Prospecting: The best ways to round up new business

As you begin making your plans for 2010, it's certain that bringing in new business will be among the top items on your plate.

In an upcoming issue of Senior Market Advisor, we have an article that will focus on targeting new business for the life insurance sector.

Below, I've included an early excerpt from that feature:

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WHERE do you go to find the best new business prospects? If you're an established producer, the most fertile territory for new life insurance sales likely resides right under your nose, with your current clients, says SMA contributing writer David Port. Top advisors such as Steve Roper and Jeff Leib say their existing client bases are proving fruitful for new life insurance business.

Referrals from existing clients are another go-to source, says Roper, who heads Roper Insurance & Financial Services in Englewood, Colo. He adds that it's proving better than ever to mine existing clients because people today are much more inclined to heed a recommendation from a trusted source than a cold call or a direct marketing appeal.

In addition, Leib, who is co-founder of ICON Wealth and Legacy Partners in Woodland Hills, Calif., says he's securing new life insurance business by networking in professional circles with accountants, attorneys and financial professionals who lack life insurance expertise. These complementary advisory relationships often prove reciprocal and highly rewarding.

In the quest for new life insurance prospects, it's also worthwhile, says Roper, for advisors to cultivate relationships via non-professional activities. "Whether it's volunteering for a charity, getting active in the local Chamber [of Commerce], or getting involved in the kids' soccer club, you can find a ton of business opportunities within those segments."

Please share your ideas on prospecting by using the form below.

About the Author
Daniel Williams

Daniel Williams

Daniel Williams, Editor-in-Chief of Senior Market Advisor magazine, is an award-winning journalist and business editor with extensive experience in print, online and trade shows. Prior to joining Senior Market Advisor, Daniel was editor of Real Estate Southern California magazine and West Coast South Bureau Chief of GlobeSt.com, both are divisions of Real Estate Media. Previously, he covered the commercial real estate beat for the Orange County Business Journal. While there, he received a certificate of merit from SABEW (the Society of American Business Editors and Writers Inc.) for a story on "OCs Cash Economy." A native of the Deep South, Daniel relocated from Los Angeles to Denver with his wife and daughter and can be reached at dwilliams@sbmedia.com

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