Pros
They did have a very good one week training program. You get lots of continued support. You learn a lot about sales. You get assigned a mentor. Mine was passionate and her mentor was as well. They made themselves available to me. Their bread and butter product, a Final Protection Life Plan to cover funeral expenses seems like a worthwhile product that I do believe has value and I was happy to offer to people. But other sideline policies not so much. Pay is in line with how much work you put in it.
Cons
Full commission. To advance you'll need to pull in friends or family into AIL. A lot of cold calling. They say it's not, that the leads are genuine, but it is in fact cold calling. You're basically switch and baiting your customers. For example, a young single mother might be interested in a child safety kit, so she signs up online. So you come to their house. She's expecting this kit, but instead all of a sudden, she gets a one hour plus insurance presentation. If she's not interested in it for herself, we're supposed to try to sell a policy for her kid, which I found distasteful. The weekly meetings were a bit to rah rah for me. There's a lot of driving around which is not reimbursed. To be successful, expect 60 hour work weeks. I was in the Burlington, MA office (Fisher Agencies)