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Family First Life

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Family First Life reviews

3.5

53% would recommend to a friend

(1,884 total reviews)

Shawn Meaike

77% approve of CEO

50% positive business outlook

Family First Life has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 1,884 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Family First Life employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Seguros industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Oct 27, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Ability to generate fast cash but it isn’t really yours.

Cons

Im writing this review in hopes that it will reach someone like myself who looking for an opportunity to better themselves financially but not at the cost of betraying their ethics. Let me start off by saying FFL can be profitable to the right people- it is a thru and thru multilevel marketing organization who’s business model is heavily recruitment focused. The people that will succeed with FFL are the ones who are willing to start their own agency and go all in on being a motivator to people at the bottom of the ladder. However those that choose to do that will have to be ok with engaging in strategies of deception in order to attract people into becoming agents. This includes inflating the amount of earnings an individual producer can generate on average, omitting the basis in which agents are paid for the business they write and creating a misguided culture of belief that the FFL system works for anyone who is willing to work hard. I’ve even seen recruitment tactics go as far as doctoring an image to claim FFL was rated one of the top 10 places to work in the US and credited LinkedIn as the source, and this was shared to a Facebook group by a partner in the company. FFL claims it was designed to help its agents create a stronger financial future for it employees, hence “family first”. In reality FFL profits off of every agent that comes aboard and fails. They do this by reframing the standard structure of an MLM organization from paying for training to paying for prospects. Make no mistake, FFL SELLS LEADS and the quality of these lead systems are incredibly poor. I have a feeling Glassdoor may suppress this review if I go to far into detail on this one, so in short I’ll say the leads you will buy are not going to be transparent in the nature of how they are generated or the language used to attract prospects into filling them out. This puts you at a massive disadvantage. I don’t want to write a book here, but there is definitely more I could say about FFL. I’m sure FFL will respond to this review placing the blame on myself for not having the willingness to work hard but this just proves my point even further. FFL’s whole success is by creating a culture of blind faith in its system and to ostracize any of those whom it doesn’t work out for as “lazy” or “this job isn’t for everyone” even though one of their most utilized recruitment slogans is “anyone can do this”. My advice is this: don’t be fooled by the things FFL markets themselves as, or the flood of positive reviews that FFL incentivizes their agents to write (lead discounts ). You may speak to someone within FFL who isn’t an agency owner that raves about how great the opportunity is (I went through this phase myself): keep in mind that this strongly resembles the mindset of a cult member- when you already invested so much time, energy and money into something, it is hard to admit to yourself that it’s too good to be true. No one likes to admit that they’re wrong until reality slaps them in the face. If you are one of the types who is monetarily motivated and are ok using methods of deception in order to achieve your goals, then FFL might work for you. If you’re like me who is simply looking for a good opportunity to earn an honest living and be free of financial stress without having to betray their ethics, then I would highly suggest staying away. I challenge any new recruits to ask their potential upline these questions: 1. Does the comp structure apply to every one of the companies/products that you write business with? 2. If I decide to leave the business will I have any liability to pay back the insurance companies for policy cancellations? 3. What kind of liability will I face if I recruit and my agents leave with debt to the insurance companies? Keep in mind when they respond you’re dealing with salesmen. Best of luck to your all!

avatar
Family First Life Response
4y
This reviewer is correct in stating that this industry is not for everyone. While we believe that anyone could follow our system and have success that doesn't mean that everyone is cut out for a competitive sales position, and there is nothing wrong with that. However, based off of the complaints that have been made in this review I don't think this individual fully understood the nature of the insurance industry. For example, needing to pay back debt to a carrier if they advanced you commission for a cancelled policy is standard in the industry. This is not a w-2 position where there is no chance of risk or overhead. This is an opportunity to grow and develop a business and with that type of entrepreneurship comes risk. We truly believe based off of the amount of agents here having success that we are the best place to work for ambitious insurance individuals looking to develop a multi-million business.
1.0
Sep 12, 2021

Stay away

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

None - they are all short lived. You quickly realize that you’re working 6-7 days a week, with a totally scattered schedule. Wear and tear on your vehicle. No benefits - 1099. Most numbers you see are completely false in the sense that they don’t take in account lead expenses, chargebacks, tax dues, gas, travel, car repairs, etc. 20k a month is broke, just as the CEO mentions. Teams are built strategically, and they encourage unhealthy ways of living. Dial all day, don’t worry about what you eat/your physical health, mental health. Just dial bro, just keep going. ‘You don’t really want it, you can’t say you’re all in when your actions don’t show it’. Cult of a company. Bunch of hoots repeating the same thing. Anyone reading this - just know that a POOL of top producers recently left, and many more are doing the same daily. Do not work here. PS - When posting this, there is an actual alert up top, saying ‘attempt to inflate reviews’. Which made me chuckle because my upline actually sent a team message out a month or so ago for us all to post positive reviews. This is actually disturbing when you put it in perspective, cult tendencies are real here.

Cons

Shared in the pros section.

avatar
Family First Life Response
4y
Everyone who starts working with FFL is aware that because this is a 1099 position there aren't any benefits like in a W-2 position. The experience that this reviewer is stating must come from a lack of understanding on how commission sales work in the insurance industry. As a company we issued $35 million last month and thousands of agents contributed to that volume. Our numbers show us that we have a tested and proven system that will work for the right individual looking to create a lucrative sales career.
5.0
Aug 5, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Very helpful in getting you licensed. Training and the ability to communicate with those above you is first class. If you want to work hard and willing to put in the time, this opportunity can be lucrative.

Cons

Not really a minus, but you have to invest in buying leads. Be prepared to spend anywhere from $200 to $1000 per month to generate solid leads.

Viewing 40 - 42 of 1,884 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,142 Family First Life reviews submitted anonymously by Family First Life employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Family First Life is right for you.