Summary
Employees often misunderstand life insurance, leaving them with a false sense of security. Employers can prevent disappointment and build trust by explaining coverage in plain English, using real-life examples, keeping the conversation ongoing, and encouraging questions. Clear communication ensures life insurance delivers on its promise of protection.
Life insurance is one of those benefits people may forget about once they purchase it. They assume the coverage is “enough” and move on.
However, most people aren’t sure how much coverage they have, what it actually means for their family, or how long it would realistically last. And this lack of understanding is risky for them and frustrating for you as the employer when it comes back around.
Employer-sponsored life insurance is a great perk. It can be offered as a flat dollar amount (a set amount), a percentage of the employee’s salary, or in increments. But if employees aren’t aware of how much coverage they have, they may not know if their life insurance will help their family cover a mortgage, child care, tuition, or everyday living expenses.
Despite this, many employees believe they’re set because the benefit exists, and it feels like one less thing to worry about. The issue isn’t apathy; it’s misinformation. Employees don’t know what questions to ask, and too often, no one is stepping in to explain.
Life insurance plays a role in retention and satisfaction because benefits reflect a significant part of your team’s compensation. When employees discover that their coverage falls short in the worst possible moment, it doesn’t matter that it was “the standard package.” To them, it feels like a broken promise.
That kind of disappointment erodes trust, and once trust is gone, it’s hard to rebuild.
Too often, life insurance is included on one slide in the open enrollment presentation. Employees are expected to understand coverage amounts, conversion options, and supplemental policies in that one quick touchpoint.
As with health insurance, benefits education shouldn’t be a once-a-year event. You cannot explain something complicated and unfamiliar one time and expect employees to remember the details. Life insurance deserves the same ongoing attention.
Helping employees understand life insurance doesn’t have to be complicated. A few intentional steps go a long way:
At its core, life insurance is about protection. It’s about giving people confidence that their family will be okay if the unthinkable happens. When employees misunderstand their coverage, they’re vulnerable.
As an employer, your role is to offer benefits and make sure people understand them. Clear communication doesn’t cost much, yet the return is massive: trust, loyalty, and peace of mind.
In those moments that matter most, employees are counting on you.
Content published by Q4intelligence
Photo by shurkinson