Circuit court issues new ruling on stranger-originated life insurance
In the past several years, there has been an increase in the number of life insurance policies acquired by third parties unrelated to the people the policies cover.
Parents know they need life insurance, but often don’t have it
One of the biggest challenges for the life insurance industry as a whole is the gap between how such coverage is perceived among the American public and what they actually do to obtain it.
Life insurance regulators still adapting to new realities
The ways in which the life insurance industry as a whole has changed in the last several years is significant, in part because of a crackdown by regulators on a number of previously normal aspects of the business.
Which groups need life insurance most?
Whether they realize it or not, almost every adult probably needs at least some life insurance.
How will life insurance change in 2019?
The new year is nearly here and the life insurance industry is changing along with just about every sector.
Life insurance denied for naloxone carriers?
Life insurance is all about risk assessment and underwriters have grown quite good at it over the course of the last several decades.
How is the life insurance landscape changing?
Since the end of the recession, the ways in which life insurers have had to interface with consumers to ensure they are engaged has changed a great deal.
Addressing the life insurance coverage gap
Life insurance companies are fully aware that there’s often a sizable disparity between the amount of life insurance people need and the amount they actually have in their names.
Enticing consumers beyond Life Insurance Awareness Month
September is Life Insurance Awareness Month and it gives the entire industry a good excuse to revisit their plans for consumer outreach, as a means of determining what already works and what might need a little bit of tweaking.
The characteristics of people who buy life insurance
The percentage of the U.S. population that has life insurance is starting to grow again, but perhaps not as quickly as those in the industry would like.