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Funeral Directors Waiting For Baby Boomers
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Funeral industry awaits baby boom windfall
BY MATT SEDENSKY The Associated Press

    ORLANDO, Fla. — Beyond the convention center filled with glistening hearses, beyond the rows of perfectly arranged caskets and bottles of embalming fluid, funeral directors await perhaps their greatest windfall ever: The death of the baby boom generation.
    For thousands of professionals gathered here at the National Funeral Directors Association convention, the current economic slump does nothing to dampen longer-term hopes pinned to the projected rise of the U.S. death rate as the cohort born between 1946 and 1964 passes away.
    Though dipping slightly over the past several years and expected to be stagnant for several more, the death rate of about 8.1 per 1,000 people is expected to inch significantly upward sometime in the next decade and eventually go as high as 10.9. The exact dates are tough to pinpoint because of the size of the generation and medical advances.
    Experts say the mortality rate is the greatest single predictor of the industry’s business, estimated at about $11 billion annually at funeral homes alone.
    “It sounds kind of morbid, but they are looking at boom times,” said Tara Olson, the owner of AllPoints Research, a marketing research firm that has worked with funeral homes to develop business plans. “They’re just sort of waiting for the baby boomers to start dying off.”
    Because of the high startup costs of getting into the business, the surge of customers is expected to be served by roughly the same number of funeral homes as now. Dan Isard, whose Phoenix-based The Foresight Companies consults with funeral homes, says he expects the average funeral home to go from serving 120 families a year to 165 before the death rate drops off again around 2040.
    “It’s a good thing,” he said, “but how much of a boom it’s going to be is open to conjecture.”
    Isard and others note that cremations, which generally cost less than burials, and questions about what else boomers will want could mean the amount spent on each service goes down. And it’s possible that some families may turn to event planners to take care of funeral arrangements and just use funeral directors for essentials such as transporting and embalming the body.
    “Other than the fatality, what’s the difference between a wedding and a funeral?” he asked.
    To that end, funeral directors say they try to set themselves apart with caring touches and a willingness to accommodate any type of memorial a person wants, made easier by the endless parade of products on display at the convention.
    There are New York Yankees caskets with pinstriped interiors, wicker caskets for the ecoconscious, caskets for fi refighters and Star Trek fans, even caskets with digital photo displays on the inside cover. Urns are disguised as marble lamps, wall paintings and Gund teddy bears. They’re fashioned in the shape of Buddha, made of rock salt or paper to dissolve in the sea, even sold as small aluminum cylinders that fit in the stock of a rifle.
    Some in the industry fear they won’t have adequate staffing to meet increased demand, but they’re trying to attract those seeking second careers and change licensing laws.
    They say economic woes are being felt now, but not nearly as bad as in other businesses. Funeral directors say they’ve had to absorb some price increases and some customers have cut back by not using a limousine or by buying a less expensive casket. But there hasn’t been a drastic change, and they’re not expecting one.
    For now, funeral directors milled around on the floors of the convention center here, in a surreal world where people in Snow White and Tinkerbell costumes hand out flyers for a funeral webcasting company and a marching band performs near a display of tiny caskets for children.
    Chocolates come in the shape of coffi ns, boxer shorts have jokes about cremation, and giveaway calendars devote months to products such as JaundiBalm (“Toughest against jaundice!”).
    Excitement builds around the most mundane products.
    Some convention-goers tested out a device used to lift corpses by being lowered into a coffin, then back onto a table. “Best thing ever invented,” one exclaimed.
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MobileTerminal
October 19, 2008, 7:12am Report to Moderator
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Oh gee, now there's something to look forward to.

Glad they find it entertaining.
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bumblethru
October 19, 2008, 9:53am Report to Moderator
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Geezzz...and there is no way out of screwing them over. We all gotta die. Although, all of the boomers could pre - arrange their funerals NOW at today's rates. That would get them 20 or 30 years from now when prices are higher.


When the INSANE are running the ASYLUM
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule. -- Friedrich Nietzsche


“How fortunate for those in power that people never think.”
Adolph Hitler
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senders
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Quoted from bumblethru
Geezzz...and there is no way out of screwing them over. We all gotta die. Although, all of the boomers could pre - arrange their funerals NOW at today's rates. That would get them 20 or 30 years from now when prices are higher.


are you kidding----it would be todays rates with small print disclaimer about fluctuations in the market at 5-10-15-20year intervals with
percentages for increases.......I need to change my profession.......this profession is recession proof......that is until civility ends....


...you are a product of your environment, your environment is a product of your priorities, your priorities are a product of you......

The replacement of morality and conscience with law produces a deadly paradox.


STOP BEING GOOD DEMOCRATS---STOP BEING GOOD REPUBLICANS--START BEING GOOD AMERICANS

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Kevin March
November 3, 2008, 7:42pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from bumblethru
Geezzz...and there is no way out of screwing them over. We all gotta die. Although, all of the boomers could pre - arrange their funerals NOW at today's rates. That would get them 20 or 30 years from now when prices are higher.


2 words to prove you wrong...Social Security.  Good thing we saved the money from people as they were paying it so we had it when it was needed, huh?


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