Top products from r/Insurance

We found 20 product mentions on r/Insurance. We ranked the 19 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/Insurance:

u/Zen_Drifter · 4 pointsr/Insurance

I'd second the Duluth pants. I wear dark colored jeans in the winter since nobody really checks on us. The shirts from Duluth have that extra length on them so you won't be having to tuck them back in every time you get in & out of the car. They are thick enough that they won't tear or snag when you're crawling up under a car parked on brushed concrete.

I wear Vasque Breeze boots, which aren't waterproof but have a high enough sole that my feet won't get wet in ordinary puddles. I find them to be a good cross between comfort and utility.

If you work in a northern climate I'd recommend doing your homework and not skimping on clothes. Buy quality stuff. I spent my first ten years kinda cold and uncomfortable, but the last ten were much better after I started taking the time to put on thermal underwear, wool socks, and wear a good coat and gloves in winter. If you dress right you can stand around outside all day in sub-zero weather without being uncomfortable.

Get a good crowbar, a jump pack, and one of those super-bright high quality flashlights that costs $50. Gel pens don't clog in freezing weather like ballpoints do. Get a decent step-stool for looking at roofs. Also a foam "snow-brum" is good for pushing snow off cars in winter for inspections.

I also carry a tire plug kit and a small 12v cigarette lighter air compressor so I can fix a flat immediately instead of having to find a tire shop.

u/TerrorSuspect · 2 pointsr/Insurance

I was shopping for an affordable dash cam for my father last year, this one came highly recommend online and so far has been great, the video quality is surprisingly good for the price, even at night. I plan on getting one for me and my wife are well. I used my dad as our test bench lol.

https://www.amazon.com/OldShark-G-Sensor-Recording-Dashboard-Recorder/dp/B01DLWBPCA

u/RealLebronJames · 1 pointr/Insurance

This is the one I got, along with the recommended micro SD card. Was easy to set up and is working great.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00SK8B47W/

u/insurancefun · 5 pointsr/Insurance

What that, interested in the history of insurance? Boy have i got a treat for you.

u/trix4rix · 1 pointr/Insurance

This one is a good deal, make sure you pair it with a 64gb memory card from Samsung.

u/vedgehammer · 1 pointr/Insurance

A good classic is The Wedge. Instead of refining your "sales technique" it focuses on proving your value while exposing the incumbent advisor, assuming they have one.

u/drunkryan · 1 pointr/Insurance

When the president of the company is named in a book it makes it pretty simple.

u/FatFingerHelperBot · 0 pointsr/Insurance

It seems that your comment contains 1 or more links that are hard to tap for mobile users.
I will extend those so they're easier for our sausage fingers to click!


Here is link number 1 - Previous text "one"



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^Please ^PM ^/u/eganwall ^with ^issues ^or ^feedback! ^| ^Delete

u/Shinka828484 · 2 pointsr/Insurance

I'm a noob on them so there may be others much better, but this is the one I bought and it seems to be able to do everything I need.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0747Q9VLB?ref=yo_pop_ma_swf

u/key2616 · 2 pointsr/Insurance

[It's available on Amazon for $16.84].(https://www.amazon.com/Life-Insurance-Handbook-Louis-Shuntich/dp/1592800572)

Maybe this isn't the sub you think it is.

u/optical_mommy · 2 pointsr/Insurance

My computer class trained us on this program, and it was part of the textbook. You can pick it up cheap on Amazon.

http://www.amazon.com/Computers-Medical-Office-Susan-Sanderson/dp/0073374601/ref=pd_sim_b_1

u/Minja78 · 1 pointr/Insurance

> You should bring up who installed what.

Why?
So they can get an unpaid claim?

Insurance companies base some of their decisions off of professional installation. I'm willing to bet there instalation involved some plumber's tape and a wrench. The black and white world of claims isn't going to understand that.

You're a who again?

u/Username_Used · 1 pointr/Insurance

Here's how I've always made my long distance trips.

Buy a spiral bound US Road Map

Plan the route and write it on a piece of paper with page numbers next to each route change that correspond to the page in the book

Tape paper to dashboard and drive. If you get confused you know exactly what page to turn to to clarify whats happening.


$15 for the map, leave it in the trunk of your car and never get lost again