Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Click Here When I Die: Sites Lay Out Plans For Loved Ones

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2016 12:09 PM
    NEW YORK — Several websites are trying to make death easier -- for the people left behind.
     
    Everplans, Everest Funeral, My Life & Wishes and other companies are helping with end-of-life planning. Users can upload digital copies of their wills, plan their funeral or name the person who will take care of the dog when they die. 
     
    Access to the information can be given to a spouse, child or anyone else you'd like. The idea is to reduce the arguments over funeral plans or the frantic search for documents that can happen after a death. Some of the sites charge fees, but others are free or offer a free service through financial planners or employee benefits.
     
    Financial advisers say everyone should write down important financial information and funeral wishes in a safe place, whether it's on a website or in a notebook. Heirs risk losing out on money if they're in the dark about accounts or insurance policies, says Len Hayduchok, president of Dedicated Senior Advisors in Hamilton, New Jersey.
     
    But getting people to think about their demise is a challenge.
     
    "People just don't want to do it," says Hayduchok. "It's something that is easy to put off."
     
    The sites are trying to make the process more inviting.
     
    Everplans guides users through everything they need to do, such as uploading information about life insurance policies or pensions. There's also room to leave letters to loved ones and a place to put passwords for emails and instructions on what to do with Facebook accounts and other social media sites.
     
    The site charges $75 a year for the service. But about 150 financial firms and advisers around the country offer Everplans to their clients, sometimes for free, says co-founder and co-CEO Abby Schneiderman. Some employers are also starting to offer Everplans to workers as a benefit, she says.
     
    Another service, called Everest , is offered as a free perk with employee benefits. On Everest's site, users can write out their funeral wishes or upload photos, their will or other documents. The company also offers concierge service that helps those left behind to plan funeral and deals with all the details. If your employer offers group life insurance from Aetna, Hartford or Voya, ask your human resources office if it comes with Everest. It likely does; more than 25 million people have access to Everest, says CEO Mark Duffey.
     
    My Life & Wishes , which was launched this year, helps put together end-of-life plans online for $79 a year. Michelle and Jonathan Braddock came up with the idea after Michelle's father passed away and left the couple scrambling to piece together his financial life. My Life & Wishes was first published as a workbook that the couple handed out to clients of the insurance company they owned. But they quickly started working on a website, realizing that updated passwords and new accounts needed to be added to the book.
     
    "Things change so frequently," says Jonathan Braddock.
     
    Fidelity, which manages retirement and brokerage accounts, recently launched a free service called FidSafe that lets users upload passports, wills and other documents. Users can give access to documents to next of kin, and you don't need to be a Fidelity customer to use it.
     
    FidSafe was launched after most Fidelity customers surveyed said that they had never talked about end-of-life planning with their families, says Daniel Brownell, CEO of Fidelity's document storage management subsidiary Xtrac Solutions.
     
    Not everyone will be comfortable putting all their important information online. All the companies say that security is a priority, but even the biggest financial institutions have been hacked. Also keep in mind that some of them are just starting up, and there is a chance they may fail before you're gone. The companies say that if that happens, there are ways to download and print out all the information you've posted.
     
    If putting everything online is not for you, writing it all down in a notebook is just as good, says Hayduchok. He gives out notebooks to clients and tells them to list all their accounts, keep paperwork and let a loved one know where everything is.
     
    "You have to communicate properly," he says.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Mistrial Declared In US Cop's Assault On Indian Grandfather Sureshbhai Patel

    For the second time in less than two months, a US judge declared a mistrial in the case against an Alabama police officer charged with slamming an Indian grandfather to the ground last February and severely injuring him.

    Mistrial Declared In US Cop's Assault On Indian Grandfather Sureshbhai Patel

    Elvis Cake, Keepsake Book And Ultimate Selfie-Helper Phone Case Among Oprah's Favorite Things

    Elvis Cake, Keepsake Book And Ultimate Selfie-Helper Phone Case Among Oprah's Favorite Things
    A Kardashian-worthy phone case rimmed with tiny lights, a keepsake book of "Letters to My Love" and a banana, peanut butter and chocolate cake called the Elvis are among Oprah's Favorite Things of 2015.

    Elvis Cake, Keepsake Book And Ultimate Selfie-Helper Phone Case Among Oprah's Favorite Things

    You Click 2,000 Selfies A Year

    You Click 2,000 Selfies A Year
    The study from Intel and Lineage Labs found that millennials take an average of at least six selfies every day, metro.co.uk reported.

    You Click 2,000 Selfies A Year

    Make-up tips to bring your spooky side out this Halloween

    Make-up tips to bring your spooky side out this Halloween
    Manisha Chopra, cosmetologist and co-founder of SeaSoul Cosmeceuticals, has shared Halloween make-up tips that are guaranteed to add spunk to your costume and make you look your scary best.

    Make-up tips to bring your spooky side out this Halloween

    US Man Asks Queen Elizabeth II To ‘Take Back America’, She Says No

    US Man Asks Queen Elizabeth II To ‘Take Back America’, She Says No
    Frustrated with the lot of US presidential aspirants, an American man has written to Queen Elizabeth II, asking her to take back control of America in a bizarre request that the monarch politely turned down.

    US Man Asks Queen Elizabeth II To ‘Take Back America’, She Says No

    New 3D-Printed Bikini Cleans Water As You Swim

    New 3D-Printed Bikini Cleans Water As You Swim
    Researchers have invented a new 3D-printed swimsuit capable of cleaning up oil spills and desalinising water while people swim.

    New 3D-Printed Bikini Cleans Water As You Swim