HEALTHCARE

Making The Most of Medicare Open Enrollment: A Short Guide for Financial Advisors

By Cole Craven

It’s the most wonderful time of the year—depending on who you ask. If you ask me, a self-proclaimed “health insurance guy,” one of the best times of the year is coming soon: Medicare Open Enrollment.

However, I’m not blind to the fact that for many, Medicare Open Enrollment is a stressful time with many questions and (what seems like) few answers. And it’s no wonder! Between not-so-user-friendly platforms, confusing health insurance jargon, misleading Medicare marketing, and the complexity of finding the ideal coverage for their specific needs, preferences, and goals, where are Medicare enrollees supposed to turn for reliable help?

Well, 65% of clients expect insurance advice from their advisor, and another study revealed that 40% of respondents reported they look for insurance advice as a product/service beyond core investment management. 

Translation? Medicare enrollees expect their financial advisor to help them navigate Medicare enrollment and coverage. 

To many financial advisors, this isn’t necessarily a surprise but it is something they dread as fall creeps closer and their inboxes fill with questions from clients about Medicare coverage and its coordination with Social Security, IRMAA calculations, and more.

The good news is that you, the financial advisor, don’t need to be a Medicare expert to help clients optimize their coverage during Open Enrollment. You just need to save or print this short guide to keep handy during the Open Enrollment season.

#1: Be Proactive

Advisors need to identify clients for whom Medicare Open Enrollment is relevant. 

A quick way to do so is to find all the clients in your CRM who are 65 and older. If you want to take an advanced approach to healthcare planning, you can create a custom field for “type of insurance” in your CRM to make this easier. You’ll want to contact the clients your CRM identifies and let them know the Open Enrollment period is coming up, and you’re available as a resource to help them identify their optimal coverage options and make the entire process easier. You can also reach out to clients who aren’t 65 but who might have a parent or older loved one who is Medicare-eligible; this can be a great strategy for generating referrals from your existing clients.

It’s important to be proactive with your Open Enrollment outreach because if you’re not talking to clients about Medicare, someone else is—someone who doesn’t care about the financial and retirement plan you and your client have worked so hard on, and who might even steal away your client’s business (e.g., annuities, life insurance, etc.) Or, if you’re not proactively letting clients know you can help them navigate Open Enrollment, they’ll tackle it on their own and potentially choose less-than-ideal coverage for their needs, preferences, and goals. At the end of the day, you’re missing an opportunity to add value to your client-advisor relationships and potentially risking fiduciary oversight if you don’t proactively engage clients about their Medicare coverage during Open Enrollment.

But before you start emailing clients, let’s go over the important information you need to know. 

#2: Your Cheat Sheet to the Parts of Medicare

If you only print out or save one part of this article, let it be this: a cheat sheet to the parts of Medicare!

You are likely aware that clients can choose between Original Medicare and Medicare Advantage. Original Medicare includes Parts A, B, D, and a Medicare Supplemental (“Medigap”) plan. A Medicare Advantage plan is a single, all-in-one plan that covers Parts A and B, and often D too, from a single private insurance company.

#3: Help Clients Optimize Their Coverage

Now that you know the basic parts of Medicare, let’s talk about how you can help clients choose their optimal coverage. The easiest way is to partner with a healthcare planning company, like Move Health, to take the heavy lifting of Medicare optimization and enrollment off your shoulders. 

But if you want to know a few basic questions to ask clients to help them narrow down their plan options, use the list below. You can schedule time to meet with clients to go through the questions below with them, or simply email them the list of questions:

In Conclusion

The idea of guiding clients through Open Enrollment might be overwhelming, but if you’ve made it to the end of this guide, you’re already one step closer to confidently embracing Open Enrollment for the great planning opportunity it is. A quick recap:

Happy Open Enrollment!


Cole Craven is Managing Partner and Head of Growth at Move Health, the only end-to-end healthcare planning solution for financial advisors and their clients.

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