Insurance in India has never been more accessible.
Plans can be compared in minutes. Premiums are transparent. Policies can be purchased online without ever speaking to an advisor. On the surface, the system appears efficient, informed, and increasingly consumer-friendly.
Yet, despite this progress, the quality of insurance decisions remains deeply inconsistent.
According to Jayant, the issue isn’t awareness or access. It is how the decision itself is framed.
Backed by over 90 years of family legacy in the industry — with both his grandfather and father having spent decades advising clients — Jayant represents a continuation of experience, but with a noticeable shift in approach.
In his view, most insurance advice in India still begins at the wrong place.
It begins with products.
Whether it is term insurance or health insurance, the process is largely similar — compare plans, evaluate features, choose a coverage amount, and complete the purchase. The decision is treated as a transaction, not a structure.
This approach works well for selling.
It works less well for protecting.
Because term insurance and health insurance are not interchangeable products. They solve fundamentally different risks.
Term insurance is designed to replace income.
Health insurance is designed to protect accumulated savings.
Yet, both are often reduced to simplified decisions — a number, a premium, a checklist of benefits.
What gets overlooked is the underlying question: what financial risk is actually being addressed?
This is where the gap begins.
Coverage amounts are frequently chosen based on familiarity rather than calculation. ₹50 lakh. ₹1 crore. A ₹10 lakh health cover. A ₹20 lakh family floater.
Numbers that sound adequate, but are rarely tested against real-life scenarios.
For an individual earning ₹25–30 lakh annually, with long-term responsibilities and financial dependents, a ₹1 crore term cover may not sustain continuity for more than a few years. Similarly, a standard health cover may get exhausted in a single major hospitalization, leaving the rest of the financial burden exposed.
On paper, these decisions appear sufficient.
In practice, they may not hold.
Jayant’s perspective challenges this pattern — not by rejecting the system, but by shifting the starting point.
Instead of asking which plan to buy, the focus moves to what needs to be protected.
This includes understanding income dependency, financial obligations, lifestyle risks, and the duration for which protection is required. Only after these elements are clearly defined does a policy become relevant.
In this framework, the policy is not the decision.
It is the execution of it.
This distinction, while subtle, changes how both term and health insurance are approached.
Term insurance becomes less about selecting a large number and more about whether income can truly be replaced over time. Health insurance moves beyond feature comparison and toward evaluating whether medical costs can disrupt long-term financial stability.
Jayant has been actively building this perspective beyond advisory through his content platform theJTalks, where he has built a community of over 20,000 followers. The content does not focus on recommending products, but on simplifying how financial decisions should be approached.
The emphasis is consistent — clarity before choice.
This approach is resonating with a younger demographic that is increasingly aware of financial planning, but often navigating an overload of options without a clear framework to evaluate them.
As access to information improves, the challenge is no longer finding answers.
It is asking the right questions.
And that is where the role of advice is beginning to evolve.
From helping individuals choose between options…
to helping them understand the decision itself.
Jayant’s work sits within this shift.
Not as a departure from traditional insurance.
But as an evolution of how it is understood.
Because ultimately, the effectiveness of insurance is not determined by what is purchased.
It is determined by whether the decision behind it was structured to withstand reality.
And that, as current patterns suggest, is where most decisions fall short — long before a policy is ever bought.
