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Posts Tagged ‘NOT’

90 Day Challenge… (Dec – Feb)

December 1st, 2009 Richie Rich Comments off

I know it’s been awhile since my last post, and I know I promised to post more.  What can I say? I have no excuses.  So what is this one for now out of the blue? Simple.  I’m starting another 90 day challenge effective December 1.

I have been trying to transition into my financial business for so long, I forgot how.  So, I am going to re-double my efforts.  I NEED to get it going to do all the good that I can do.  I made a 5 year game plan to have 10 direct recruits making 100k+ a year.  And 5 years after that another 10 direct (plus 10 direct to each of the previous directs).  And repeat that process every 5 years after that.  How am I going to do that with being a 0 now? Simple.  2 recruits a month.

So, in the next 90 days, I must go from Dud to Stud.  Based on my offices averages, that comes out to 6 recruits, 22.5k in premium (total team).  That includes the 7500 I must do.  The rest is based on an average sale and average number of sales.

Bottom line, I’m heading to the top and I ain’t letting nothing stop me this time.  I’ll post updates every night before passing out on my progress.  If I don’t, feel free to harass me endlessly and tell me how much of a loser I am for not taking care of my family.

I’ll add a text block to the side bar (or in the about box to the right) that will keep the score displayed.  Every 90 days will be a new challenge and increase the numbers.  This first 90 days, is all personal (in the sense of I’m signing).

I’ll see you at the top!

Term Insurance: A Little More In Depth

October 4th, 2009 Richie Rich Comments off

Alright, second in a series on life insurance.  We are going to go a bit more in depth on the different kinds of term insurance.  I wish I could say that there was only one kind, but sadly, there are a great number of different kinds.  On the plus side, the break down into 2 main types.  Annually Renewable Term and Decreasing Term.

Annually Renewable Term

This one is by far the most common.  Every renewal, the price goes up.  You don’t have to prove insurability (traditionally) so long as you are willing to pay the premiums.  The premiums can get quite high, to the tune of $20k/month in the MUCH later years (80+).  No, that is not a typo.  As with all life insurance, it is meant to cover loss of income during your income producing years.  Not to cover you during retirement.

Decreasing Term

This one is common for elderly to slowly reduce the face amount as well as being used as mortgage insurance.  It’s purpose is to slowly drop to 0 over a given set of time, thus why it is used as mortgage insurance.

It should be noted that EVERY kind of life insurance out there, is a variety of one of these two.  These are also the purest form of life insurance, just cover.  Before you leave though, there is more.

Level Term

This is ART from above, but the premiums are averaged over a set amount of time.  The shorter the term, the lower the cost.  You have to be careful with who you buy this from though.  Many companies lower their prices just to attract customers and may be unable to pay claims.  Is it better to have lower premiums, of course, but not at the expense of the company not paying claims.

After the set time is up (typically from 10 to 35 years), the policy reverts back to ART with the premiums practically sky-rocketing afterwards.  In addition, most policies, at renewal, will give you 4 options.

  1. Drop Coverage
  2. Re-qualify Medically for another Term
  3. Leave alone and pay the higher premiums
  4. Convert to a form of cash value/permanent insurance (will go over this later).

If you have medical issues, #2 probably isn’t possible, #1 and #3 aren’t desirable, and #4 would probably cut your coverage down so that it barely covers even half of what it did before or your current expenses.  That being said, if you have serious medical issues, having a whole life/permanent policy may be the only way to pass on/reduce final expenses if you don’t have a sizable estate.

Return Of Premium

This is generally a rider added onto a policy.  It does cost more.  How this works is, as you pay your policy, the extra premium goes into a separate account to earn some interest.  At the end of the policy, you will get up to 100% of your premiums paid back.  However, if you cancel the policy at any time, you will NOT get all your premiums back.  It works off of a graduated chart.  Typically, the first 5 years, you will get nothing back. In addition, in some states, even if you go till the end of term, you will only get 95% of your premiums back.

When dealing with these policies, you must run the numbers.  Thus far, 9 times out of 10, ROP is a waste of money.  You can generally do better by taking the difference and putting it into a conservative fund or a tin can in your backyard.

With ROP though, you do have one additional option at the end of term (besides getting some of your money back), and that is taking out a paid-up insurance policy.

Credit Life

This is a rip off.  You are basically paying for term insurance for the balance of your credit card and that is it.  When you die, the credit company gets their money.  That is it.  Your family doesn’t get anything, and the money that could be better served helping your surviving family members, is gone.

Mortgage Life

This is also a rip off and is sometimes financed into your mortgage.  This is pure decreasing term insurance.  The face amount drops with the balance of the note.  Same as credit life, you die, it pays the mortgage company.  It generally costs more than just getting level term by it self.  If you have this, replace it.  Your surviving family will think better of you when they can actually pay the bills with the proceeds instead of giving it to the mortgage company.

Accidental Death & Dismemberment

This one, is more of a rip off than the last 2 combined.  Lets break this up into it’s 2 parts shall we.

Accidental Death – If you death is caused by accident, it pays.  What does this mean? Well, you get into a wreck, you die at the scene.  Death by accident.  Same scenario but the paramedics arrive while you have a pulse.  You die en-route or at the hospital.  Death due to complications as a result of an accident. Doesn’t pay.  But wait? Your died because of an accident and it wont pay? It’s splitting hairs, but basically yes.  It all depends on what is on the death certificate.  One wrong word and it wont pay.

Accidental Dismemberment – This has so many crazy restrictions, it’s actually funny.  It changes based on the policy itself.  In some cases, you have to loose 2 appendages (1 leg and 1 arm; 2 legs; 2 arms; 1 eye and a foot).  And in some, you have to actually have to have it in one piece so they can verify that it is yours and you really did loose it.  IE, you can’t show up with your arm chopped off and not have your arm.

I have even heard of cases where they didn’t pay unless you were fully disabled as a result, although, these are rare.

For both of these policies, just get rid of them.  They are dirt cheap because they pay out even LESS than a pure term policy.

Conclusion

Now, many cash value agents like barging that term only pays out 2% of the time in order to sell a permanent/cash value policy that, so long as you live long enough, pays out regardless.  Although this is true, lets put it into perspective shall we.  That 2% also counts all the policies that have lapsed, been replaced, canceled, etc.  It is not an accurate figure to say the least.  Of all policies that are in force at the time of the policy holders death, I’d say (my guess) 95% pay out regardless of which kind of life insurance it is.  Why not 100%? Well, you have a 2 year contestability clause that gets activated sometimes.

Death my suicide, mis-statement of information on the policy, etc can cause that clause to activate and the insurance company to not pay.  There was a recent article about a women whose house was in foreclosure.  She was given a sub-prime loan and the mortgage company refused to help.  She took out a life insurance policy equal to the balance of the note so her family could pay it off and keep the house.  Within a few weeks of it being issued, she committed suicide so the policy would pay out.  She even left a note to that effect.  Upon reading that, my heart went out to the family.  Not only did they loose a loved one, but they also lost the house because the insurance company wouldn’t pay.  They didn’t report that, but I know it happened.

Keep an eye out for upcoming articles on the other types of life insurance as well as more examples of debt killing and various other products to help you better navigate this crazy world.

Basics of Life Insurance

June 26th, 2009 Richie Rich Comments off

Howdy howdy. I know it’s been around a month since my last post and I promised this time would be different. Well, I’ve been busy saving families financial lives so this took a bit of a back seat. Anyways, on to the post!!!

This post will be about the bare bones basics. No frills. In later posts, I’ll get into the differences between specifics and will even include graphics demonstrating various concepts. Don’t laugh at them, I’m a programmer/money coach, not a designer.

When dealing with Life Insurance, there are so many different kinds that it becomes easy to get confused. The insurance companies LOVE it that way. The problem is, many of the agents also get confused. Lets see, we have Credit Life, Mortgage Life, Accidental Death and Dismemberment, Level Term, Whole Life, Variable Life, Universal Life, Variable Universal, Return Of Premium, Permanent, Annually Renewable, Decreasing, etc. Actually, I think that is all of them. If I missed one, put it in the comments.

When you break every single one of these down to the bare bones basics, they are all 1 of 2 kinds of policies. Annually Renewable Term or Decreasing Term. What a minute, we have 12 listed policy types and they are all varieties of 2 of them? Yup. So why are there so many different varieties, well, profits. In general, the more complex the policy, the greater the profits.

Annually Renewable Term

This is probably the most common type.  Usually found in group, level term, and most types of cash value policies.  Every year, the policy renews and the price increases based on a schedule in the policy.

Decreasing Term

The face amount of the policy decreases every year but the premium stays the same.  It is typically used as mortgage insurance and in whole life policies.

It’s important to know these 2 policy types since they are the basis for the rest.  I’ll go over the basics of them now and expand on them in later posts.

Credit Life, Mortgage Life, Accidental Death and Dismemberment

You should avoid these types of life policies.  They are pure profit makers for the insurance companies and don’t benefit your family one iota.  Credit Life is usually bought on a monthly basis by the lender (on your behalf, that you pay for) to cover the current balance.  The beneficiary, the lender. Mortgage Life is typically bought and paid for when you get the mortgage.  Many times, it is rolled INTO the note so you don’t have to pay for it out of pocket.  Several issues with this.

  1. It’s typically paid up for 30 years based on expected balance.
  2. If rolled into the note, you now pay INTEREST on the premium.
  3. If the note is paid off early, unless you make an effort for it, you typically don’t get your unearned premiums back.

AD&D is the worst of all.  Many policies have very strict conditions for their death benefits hence why it is the cheapest of all.  General scenario on how most pay out.  You get in a wreck, die BEFORE the paramedics get their, death by accident, policy pays.  If you are alive when the paramedics get there, you get in the ambulance/care flight and die either en route or at the hospital, it typically wont pay.  Why? Simple, you died due to COMPLICATIONS as a result of an accident, not DUE to the accident.  Splitting hairs right? Now you know why it’s so cheap.

Level Term, Return Of Premium

Both of these are variants of ART (annually renewable term).  Level term is exactly as it sounds, ART with a level period.  You die while policy is in force, it pays.  ROP (return of premium) is a variant of Level Term.  It’s a rider added on that allows you to get your premium back at the end of the term.  Typically the first 5 years, you would get $0 back.  After that, it’s a graduated percentage till the policy term is up.  And even then, you still may not get all of the premiums back.

Now, ROP sounds great doesn’t it? You make it to the end of the term and get all/most of your money back? What they don’t tell you is that you actually LOST money in the process.  How? Inflation.  The reality is in year 6 you start seeing a balance.  That balance grows interest.  But the interest and 5 year loss equals out to an actual interest of 0% and an effective interest of -4%!  Yea, that’s a great deal.

Permanent

This is a tricky one.  This can be virtually any kind of policy.  It can be a term policy that expires at age 95, it can also be a cash value type policy . This is now a more universal term than anything.  Basically, any policy that expires/matures between ages 80 and 120 can be technically be classified as one.

Whole Life

This is decreasing term with a savings account.  The policies are designed so that when they mature, the cash value that is built up equals the face amount.

Variable Life

This is an interesting policy.  It has a minimal death benefit, if you pay for it.  With this kind of policy, your face amount changes with the underlying investments.  Assuming you decide to use investments.  When the market is good, your face amount is usually great.  When the market is down (like as of this writing), your face amount is down.  You pay the same premium either way, and may get a rate hike if the cash value drops to $0.

Universal Life/Variable Universal Life

A universal life policy is an evolution of whole life.  Instead of being DT (decreasing term), it’s ART.  You get a minimal death benefit with a cash account that is invested in the market.  You have the flexibility to decide the premiums and the coverage while the policy is in place.  A variable version adds the ability to determine a wider variety of investments for the cash account.  On both of these, you typically have 2 options.  Option A and option B.  Option A, your beneficiaries get the face amount ONLY.  Option B, you pay MORE so your survivors can have both the face amount and the cash.

This is just a rough overview.  I’ll spend more time on each one individually here in the coming days/weeks/months/years.

The Sack Lunches

June 1st, 2009 Richie Rich Comments off

Before I get back to my regularly unscheduled postings, I thought I would share this.

My cousin sent me this as an email.  Normally  I just file them in either my Personal folder or the Trash depending on what it is.  I don’t know if this really happened or not.  It is still a god story.

I put my carry-on in the luggage compartment and sat down in my assigned seat. It was going to be a long flight. ’I’m glad I have a good book to read. Perhaps I will get a short nap,‘ I thought.

Just before take-off, a line of soldiers came down the aisle and filled all the vacant seats, totally surrounding me. I decided to start a conversation.. ‘Where are you headed?‘ I asked the soldier seated nearest to me.

Petawawa. We’ll be there for two weeks for special training, and then we’re being deployed to Afghanistan.

After flying for about an hour, an announcement was made that sack lunches were available for five dollars. It would be several hours before we reached the east, and I quickly decided a lunch would help pass the time.

As I reached for my wallet, I overheard soldier ask his buddy if he planned to buy lunch.

No, that seems like a lot of money for just a sack lunch. Probably wouldn’t be worth five bucks. I’ll wait till we get to base.

His friend agreed.

I looked around at the other soldiers. None were buying lunch. I walked to the back of the plane and handed the flight attendant a fifty dollar bill. ‘Take a lunch to all those soldiers.‘ She grabbed my arms and squeezed tightly. Her eyes wet with tears, she thanked me. ‘My son was a soldier in Iraq; it’s almost like you are doing it for him.

Picking up ten sacks, she headed up the aisle to where the soldiers were seated. She stopped at my seat and asked, ’Which do you like best – beef or chicken?‘  ’Chicken,‘ I replied, wondering why she asked. She turned and went to the front of plane, returning a minute later with a dinner plate from first class.

This is your thanks.

After we finished eating, I went again to the back of the plane, heading for the rest room. A man stopped me.

I saw what you did. I want to be part of it. Here, take this.‘ He handed me twenty-five dollars.

Soon after I returned to my seat, I saw the Flight Captain coming down the aisle, looking at the aisle numbers as he walked, I hoped he was not looking for me, but noticed he was looking at the numbers only on my side of the plane. When he got to my row he stopped, smiled, held out his hand, an said, ‘I want to shake your hand.

Quickly unfastening my seatbelt I stood and took the Captain’s hand. With a booming voice he said, ‘I was a soldier and I was a military pilot. Once, someone bought me a lunch. It was an act of kindness I never forgot.‘ I was embarrassed when applause was heard from all of the passengers.

Later I walked to the front of the plane so I could stretch my legs. A man who was seated about six rows in front of me reached out his hand, wanting to shake mine. He left another twenty-five dollars in my palm.

When we landed I gathered my belongings and started to deplane. Waiting just inside the airplane door was a man who stopped me, put something in my shirt pocket, turned, and walked away without saying a word. Another twenty-five dollars!

Upon entering the terminal, I saw the soldiers gathering for their trip to the base. I walked over to them and handed them seventy-five dollars. ‘It will take you some time to reach the base. It will be about time for a sandwich. God Bless You.’

Ten young men left that flight feeling the love and respect of their fellow travelers. As I walked briskly to my car, I whispered a prayer for their safe return. These soldiers were giving their all for our country. I could only give them a couple of meals.

It seemed so little…

A veteran is someone who, at one point in his life, wrote a blank check made payable to ‘United States of America‘ for an amount of ‘up to and including my life.

That is Honor, and there are way too many people in this country who no longer understand it.

Pass this link on to your friends and family.  If you see a solider or know a veteran, make sure you thank them.  You probably wouldn’t be here if not for the Men and Women protecting this country and our way of life.  Freedom isn’t free, and these people are paying for it for us.

CarMax – Just Another Dealership?

May 5th, 2009 Richie Rich Comments off

This post is about the recent experience my wife and I have had at the CarMax on Eastchase in Arlington/Ft. Worth.  The names and facts have NOT been changes to allow throwing stones at the guilty.

This story started end of March.  March 27th, 2009.  A few days before our old ‘89 Buick Skylark bit the dust.  Brakes failed, stearing became a problem, and the oncoming traffic didn’t help matters either.  We looked around online at CarMax and a few other local dealerships wanting to stay below the $10k mark.  Their site made it easy to search about the 5 or 6 dealerships within a 300 mile radius.  That being said, they had about 15 cars below that mark.  All and all, we settled on a 99 Dodge Grand Caravan Sport.  As an added bonus, it only had 63k miles on.  A 99 with 63k miles, for $8200, would you turn that down?

The following week, we sold the Buick to them.  Got $100 for it.  Double what I was expecting.  So far at this point, it has been a good experience.  Bill Dearman (the sales rep that helped us) was curtious the entire time and let us take our time.  He earned our repeat business AND my recommendation.  Both things I don’t take lightly.

Well, fast forward about 33 days.  Fuel pump goes out.  I’m no machanic, but for a 10 year old car, the fuel pump probably should have been replaced just due to old age.  At least those are my thoughts.  I call up Bill and asked his opinion.  He said to call the service center and ask up the chain until I got the top dog or the answer I wanted.  That was my first mistake, I should have listend and done just that.  Instead, I called one, and the rep on the other end (don’t recall the name), was very rude about the 30 day warrenty.  I understand that 30 days was it and they have no obligation to do anything after that period.  But in the same token, this is a major repair shortly after warrenty period.  It’s just good customer service to take care of.  Now, 10 days? 15 days? 30 days after expiry, I wouldn’t have even bothered to try to get it for free or even discounted.

I made a few complaints on Twitter about the bill we got from Pepboys ($730).  That was my second mistake, I took it to Pepboys.  They insisted that more work needed to be done than was required.  Some services they were suggesting were completed not but 2k miles before.  On top of that, had I just went back to CarMax anyways, even paying for it, would have saved between $200 and $300 off the repair!  Well, @CarMaxChris spoke up and suggested I call the Customer Service Center (Executive Response Team) to see if they can fix this.

Called them and spoke with a women named Paige.  She asked for some details about what happened and said she’ll make a call to the same store and see what the Service Manager could do (His name was also Bill.  Don’t ask for his last name because frankly, I’d buther it).  He called about 5 mins later and asked a few more questions.  By the time he called though, the tank was already dropped at Pepboys so he couldn’t tow it over.  When all was said and done, he confirmed what Bill Dearman said.  Had I gone straight to him in the first place, it would have been towed and repaired at no cost.  30 Days is the rule, but most are handled on a case by case basis.  In cases like mine, they let it slide.  It was just a few days out of warrenty and good customer service to just do it.

Needless to say, they have earned a repeat customer.

Weight Loss Update And Other Personal Things…

April 24th, 2009 Richie Rich Comments off

I know everone is just DYING to know about this (it’s nice to dream right?), but I’ve been keeping tabs on my weight since starting at 24 Hour Fitness.  Almost daily actually.  Since Mar 16th I have lost 13 lbs.  And it shows.  I look slimer, I feel better, have more energy, and my love handles don’t bounce as much when I run (more of a jog really).

Wife and I also started on a 90 day sprint.  Might post up weekely updates on that as well.

Also began work on Arlington’s 4th of July website.  It needs MASSIVE work.  The current incarnation is NOT of my creation, but it slowly turning into one.  The Google Maps screenshots have been turned into real GMaps, the search on the main page has turned into Google Custom Search, and Google Analytics has also been added to all pages.  BTW, Google, you can send those endorsement checks to my creditors, they are hurting so bad without my payments that they could really use the help.  Why else would they be raising rates right? They wouldn’t do such a decietfull thing as raise rates just because they can right?

I’ve also been having a good talk with Larry Wiedel this week.  Made me realize that I really need to not work so hard.  What’s the point of working 30 hour days for your family, if you never spend time with them?  For that sir, I thank you.

Anyways, I better get back to catching up so I can spend quality time with my daughter and wife today.  And I’m glad I did make time this week just to spend with them.

See you in the next post!