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BUSINESS
DISABILITY INCOME INSURANCE |
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SELLING
THE ENTREPRENEUR
If
the people of the world were divided into entrepreneurial and
non-entrepreneurial classes, the differentiator between the two would be
the tolerance for and the aversion to risk.
Webster uses the word risk as a key word in the definition of an
entrepreneur. We
recognize that entrepreneurs are not always organizers of a business.
They may buy or buy into a business, or they may inherit a
business interest. The
willingness to accept risk in an ongoing firm tabs this person as a
person willing to accept risk in it's various forms.
The entrepreneur does not relate risk acceptance to gambling for
such a person feels absolutely certain of his ability to succeed and to
stay in a success mode. Failure
is a never thought. To
get to the starting line the entrepreneur checks off the ingredients for
success: courage, stamina,
knowledge and financial strength. If
there are areas of uncertainty partners or associates who posses
strengths in the entrepreneurs areas of weakness are recruited to join
him and create a sound team. Determined
and confident the entrepreneur manifests not just an attitude of
success, but of incredible success and failure is not an option.
Strong, proud, capable of climbing any mountain and solving every
challenge the entrepreneur becomes a victim of the Tarzan Syndrome. Being
healthy and born of sturdy stock, and an avowed careful driver, the
entrepreneur barely admits to mortality and morbidity is dismissed as
something that can only happen to other people.
The entrepreneur being a risk taker, possessed with the Tarzan
Syndrome can become an obstacle in selling the entrepreneur on securing
adequate kinds and adequate amounts of disability insurance.
The sales task is to bring to Tarzan that if he is impervious to
all accidents and all sicknesses, he may feel the negative financial
effects to the firm by having a partner struck down. |
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THE
SCENE TO BE PAINTED Mr.
Tarzan, imagine that you are riding to a meeting with your partner, Mr.
Wimp. An oncoming car
crosses over the centerline. There
is a head-on collision. You
escape without serious injury. Mr.
Wimp, badly hurt, is taken to a hospital in an ambulance. At
the hospital you sit vigilantly with Mr. Wimp's family, hoping and
praying he will live. You
offer reassurance to the family that Mr. Wimp is tough and he will
survive, shrouding your own misgivings for you recognize now that his
total recovery is the key to that family's future. Months
pass. Mr. Wimp remains in
the hospital in traction and faces unknown surgical procedures on his
back, which was broken in the car crash.
Mrs. Wimp appears at the foot of her husband's " bed of
pain" with tears in her eyes and a look of anguish on her face.
Mr. Wimp, though sedated, realizes her deep concern.
She replies that their cash savings have been consumed and she
still has bills to pay. "Why"
Mr. Wimp asks, " have our savings been spent?" "Because",
she replies, "Mr. Tarzan has not provided a paycheck since the
accident. He said the firm
cannot afford to pay a non-worker and that Workers' Compensation and
Short Term Group Disability benefits are all we can expect." Mr.
Wimp becomes enraged and directs his wife to go to you Mr. Tarzan and
advise you that he, Mr. Wimp, is a principal of the firm and demands
equal pay to yours and he demands it now! Mr.
Wimp's voice cannot be quieted as long as he lives.
Although he is productively dead it is illegal to bury him.
When the business was started he, like you Mr. Tarzan felt very
bullish and believed in taking only modest compensation and reinvesting
profits in the business. Today his attitude is the exact opposite.
He is a frightened and timid soul who wants more compensation and
loans from the firm to help resolve his personal financial problems. Your
firm continues to weaken under it's undermanned state and it's value is
falling because of Mr. Wimps frightened attitudes and his personal
financial demands. You
owners, previously excellent team players who were always on the same
page, become hostile to one another.
Your families no longer speak.
Suspicion replaces trust. What
can be done? Possibilities
considered are to try to sell the distressed firm, or to reorganize the
firm by taking in new controlling interests, who may be hostile to the
present owners.
There is no satisfactory solution.
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THE
BEST SOLUTION;
Agreements planned in advance and funded with insurance By
agreement in advance, affordable and budgetable insurance plans can be
provided to fund the terms of the agreement. 1-
Salary Continuation for the disabled member of the firm 2-
Key Person indemnification to the firm to offset the
losses sustained due to loss of the disabled member's productivity. 3-
Funds to hire a replacement for the disabled member. 4-
After 12 months of disability the disabled member would be
obligated to sell, and the firm would be obligated to buy out the
disabled members percentage of ownership of the firm at the agreed upon
price, or on the formula agreed upon to arrive at the price. The
disabled member's income is sustained, the firm has remained solvent and
the voice of the disabled person has been quieted in a merciful and
friendly way. |