I had the occasion to revisit a December ’08 posting of Greg Pollock’s in the message board and came across a question about the CLU designation’s importance, relevance and name brand. A challenge was presented about the name and its apparent reference to insurance to the exclusion of other contemporary values and expertise that a professional financial services designation should stand for. The perception is that it’s one-dimensional, outdated, antiquated and irrelevant.
Some would argue that the term Chartered Life Underwriter is misleading. The term isn’t misleading. It is in fact quite accurate. The challenge is that the words within it are also ambiguous. And those whose agenda is to downplay the CLU for their own interests (i.e. competing designations) are intentionally exploiting this ambiguity to the uninformed. The uninformed, because they don’t know any better, are buying into it. We don’t need to change the name; we just need to explain the words beyond their current understanding.
Here’s my slant on it for consideration. What do the letters in the CLU designation stand for?
Chartered Life Underwriter is NOT the same as Chartered “Life Insurance” Underwriter. There is a perception that because Life Underwriter is part of the term, it automatically refers to the field level underwriting process behind life insurance. This perception is pervasive in the market and understandably so. Because of this ambiguity, inappropriate assumptions are made to the meaning of the words. Clear up the inappropriate assumptions by changing the slant and you change its perception. Change its perception and you change its value. There’s a reason why it’s called “Life” Underwriter and not “Life Insurance” Underwriter.
A CLU professional underwrites the financial risks attached to a person’s “life”, not the financial risks and obligations attached to that person’s life insurance. This includes the risks attached to an individual’s savings habits, investment strategies, pension programs, retirement income needs, human behaviour influenced through the emotions of greed and fear, investment risk profile, approaches to income protection, long-term care planning, challenges that come with a critical illness, estate wants & needs, lifestyle security, business dependencies, family obligations, wealth transfer, taxpayer responsibility, hopes & dreams.
A CLU professional’s value does not revolve around the sophisticated understanding of insurance products. A well constructed insurance program obviously plays an important role in a person’s security but it is not the whole meal deal. The professional CLU has the competency to handle the whole meal deal – which is a consumer’s entire financial “life” – hence the term Chartered Life Underwriter.
—Rick Johnson, CFP, CLU, CH.F.C., CSA, CFSB