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edna_mode
Participant@danielws: Sorry to hear it. What I find so troubling about purchasing something like life, disability or long-term care insurance is that it suffers the same economic dynamic as shopping for a house or wedding: it’s a very expensive one-off transaction. Sure, you are putting in premiums for a long time but by the time you know it was or was not a good deal, it is too late.
Not only that but the best deals are offered to that demographic taking on the biggest risk: that the insurer will go bankrupt before their services are needed.
I wonder if there is a way to incentivize this industry the way more common retail ones are. For example, if I have a bad experience with a bank, a restaurant or a department store, I can penalize them by withholding future business — and conversely reward them by granting more future business if they are good. Recommendations are rather indirect feedback — and complaints could be considered the cost of doing business if you price your margins high enough.
This is why I would like to see greater standardization of services offered, and price transparency. But it probably won’t happen even with something as tangible as real estate, let alone insurance.
edna_mode
Participant@danielws: Sorry to hear it. What I find so troubling about purchasing something like life, disability or long-term care insurance is that it suffers the same economic dynamic as shopping for a house or wedding: it’s a very expensive one-off transaction. Sure, you are putting in premiums for a long time but by the time you know it was or was not a good deal, it is too late.
Not only that but the best deals are offered to that demographic taking on the biggest risk: that the insurer will go bankrupt before their services are needed.
I wonder if there is a way to incentivize this industry the way more common retail ones are. For example, if I have a bad experience with a bank, a restaurant or a department store, I can penalize them by withholding future business — and conversely reward them by granting more future business if they are good. Recommendations are rather indirect feedback — and complaints could be considered the cost of doing business if you price your margins high enough.
This is why I would like to see greater standardization of services offered, and price transparency. But it probably won’t happen even with something as tangible as real estate, let alone insurance.
edna_mode
Participant@danielws: Sorry to hear it. What I find so troubling about purchasing something like life, disability or long-term care insurance is that it suffers the same economic dynamic as shopping for a house or wedding: it’s a very expensive one-off transaction. Sure, you are putting in premiums for a long time but by the time you know it was or was not a good deal, it is too late.
Not only that but the best deals are offered to that demographic taking on the biggest risk: that the insurer will go bankrupt before their services are needed.
I wonder if there is a way to incentivize this industry the way more common retail ones are. For example, if I have a bad experience with a bank, a restaurant or a department store, I can penalize them by withholding future business — and conversely reward them by granting more future business if they are good. Recommendations are rather indirect feedback — and complaints could be considered the cost of doing business if you price your margins high enough.
This is why I would like to see greater standardization of services offered, and price transparency. But it probably won’t happen even with something as tangible as real estate, let alone insurance.
edna_mode
Participant@danielws: Sorry to hear it. What I find so troubling about purchasing something like life, disability or long-term care insurance is that it suffers the same economic dynamic as shopping for a house or wedding: it’s a very expensive one-off transaction. Sure, you are putting in premiums for a long time but by the time you know it was or was not a good deal, it is too late.
Not only that but the best deals are offered to that demographic taking on the biggest risk: that the insurer will go bankrupt before their services are needed.
I wonder if there is a way to incentivize this industry the way more common retail ones are. For example, if I have a bad experience with a bank, a restaurant or a department store, I can penalize them by withholding future business — and conversely reward them by granting more future business if they are good. Recommendations are rather indirect feedback — and complaints could be considered the cost of doing business if you price your margins high enough.
This is why I would like to see greater standardization of services offered, and price transparency. But it probably won’t happen even with something as tangible as real estate, let alone insurance.
edna_mode
ParticipantIf this furniture actually works the way it claims to, it would be a lot cheaper in the long run to buy housing with fewer rooms, and transform the furniture as needed:
http://www.resourcefurniture.com/
Alas, I don’t know how much it actually is.
edna_mode
ParticipantIf this furniture actually works the way it claims to, it would be a lot cheaper in the long run to buy housing with fewer rooms, and transform the furniture as needed:
http://www.resourcefurniture.com/
Alas, I don’t know how much it actually is.
edna_mode
ParticipantIf this furniture actually works the way it claims to, it would be a lot cheaper in the long run to buy housing with fewer rooms, and transform the furniture as needed:
http://www.resourcefurniture.com/
Alas, I don’t know how much it actually is.
edna_mode
ParticipantIf this furniture actually works the way it claims to, it would be a lot cheaper in the long run to buy housing with fewer rooms, and transform the furniture as needed:
http://www.resourcefurniture.com/
Alas, I don’t know how much it actually is.
edna_mode
ParticipantIf this furniture actually works the way it claims to, it would be a lot cheaper in the long run to buy housing with fewer rooms, and transform the furniture as needed:
http://www.resourcefurniture.com/
Alas, I don’t know how much it actually is.
edna_mode
ParticipantThanks UCGal — I thought I’d read about it somewhere and tried searching the website for the discussion, but failed to find it.
Mostly I was hoping someone might have more up-to-date info on if it were going to be above/on/below current ground level, and where the station might be. Heck, TGIF might be happy to be paid off to give up that site — I go by there several times a week and never see it busy.
edna_mode
ParticipantThanks UCGal — I thought I’d read about it somewhere and tried searching the website for the discussion, but failed to find it.
Mostly I was hoping someone might have more up-to-date info on if it were going to be above/on/below current ground level, and where the station might be. Heck, TGIF might be happy to be paid off to give up that site — I go by there several times a week and never see it busy.
edna_mode
ParticipantThanks UCGal — I thought I’d read about it somewhere and tried searching the website for the discussion, but failed to find it.
Mostly I was hoping someone might have more up-to-date info on if it were going to be above/on/below current ground level, and where the station might be. Heck, TGIF might be happy to be paid off to give up that site — I go by there several times a week and never see it busy.
edna_mode
ParticipantThanks UCGal — I thought I’d read about it somewhere and tried searching the website for the discussion, but failed to find it.
Mostly I was hoping someone might have more up-to-date info on if it were going to be above/on/below current ground level, and where the station might be. Heck, TGIF might be happy to be paid off to give up that site — I go by there several times a week and never see it busy.
edna_mode
ParticipantThanks UCGal — I thought I’d read about it somewhere and tried searching the website for the discussion, but failed to find it.
Mostly I was hoping someone might have more up-to-date info on if it were going to be above/on/below current ground level, and where the station might be. Heck, TGIF might be happy to be paid off to give up that site — I go by there several times a week and never see it busy.
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