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Why the red font??????
It's the furthest left and top other than black . . .
If you prefer, he also comes in blue, green, orange and purple.
Yes I do Amtrak . . .
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Why the red font??????
If you prefer, he also comes in blue, green, orange and purple.
It's the furthest left and top other than black . . .
Yes I do Amtrak . . .
Finally - a man that makes sense . . .
Almost everyone that replies to you makes sense. You just refuse to listen.
You actually expect to read all that mess? Not a chance in hell . . .
Almost everyone that replies to you makes sense. You just refuse to listen.
When I started reading posts on the forum, I noted instances of replies along the lines of: Page === of the Medicare and You Handbook says ....... . That suggests to me that some folks consider part of their groundwork in selling the product to be to read the Government's information about Medicare that is sent to every Medicare enrollee each year.
When I started reading posts on the forum, I noted instances of replies along the lines of: Page === of the Medicare and You Handbook says ....... . That suggests to me that some folks consider part of their groundwork in selling the product to be to read the Government's information about Medicare that is sent to every Medicare enrollee each year.
I've toned down
I pulled this question out of another thread because I thought the possibility of rational response there was shut off:
Generally speaking, if you go beyond F, G, N and possibly HDF, do the premium rates on the other plans allow them to cost effective coverage considerations for a client?
There must be reasons each of those plans was put into play originally, but it seems like small pools of utilization, leading to higher premiums lead to them not being useful to consider for coverage. Right, wrong .... ?
I'm sure there is logic on the creation of it. But the other plans are almost never sold. Personally, I only plan K maybe once a year. The only reason it is ever sold by me is if MAPD is not an option (usually for network reasons), and the cleint still wants a supplement to hedge their risk, but cannot (or will not) pay for a plan N, or F.
Personally however, if I were on Medicare and were to choose a supplement (and thats a big If), I would go with a plan K with AARP. The deductibles are reasonable, has a reasonable MOOP ($4,960), and AARP allows their members to switch to any other plan GI at any time of the year.
If it weren't for the low commission on the plan, I would probbly sell plan K the most.