Marketing, Sales Practices, and Unfair Trade

Insurance is fundamentally the sale of an invisible, abstract promise: the guarantee of future financial protection delivered at the exact moment of a client's greatest vulnerability. Because the product cannot be touched, test-driven, or instantly verified, the entire industry rests on a foundation of absolute trust and symmetric information. When an applicant purchases a life or health policy, they are relying on the producer's expertise and the insurer's integrity. Consequently, state regulators enforce strict codes of conduct to bridge the knowledge gap between the insurance professional and the consumer. Marketing regulations, replacement protocols, and claims settlement laws do not exist merely to create bureaucratic paperwork; they exist to ensure that this invisible promise is presented honestly, fits the client’s actual life circumstances, and pays out exactly as expected when tragedy strikes.

Because insurance is an intangible promise, there is an inherent information asymmetry between the knowledgeable insurer and the consumer, making strict regulatory oversight essential.
Because insurance is an intangible promise, there is an inherent information asymmetry between the knowledgeable insurer and the consumer, making strict regulatory oversight essential.
Source: Information asymmetry by Belbury, CC BY 4.0.
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