Posts Tagged ‘Primerica representative’

Dec

19.11

Primerica’s proud to have great leaders from all walks of life. One of the company’s founders, Bobby Buisson, hasn’t been an inspiration only to Primerica. He made a lasting impression on best-selling author Pat Conroy many years ago when they battled each other on the college basketball court. In Conroy’s bestseller My Losing Season, he tells the story of how his competition with Buisson made him a better player … and a better person. Read excerpts from My Losing Season, including personal stories about Buisson, on his high school alma mater’s website.


2 Comments »

Tags: basketball, Bobby Buisson, college, competition, inspiration, My Losing Season, Pat Conroy, Primerica, Primerica representative

Posted in Primerica, Representatives |

Oct

11.11

Primerica leader David Lipsit of San Antonio, TX, broke his neck playing college football his freshman year. The injury left him paralyzed from the neck down and his doctors told him he would never walk again.

Read about David’s amazing comeback and how this successful leader beat the odds.


No Comments »

Tags: business opportunity, David Lipsit, disability, football, neck injury, paralyzed, Primerica, primerica opportunity, Primerica representative, Vanessa Lipsit

Posted in Opportunity, Primerica, Representatives |

Sep

30.11

Scott Wilson of Edmonton, AB, is a fighter. More than 15 years ago, amid an overwhelming work schedule and a child’s heartbreaking illness, he left his corporate job and joined Primerica. While his wife worked full-time as a dental assistant, Scott was working 60-hour weeks before Primerica came along. He decided to start a business. He could make calls while his son napped during the day and he could go on appointments in the evenings, when his wife was home. It sounded like the perfect plan, until the Wilsons realized that their son wasn’t like other children.

The boy lasted just 10 days in daycare. He sat in the corner all alone, not interacting with the other children at all. It was the first sign that something was amiss with his development. Scott took extra care to make sure his son’s special needs were being met, but it wasn’t until a few years later that he was diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder. It changed the course of Scott’s life forever.

The challenges of rearing a child with this developmental disability were remarkable. He needed constant attention and, since Scott had the flexibility that comes with being your own boss, the daytime responsibility fell to him. Caring for their son was a full-time job. Scott recalls, “Most children learn through incidental experience but, in our son’s case, we had to be intentional about every learning outcome. The more time I spent with him, the better he did. Left to his own devices, he’d quickly regress. Because I was able to be present with my son, he was able to teach me what he needed.”

Just two short years after their son’s diagnosis, a daughter was born, and the Wilsons were ecstatic. Sadly, the daughter would soon be diagnosed with autism, as well, and would exhibit more severe signs than her brother did. But Scott and his wife Lynn were there.

“I was able to bring the children home from school every day for lunch so they could get a break from the chaos that the playground is to a child with autism. I shudder to think where my children would be today had I continued to work 60 hours a week. I certainly wouldn’t have been able to provide them with the attention they needed,” Scott argues.

“Primerica is the only place where you get support even while you’re going through a valley. Some valleys are deeper than others, but that doesn’t matter here. If you keep plodding through, Primerica will be waiting.”

Something Bigger Than Themselves
Over the years, Scott and Lynn have become staunch advocates for issues relating to children with disabilities. They helped create a martial arts class for children with autism. It’s taught by an occupational therapist who has a black belt in Tae Kwon Do. The class began with eight children. It now boasts more than 40.

When Scott saw that his son was struggling socially in the seventh grade, he mobilized a social skills pilot project and saw the funding come into place for his son’s eighth- and ninth-grade years, too.

Because of the flexibility and freedom that having a Primerica business gave him, Scott was instrumental in guiding the government of Alberta on Bill 23: The Family Supports for Children with Disabilities Act. Since 2007, he’s been appointed to sit on two advisory boards that have guided the Minister of Children’s Services on issues relating to children’s disabilities.

Now, the boy who needed constant care gets himself out of bed and to the city bus on time. He makes it to his high school classes and back home again with ease. The intensive therapies that the Wilsons had the time and freedom to provide their children have made all the difference in their lives … and the lives of countless other children with developmental disabilities.

The Primerica Story
Scott says he’s not the poster boy for the Primerica business opportunity. He hasn’t grown a big business or made all of the money he’d hoped to make … yet; but, Scott couldn’t be more wrong. His story is the Primerica story. Because of this company, he was able to spend precious time with his children during what could have been turbulent years for them. He had the freedom to be there when his family needed him most. He had the opportunity to affect law as it pertains to children with disabilities. And he knew that, no matter what, Primerica would be ready for him when he was ready to build it big.

That, Scott, is exactly what Primerica’s all about. You’re a survivor. You’re a Primerican, and we salute you.


5 Comments »

Tags: Alberta, autism, canada, children, daughter, disability, Primerica, Primerica Canada, Primerica representative, Scott Wilson, son

Posted in Opportunity, Primerica, Representatives |

Jun

08.11

Primerica representative Susan Price of Riverview, FL, knows what it’s like to lose a loved one. Her son, Gunnery Sergeant Aaron Michael Kenefick, USMC was killed in an ambush in Afghanistan on September 8, 2009.

Susan’s son enlisted in the Marine Corps after his junior year at Roswell High School in Roswell, GA, because he wanted to make a difference in the world.

Although Susan now resides in the Tampa area, she was asked by the town of Roswell, GA, to participate in an honor ceremony during Memorial weekend.

Though the loss of any loved one is tough, the loss of a child is devastating. Luckily for Susan, she discovered Primerica.

“Primerica has added joy and light back into my life,” says Susan. “After God and my family, Primerica gives me new purpose. This new endeavor is my something special to rebuild my new beginnings.

“The people I’ve met through Primerica have been people of the highest caliber. They have dreams that no one can take away from them and an uncommon spirit and zest for life.”

And now through Primerica, Susan can make a difference in others’ lives just like her son Aaron did. She can help educate families about their finances, and help them get the term life insurance coverage they need in case the unthinkable happens to them, just like it happened to her son.

“I believe that my future with Primerica will enhance the lives of many,” Susan enthuses.


25 Comments »

Tags: Aaron Kenefick, family, loss, Marine, Primerica, primerica life insurance, Primerica representative, Primerica term life insurance, Susan Price

Posted in Company, Primerica, Representatives |

Dec

01.10

… For People Impacted by Recession

At a time when so many families have been forced to change their way of life, Primerica offers new hope for people to start dreaming again.

“The nation’s financial crisis is altering Americans’ way of life from the home and the workplace to the highway and the altar, according to the 2009 Census data,” The USA Today reported recently.

The impact has been felt throughout our society:

  • Median household income fell 2.9% in 2009, the second consecutive annual drop as the cost of living continues to rise.
  • One of eight housing units was vacant in 2009, a sign of the soaring foreclosure rate.
  • The share of women 18 and older who are married slipped below 50% for the first time ever, “an adaptive response to response to the lack of jobs and economic uncertainty,” according to a demographer at the Population Reference Bureau.

Primerica offers people the opportunity to start a business – with the freedom to build the way they decide, with no restrictions on the earnings potential.  Many choose to simply earn a little extra money part-time, while others begin a new full-time career.

“Our business does real good during good times,” Primerica Senior National Sales Director Jim Meyer said.  “Our business does great during poor economic times.”

The time is now, and people need a game plan and a financial education like never before.

Source:  Recession’s impact on us, USA Today, September 29, 2010


8 Comments »

Tags: business opportunity, economy, education, financial crisis, foreclosure, foreclosures, hope, Jim Meyer, jobless, loss of job, poor, Primerica, primerica opportunity, Primerica representative, recession, unemployeed, unemployement

Posted in Opportunity, Primerica, Representatives |