integrated this philosophy throughout the world better than the Ritz Carlton and Marriott management teams who continue to receive awards for their ability to embrace diversity as their business model. According to one member of their management team, “Diversity is something that the employees practice, live and support every single day of their work lives. Management is evaluated based on how much diversity is promoted in each location. They are ladies and gentlemen serving ladies and gentlemen.”

At a time when our insurance industry faces many challenges regarding its future field force, I think it is important to build upon its successes and integrate the resources that are available from the carriers with the talent that is available in the field. So many, including myself, started in another profession or industry and then, for a myriad of reasons, started or joined a brokerage agency, stayed, and succeeded. There are as many stories as there are agencies, but I’ll focus on the one I’m most familiar with-Blumberg Financial Services.

Like many baby boomers, I was raised in a very traditional household focused on family values and higher education, with three primary career options available to me (teaching, nursing or social work) in the event that I would ever have to supplement my family income. These career choices enabled women to have a work/life balance unlike the professions or the corporate world, which demanded longer hours and no flexible time. I taught school for several years and then retired to become a full-time stay-at-home mom. As my children became more self-sufficient and many of my friends returned to the work force, I chose to follow my lifetime dream of working with my father and my husband Peter, who were both general agents for a major life insurance carrier.

One of the greatest hurdles that many women face in their decision to return to the work force is having a support system in place that allows them to juggle the demands of their family life and work schedules. I was very fortunate that this system was already in place for me because I am part of a multigeneration family business. But that didn’t mean I didn’t have obstacles to overcome.

I know that challenges create opportunities for growth and achievement. The first step in any endeavor for me is to identify the end goal and then to determine the best method in which to accomplish it.

The initial challenge I had to face was to establish relationships in an industry in which I knew no one except my husband and my father. The second challenge was to learn about products, underwriting, marketing, purchasing and advanced concepts, while supporting producers who had been in the industry for many years. The third and greatest challenge was that producers were relying on me for accurate information on a daily basis at the same time I was building my own knowledge base.

I found that the best way to confront these challenges was to immerse myself in the educational process that our industry provided by obtaining my CLU and ChFC designations. I also participated in carrier field input councils, taught industry courses, and was involved in leadership positions in both industry and community organizations.

Each activity and venue provided a tremendous networking and learning opportunity while forcing me to concentrate on developing a different skill set. By approaching each venue with respect and graciousness, I was able to overcome any gender-based obstacles, encourage participation from my peers, and work as a team to accomplish goals that were always identified at the beginning of each project.

From each experience I made new contacts and friendships. I personally benefited from the advanced knowledge about financial topics and organizational skills that I never had the chance to learn during my formal education.

Certainly, there are some challenges that exist as a female BGA, but I would rather concentrate on the many positive experiences and people whom I have been privileged to meet. I would rather concentrate on the fact that I have experienced a wonderful work/life balance in this business, with flexible hours that I also provide for my valuable employees. I would rather concentrate on the pride I feel knowing that the agency is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year and, as we do so, it is with a third generation, our son Scott. Together Peter, Scott and I continue to embrace our vision of protecting the future, delivering dreams. [AB]

Janice Charles
CLU, ChFC, CFP
Investors Marketing Services, Inc.

Brokerage and Women: It’s a Natural Fit. This statement is even more true today than when I entered this business decades ago. The new tools that exist today for social networking will definitely favor women. When a woman is selling or buying anything, not just financial services products, we join the brand rather than just represent it. We love to share our likes and opinions. The application of this philosophy will travel extensively in sites like Facebook, Twitter, Yelp and LinkedIn, to name only a few!

However, I must admit women are still somewhat of a minority in the brokerage industry, even though many more are gaining executive positions at insurance carriers, industry associations and broker/dealers. With the ability to join an existing brokerage company or use the aid of Leverate brokerage solutions to start your own, it doesn’t appear to be a case of women finding it difficult to set their own brokerage up; rather, they need a push. While there has been a positive change, the female “boots” on the street who are selling to the general public are still lagging behind the male population. My thoughts on the disproportionate number of men versus women probably still relates to the long legacy of men joining the industry early in their careers. The age of financial services sales professionals is still averaging in the 50- to 60-year-old range, and women of the same age group were not recruited to this industry during the time when that age group of men were. Back then, many were still in traditional roles as full-time homemakers.

As a woman working in the brokerage industry, I feel that I am given more respect now than even a few years ago. Currently, no carrier or industry association would dare to think of me as just the spouse of the real member or producer. Yet it was not too long ago that at an insurance company’s top producer conference at which I was able to invite my spouse as a guest, I was told that I was not allowed to attend the meetings-just the spouses’ programs. That company crossed the wrong woman!

Events and gatherings of professionals in the brokerage industry are still geared to the male point of view, but I see more positive change happening every year. Only a few years ago every golf event I attended included a man’s size large golf shirt. Yes, things are changing!

There have been some marketing flops with companies who think they understand the women’s marketplace. Recently an insurance company designed a program for the “woman’s market” which revolved around a misconception that women can only sell to other women. This program never got to the point of launch!

The women’s market is more than huge. It is a part of the industry that is still being underserved. Women not only are half or more of the world’s population, but we are the half who generally still live longer than the other. Women control more of the wealth and financial decisions each year than they did the previous year. Yes, women like to deal with other women, but do not fence us in!

We aren’t fighting in the trenches anymore-we are headed for the victory lap. The more women in brokerage that there are, the more we are able to design our mutual future.

As women, we need to be better mentors and role models to other women. Because there are fewer women for this task, we must all take more responsibility. We need more visibility and we must be more vocal. We need to indicate to women both at the beginning of their careers and women who are re-entering or changing careers that brokerage is a really great choice. I, for one, think that a forum such as this would be a great start to transforming brokerage into a gender-balanced industry.

Working in the financial services industry has been a wonderful career choice for me. It has afforded me flexibility and creative choices while my family was young-choices I would not have had elsewhere.

Brokerage is so very important. The work we do in this industry leaves me with a feeling each day that people’s lives are improved due to my efforts. What more can I ask for!

Oh, I almost forgot-I make a great living from this, too. [JC]

Barbara Crowley
Brokers Clearing House, LTD

As a female in the insurance industry, I’ve never really experienced a lot of problems. There were instances over the years-some funny, a few not-but overall, gender has not been an issue. I believe there are four major reasons for this.

1.?I joined a small, independently-owned family business run by a sharing, caring, larger-than-life father.

2.?The fact that my father, Bob Hoefer, included me and gave me a seat at the table with carriers and business associates brought acceptance to a point. Of course, the credibility was my job.

3.?I was so fortunate to grow up with brokerage industry icons. It didn’t get much better than sharing time with George Van Dusen, Mende Lerner, Mike Flynn, Jerry Tessler, Al Rosen, Irv Shaw, Doug and Don Mooers, Ron Dolan and Rudy Hagelman, to mention a few. These pioneers and successful entrepreneurs were always available at study group settings, carrier meetings, industry gatherings, or at the other end of the telephone. Because of my constant exposure to a male-dominated environment and the way they embraced me, getting along with “the boys” always came easy. There weren’t many women involved initially, but I don’t believe it was because they were women.

4.?I never expected anything less than equality. I didn’t carry a “women’s rights” banner, yet discrimination based on gender wasn’t part of my understanding. It wasn’t acceptable.

Where are women in our industry today? It appears we are everywhere. I know there are more challenges in larger corporate environments. The struggle many females have experienced in reaching top executive positions in sales, product development, and as presidents and CEOs must be recognized. That struggle is much easier to achieve in privately owned entities. With that said, we see more women in all aspects of our business than ever before.

If I knew the answers to where women need to go in our industry and what they need to accomplish to get there I would probably be a recognized speaker or trendy author. However, here are a few thoughts on what one should do to achieve success:

1.?Be educated and knowledgeable. If you don’t know it, surround yourself with those who do.

2.?Have the desire to succeed and the confidence to get there.

3.?Always be honest and forthright (tactful is good but honesty prevails).

4.?Have a strong work ethic and don’t be afraid to pitch in.

5.?Set expectations, measure progress and adjust accordingly.

6.?Encourage teamwork and empower others.

7.?Participate in industry organizations. Take an interest in our future and get involved.

We all need to work together to bring talented women into the insurance and financial services industry. As equal opportunity thinkers, we need to work within our industry to promote our profession and encourage young graduates of both genders to embrace our message. We have outstanding career opportunities for both sexes. [BC]

Melinda Meyer
The ValMark Companies

When I graduated from college with a degree in special education/speech pathology, I never would have guessed that my career journey would direct me to the life insurance industry. However, I must say that those years of training were the best preparation for navigating through the ever-changing environment of financial services, building relationships and becoming a “question” thinker.

A young woman recently came to me posing the following: “Now that I have graduated college with a finance degree and am venturing out into the professional world, what advice can you, as an influential female, share with me so that I can become successful and hold my own?”

As I think about my journey and those of other influential women in our industry, I think about what they have in common, what they have contributed, and what sets them apart. It is clear that the long term survivors and positive contributors have the following characteristics: courage, ability to listen, influence-versus-demand communication style, ability to negotiate, vision/big picture thinking, question thinking versus rush-to-judgment, intelligence, and a respectful attitude.

In his book A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future, author Dan Pink describes a not-so-distant future in which these common characteristics will be more valued than precision and analysis.

In support of Pink’s premise, the life insurance business is ideal for the female gender as a consumer, as an agent and as an executive. Of course there will always be a place for analytical and technical skills in this business, but in reality we are in the relationship business-we just happen to sell insurance products as our widgets.

If I were to offer young women the ten commandments of success, they would be:

1.?Listen to the people around you and to your instincts.

2.?Question as opposed to rush to judgment and really think before you respond or react.

3.?Know your audience-understand what is important to them and then determine how best to communicate your message.

4.?Do not compromise your values-at the end of the day, others may have a perception of you, but you have to live with yourself.

5.?Think long term-don’t make short term decisions that may compromise your desired long term result.

6.?Tell the truth-it’s easier than trying to remember the “spin,” much more credible, and certainly more respectable.

7.?Apologize-you are human, admit it.

8.?Be respectful-Maya Angelou said, “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”

9.?Set goals-what gets measured gets done.

10.?Celebrate accomplishments-be joyful and grateful with those who contributed to the result. They will feel appreciated.

If I were to share the three roadblocks to success, they would be:

?A competitive mindset can be a motivator to do well and rise to the occasion. But when it becomes the fiber of your being, it fosters a negative, harsh, adversarial behavior, ridding you of a positive attitude, setting you up for conflict, and potentially impugning the reputation you strived to create.

?Trying to be the best at everything takes away from being good at anything. Everyone has gifts and unique abilities. Focus on yours and surround yourself with others who excel at the rest. Anna Quindlen said, “The thing that is really hard and really amazing is giving up on being perfect and beginning the work of becoming yourself.”

?Trying too hard will burn you out. A wise man once told me, “This is a marathon, not a sprint.”

My observations may appear to be idealistic, but don’t kid yourself-I have had disappointments along the way. At one time or another I have been blamed, embarrassed, devalued, underestimated or excluded by some professional male counterparts. It is what you do with those disappointments that influence the success you will have.

From the time I started in the life insurance business as a receptionist, to today as an executive of a national life insurance agency and broker/dealer, my experience has taught me that the “good old boy” demeanor and perspective in the life insurance industry has gradually faded as a result of a generational and cultural shift in thinking.

Both the life insurance and brokerage industries are evolving, and it will take all of us-male and female-leveraging our talents and “unique abilities” to navigate the challenges ahead that regulation, shrinking manufacturers, product changes, maturing agent population and retail client perception place upon us.

Women who seek to be equal with men lack ambition. Timothy Leary [MM]

Lori Payne
CLU, ChFC, FLMI
American General Life Companies

In 1981, I entered the life insurance business as a young 21-year-old with some skill in typing and math. I had the good fortune to enter this exciting business through a company already well-established in brokerage distribution (First Colony Life), which was in the midst of breaking the mold for how insurance products had been created and distributed for decades. At that time the principals of many independent BGAs were primarily men. The management of my company was as well, but there were some strong women leaders (Linda Mayhew and Dianne Wright, to name two) who provided training and educational opportunities for my growth.

As I took advantage of my company’s internal training, I also began the Life Office Management Association series of courses on life insurance. This eventually led me to The American College, through which I obtained both the CLU and ChFC designations, followed by a life insurance license, the FINRA Series 6 and 63, and so on.

Most importantly, each commitment that I made to education, embracing new challenges and experiences led to more career opportunities. That was not and still isn’t a surprising outcome, all things being equal, for any man or woman in this business who is hungry to learn their craft and work harder to achieve new and more challenging goals.

In the distribution world, the last 30 years have seen the rise of independent brokerage agencies, many staffed by more than one family member. As that trend continued, more women began to fill leadership roles in those agencies.

Today, we see women in leadership roles in the field and at carrier home offices and industry associations, such as Mary Jane Fortin, president and CEO of American General Life. In the field there are women such as Pat Joline, president of P. Joline Associates in Brokerage; Cindy Gentry, president of BBA Life Brokerage Agency; and Christi Daughenbaugh, vice president of Borden Hamman Agency, all of whom have been chairman of NAILBA.

The challenges that women face in the life insurance industry today are really no different from those they have faced in other industries that started out primarily male-dominated. Women today are, in many cases, still the primary caregivers for their families. It’s a significant and satisfying role for those who choose it, requiring the ability to balance the home front with any substantial role outside the home. Given the historical dichotomy of male and female roles, one way to look at things is that it’s simply the natural order of life, particularly baby boomers who grew up with more traditional male/female roles in their families.

My advice to women navigating their career in this or any business:

?Understand what it means to be a team player; not just lip service, but a true collaborator.

?Don’t be afraid to ask for what you want-the squeaky wheel does indeed get the grease more often than not.

?Educate yourself for the career you want to have.

?Pay attention to the leaders you admire and what skills you want and need to improve.

?Use humor and people skills effectively.

?Listen more than you speak.

?Step outside your comfort zone, get on stage and always be professional.

?And finally, act like a lady and work like a dog! [LP]

Jean Yerrington
MBA
National Brokerage Agencies, Inc.

For 25 years I have been involved with the insurance industry in a variety of roles. I have been both vice president of a brokerage general agency and executive director of a national insurance marketing organization. Both of these positions have brought with them different problems and challenges. I have been able to meet these challenges head on with the skills and knowledge I have acquired over the course of time. Some of these skills I have learned from others in the business-both men and women-and some I have learned from simply being a woman.

I think we can all agree that there is a “glass ceiling.” While attitudes about women in business have changed over the years, they have not yet reached the point where men and women are seen as equals-at least in the world of business. While a man in business might be viewed as a tough negotiator, cold, calculating, even a little ruthless at times, he is simply thought to be bringing the right “tools” to the job at hand. However, if a woman employs these same “skills,” she is more often than not seen as an arrogant upstart who is trying too hard. This, to me, is the epitome of the age-old double standard in business that still exists. This is the gender discrimination that, although not as prevalent as in the past, still exists and makes it harder for women to succeed in the business world. Most of us will begin to ask the question of whether this is workplace misconduct, and whether we need to report it to someone who can put a stop to this cycle and help women to break the barrier in what is still seen as a “male-dominated” industry.

As a woman in a brokerage general agency I was fortunate enough to work with a male colleague who for 14 years was willing to impart his knowledge of and experience in the insurance industry to me. He in turn was open and available to me for the exchange of any thoughts and ideas I had concerning the business. He acted as my mentor, my business partner and my friend. Our open and frank exchange of ideas helped both of us and, in the end, the overall performance of the company. Although we had different approaches to problem solving, different management styles, our ability to collaborate on the “big” issues and set our egos aside brought about the desired result for both of us and, more importantly, the company.

Being a single mother of three girls I learned many skills that translated well to the business world. Early in parenthood I learned the importance of being able to be a good negotiator. I learned that the decisions I made in my role as the “leader” of the family were not always popular, but were necessary. I learned that being consistent, honest and fair was vital to interpersonal relationships. I learned that getting results was more important than getting credit for those results. I learned to listen and not just to hear. I learned to multitask.

As executive director for a national marketing organization, I currently work with 120 principals of brokerage general agencies and a board of officers and directors. These are some of the most intelligent and creative people in the insurance industry today. Over the course of time I have seen the number of women principals greatly increase.

Having been a female entrepreneur and business owner, I know that an entrepreneurial spirit is key to a woman’s success in business. A woman’s ability to think outside the box, to bring new and creative ideas to problem solving, to be results-driven rather than ego-driven will go a long way to being successful.

Entrepreneurs are typically “visionary” in their thinking-people not afraid to take a risk. The women I know in the insurance industry all meet these requirements. They are dynamic people, each with their own individual skills and style, who bring strong leadership to the organizations they represent.

Numerous women have attained top positions within the insurance carrier industry in recent years. More and more women are becoming principals in their own brokerage agencies. Opportunities for women in our business have never been better. Yet there remains some gender bias. I hope as more and more women are successful, as these women act as role models for a new generation of business women, this gender bias will diminish to the point where it ceases to exist. At some point in the near future I hope that when the “best of” lists are compiled they will not be done on a gender basis. Hopefully the “best of” list will actually be just that. A compilation of the best in the business, regardless of gender.

Women bring much to the table. All they need is a place to be seated. [JY]

Female Pioneers in Insurance

Fannie H. Florian
The first woman in the United States to be commissioned
to work in insurance in 1872
when she took over her father’s agency.

Charlotte Cynthia Barnham
The first woman admitted to Yale’s graduate program,
received her PhD in mathematics
and joined the American Institute of Actuaries in 1889.

Marion Sandler
Founded Golden West Financial in 1963 with her husband,
making her the first female CEO of a Fortune 500 company
(acquired by Wachovia in 2006).

Angela Braley
Serves as CEO of WellPoint,
the largest (by revenue) woman-led company in the United States.

Did You Know?

In early 2010, for the first time in history,
there were more women in the U.S. work force than men.

The last time men earned more master’s degrees
than women was 1984-1985.

American women hold an average of
only 18 percent of the highest leadership positions.

Women in managerial positions
are paid 81 cents for every dollar earned by men.

Source: The Jacobson Group