Dave Ramsey ELP Leads - Pure Garbage

Just a warning to all. The Dave Ramsey ELP program is pure junk. These are some of the worst leads we've ever received. We close close to 30 new clients a week. Do you know how many we closed from the Dave Ramsey ELP Program? Zero. We received five bad telephone numbers. Some wanted a quote, but didn't want to do an app (not sure how to get the information for a quote without an app). Some changed their mind. Some didn't even remember applying for insurance, and someone from our office called them after 2 mins of receipt of the lead.

If you want better value for your money, you should just throw the money out the window. At least you can see where it's going. Here's a kicker, they do not even charge per lead. They charge an AVERAGE over the previous 12 months and you pay that monthly regardless of receiving leads or not. For example, in Feb. and March, we received north of 10 leads each. In April, ZERO. In May, one so far. Why does that matter? Well, you will still pay the same rate each month. Just nuts.

STAY FAR AWAY FROM THIS. IT PURE BS.

I tried them for tax return leads. And yes, they were horrible leads. Many (about half) were an hour's drive away, despite the would-be lead being told they are inputting their information to get set up with an "endorsed LOCAL provider." I was unable to make contact with roughly 75% of them, the phone calls almost always went to a automated voicemail system that only verified the number that I called and asked me to leave a message. I only received one lead that was actually local before I canceled out of the lead program, and that guy was just kicking tires, never heard from him again (I initiated the first call). And you have to know that the leads that are filled out at 2:00 AM are at best drunk, and most likely totally fake. I did better than some, and I actually closed ONE lead, but only because that person had a really messed up situation on his hands, and nobody else wanted to fool with him; that one sale didn't come close to covering all the money I paid for the leads.
 
Actually, I am debating if I should file a BBB claim. You do not even pay for each individual lead. You pay for an average combined amount. The sent us the averages for the last year. We didn't even get close to those numbers. Pure lies. Just sell like anyone else, per lead, not average.

Wake up dude. The BBB gives its prizes to the highest bidder; bad products and rip-off services don't matter, just as long as the bad actor involved has paid his fees to the BBB. I've seen absolutely rotten outfits with an A or A+ rating, and some pretty decent outfits with low ratings. One of those TV sting programs managed to get Hamas (the Palestinian terror organisation) an A+ rating by paying a $240 fee, and demonstrated how numerous local businesses were extorted with low ratings -- if they paid the fee, the rating instantly went up.
 
Dave Ramsey and his ilk operate on "confirmation bias" or telling people what they want to hear. Which is to avoid spending money. Term life is cheap. Hooray!
But if you pivot to Dave recommending DI, you get crickets.
DI costs money.:idea:
 
Dave Ramsey and his ilk operate on "confirmation bias" or telling people what they want to hear. Which is to avoid spending money. Term life is cheap. Hooray!
But if you pivot to Dave recommending DI, you get crickets.
DI costs money.:idea:

Also...what happens if, at the end of the term, you're no longer insurable? Dave never bothers to mention that...
 
Also...what happens if, at the end of the term, you're no longer insurable? Dave never bothers to mention that...

Oh, Ramsey has a very simplistic answer for that: At the end of the 20-year term (Ramsey specifically recommends 20-year term), the person will be so filthy rich from investing 15% of his pay in the stock market (using a 401(k) plan, IRA, or just outright investing) that life insurance won't be needed in year 21.

Doesn't everyone invest 15% of their before-tax pay in the stock market? Especially when they are young with kids to feed?
 
Oh, Ramsey has a very simplistic answer for that: At the end of the 20-year term (Ramsey specifically recommends 20-year term), the person will be so filthy rich from investing 15% of his pay in the stock market (using a 401(k) plan, IRA, or just outright investing) that life insurance won't be needed in year 21.

Doesn't everyone invest 15% of their before-tax pay in the stock market? Especially when they are young with kids to feed?

Plus they ate only rice and beans and beans and rice for those 20 years.
The only time they will see the inside of a restaurant is if they are waiting tables there.
Got to sell their car with the payment and drive an $800 hoopdie.
Work three jobs.
Did I miss anything?
 
Plus they ate only rice and beans and beans and rice for those 20 years.
The only time they will see the inside of a restaurant is if they are waiting tables there.
Got to sell their car with the payment and drive an $800 hoopdie.
Work three jobs.
Did I miss anything?


No Cable or unlimited cell phones.
 
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