You should contact Rudi Hoffman, an insurance middleman who has helped many people get insurance for cryonics.
Contact for ideas, or to get him to run an ad campaign? While he definitely has the incentive, I don't think he has the resources. I was imagining a company like Northwestern Mutual doing this, which someone like Rudi Hoffman shouldn't want.
He would be the obvious person to hire as a consultant for the marketers to ask about how people feel about various pitches and what they tend to think and say in response. The trove of practically-oriented-evidence-about-humans on this subject contained in his head is vast. In the course of selling to people I'm sure he's conversationally traversed nearly every line of thinking between the conclusion and various bits of evidence that people normally come up with, including the ones that make no sense. If the campaign is worth running, I'm pretty sure it would be worth hiring him for advice.
My uncle works in insurance. I recently mentioned that I'm planning to sign up for cryonics.
"That's amazing," he said. "Convincing a young person to buy life insurance? That has to be the greatest scam ever."
I took the comment lightly, not caring to argue about it. But it got me thinking - couldn't cryonics be a great opportunity for insurance companies to make a bunch of money?
Consider:
Almost a year ago, Strange7 suggested that cryonics organizations could run this kind of marketing campaign. I think he's wrong - there's no way CI or Alcor have the money. But the biggest insurance companies do have the money, and I'd be shocked if these companies or their agencies aren't already dumping all kinds of money into market research.
What would doing this require?
I want to live in a world where cryonics ads air on TV just as often as ads for everything else people spend money on. I really can see an insurance company owning this project - if they can a) successfully revamp the image of cryonics and b) become known as the household name for it when the market gets big, they will make lots of money.
What do you think? Where has my reasoning failed? Does anyone here know anyone powerful in insurance?
Lastly, taking a cue from ciphergoth: this is not the place to rehash all the old arguments about cryonics. I'm asking about a very specific idea about marketing and life insurance, not requesting commentary on cryonics itself. Thanks!
1 Perhaps modeling the potential size of the market would offer insight here. If it turns out that this idea is not insane, I'll find a way to make it happen. I could use your help.
2 Consider what happened with diamonds in the 1900s: