Make personal finance fun

Make personal finance fun
Stop using jargon and graduate school terminology. Talk with your clients the way you talk with your friends
OCT 26, 2020

As financial advisers, we all know that most Americans are woefully mismanaging their personal finances. And we all know why: Most lack the education they need to make effective financial decisions that are in their best interest.

Few Americans are taught about money by their parents. Fewer take any classes about the subject in school, and it’s a rare employer that provides any advice or information about personal finance to its workers.

Yep, America is a land of financial illiterates. And that’s why most people find the topic intimidating, confusing and even downright scary.

We can improve the situation by doing something that few advisers ever attempt: Let’s make personal finance fun.

It’s a routine approach for us at Edelman Financial Engines. Here’s just one example, using perhaps one of the most hated and confusing aspects in all of financial planning: life insurance.

Few clients want to talk about it. No one wants to spend money on it. But we have found a way to create a conversation that is always filled with laughter -- and results in the client agreeing to get the insurance policy they need. How do we do it? We ask our clients one simple question.

Does Batman need life insurance?

You’re already smiling.

After a fun dialogue about superheroes and favorite movies, and the comic books we read (or didn’t read) as children, we return to the question. And almost every client’s response is, “Yes, of course, Batman needs life insurance.” After all, everyone knows that Batman engages in very risky behavior; his odds of dying are pretty high.

But as a financial planner, you know the truth: Batman, aka billionaire Bruce Wayne, has no need for life insurance. Bruce is unmarried, with no living parents and no children. With no one financially dependent on him, Batman has no need for life insurance. (Protecting Alfred via his estate plan is a different matter -- and the opportunity for another fun conversation.)

So who does need life insurance?

Homer Simpson.

Laughing yet?

Homer, we explain to our clients, is the sole wage earner in his family. Marge and the kids are at great financial peril if Homer dies.

This simple conversation -- funny, disarming, engaging -- is all it takes to help our clients put life insurance into proper context. They get it, and that lets them get the life insurance they need to protect their family.

It’s time for the financial planning community to stop showing off. Enough with the multicolored charts and graphs. Stop using jargon and graduate school terminology that you use (let’s face it) partly to impress your clients but mostly to intimidate and bully them into acquiescing to your entreaties.

Talk with your clients the way you talk with your friends. Make it fun.

And then, when they agree that Batman doesn’t need life insurance, you can ask them if he needs disability insurance coverage — and whether he can quality for a policy!

Ric Edelman is founder of Edelman Financial Engines, the RIA firm ranked No. 1 in the nation by InvestmentNews.

Latest News

Federal judge dismisses Eltek manipulation lawsuit against Morgan Stanley Smith Barney
Federal judge dismisses Eltek manipulation lawsuit against Morgan Stanley Smith Barney

Nine-month electronic trading freeze and share lending program at the center of dismissed claim.

RIA wrap: Dynamic strikes South Carolina deal to reach $7B AUM milestone
RIA wrap: Dynamic strikes South Carolina deal to reach $7B AUM milestone

Meanwhile, Rossby Financial's leadership buildout rolls on with a new COO appointment as Balefire Wealth welcomes a distinguished retirement specialist to its national network.

Rethinking diversification amid a concentrated S&P 500
Rethinking diversification amid a concentrated S&P 500

With a smaller group of companies driving stock market performance, advisors must work more intentionally to manage concentration risks within client portfolios.

Merrill pays second settlement to former Miami Dolphins player, client of ex-broker
Merrill pays second settlement to former Miami Dolphins player, client of ex-broker

Professional athletes are often targets of scam artists and are particularly vulnerable to fraud.

Schwab touts AI as its biggest growth lever at investor day
Schwab touts AI as its biggest growth lever at investor day

The brokerage giant tells Wall Street it will use artificial intelligence to reach clients it has never been able to serve — and turn the technology's perceived threat into a competitive edge.

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management

SPONSORED Durability over scale: What actually defines a great advisory firm

Growth may get the headlines, but in my experience, longevity is earned through structure, culture, and discipline