Six Phrases You Should Never Use About Insurance

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September is life insurance awareness month so I thought I’d celebrate by cautioning against the worst clichés frequently used when selling insurance.

  1. We’re a mutual company owned by our policyholders, not by Wall Street

Actually, given what this allows you to get away with, I’d take Wall Street any day.

All this does is open the door for mutual insurance companies to achieve a ridiculously bad return on capital without getting their stock shares gobbled up in a takeover.

A mutual structure doesn’t allow policyholders any greater degree of control over their experience. I’ve never seen evidence that mutual and shareholder companies offer drastically different policy rates as a result of the policyholders having a greater influence over the company. Hit me on APViewpoint if you know of a study that proves me wrong.

Who cares?

Moreover, mutual companies have no stock shares to offer as currency if they want to do an acquisition. So essentially they’ve rendered themselves infertile and blocked their own growth trajectory.

If mutualization were all it is cracked up to be, then why are all the mutual companies converting to stock companies?

Useless mumbo jumbo.