Friday, 16 December 2016

7 ways to get the most from your brokerage agency



The best BGAs stay current on investment trends, new products and technology. (Photo: iStock)
The best BGAs stay current on investment trends, new products and technology. (Photo: iStock)

All too often, advisors short-change themselves and their clients by failing to take advantage of the capabilities of a life insurance brokerage general agency.


Related: Your 5 best arguments for life insurance




Here are seven ways to get more from a BGA: 


No. 1: BGAs have the pulse on the market regarding products, company trends, underwriting niches, time service and deadlines for changes that can impact advisor clients and prospects. 


No. 2: BGAs can match up advisors with the right company and product the first time, avoiding delays created by submitting another application later in the process.


No. 3: BGAs know about the technology changes in the new business platform that can save an advisor time and energy, as well as shorten the process for the applicant.


No. 4: BGAs will know if there are potential licensing landmines or deadline issues when submitting business to a carrier for the first time. When applying for an annuity or long-term care plan, there may be training and certification hurdles to overcome before taking an application.


No. 5: If there are product deadlines that could have an adverse effect on an applicant, a BGA can assist advisors in taking advantage of looming product changes, interest rate reductions, or re-pricing based on the low interest rate environment.


No. 6: There may be a better solution for a prospect or client that an advisor may not know about that a BGA can offer, which will increase the chances of placing the coverage.


No. 7: BGAs can offer more advanced illustration support for those cases when an applicant is concerned about the rate of return, the cost of waiting, or what type of income the plan can generate for retirement.  These supplemental reports can seal the deal with a business owner, partner or CFO, helping owners feel comfortable knowing they are making a sound financial decision for the family or business.


To be sure, BGA’s vary in their capabilities and services. If you don’t find what you need with one, there are others that may be a better fit.


See also:


Could complying with the DOL rule give insurers a competitive advantage?


Here’s why digital life insurance sales are growing


Have you Liked us on Facebook?





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7 ways to get the most from your brokerage agency

After-Hours ER Care May Come With A Doctor’s Surcharge


Emergency clinic sign on a modern medical building.


If an emergency department is open 24 hours a day, why would patients be charged extra for coming in “after hours”?


Good question, say experts who help patients decipher and dispute their medical bills. “After-hours surcharges,” as they’re sometimes called, should be included in the regular fees charged by emergency physicians for an emergency department visit, they argue. But instead patients sometimes find an additional charge, generally between $30 and $200, tacked onto their bill for visiting overnight.


Although not commonplace, the use of such surcharges may be on the rise. “We’ve definitely been seeing these surcharges a lot more this year than in the past,” said Candice Butcher, vice president of Medical Billing Advocates of America in Roanoke, Va., which provides medical billing resolution services to individuals and companies.


She pointed to a recent example last September in which an uninsured man visited a hospital overnight in Texas to have an abscess on his finger drained. The emergency physician’s bill totaled $1,697: $910 for evaluation and management services, $749 for draining the abscess and $38 for receiving services between 10 p.m. and 8 a.m.


In this case, as in others, the after-hours surcharge was a tiny fraction of the total bill. But it rankles people.


“People ask, ‘Why are they charging me this extra fee for a facility that’s open 24 hours a day?’” said Butcher.


Insurers may refuse to pay the extra charge, and if they do rule the charge ineligible for payment, typically patients don’t have to pick it up.


“Aetna does not reimburse for an ‘after-hours charge’ if it is associated with an emergency room visit code or in an urgent care center as these facilities are usually open after routine office hours,” said Ethan Slavin, a spokesman for Aetna.


The rationale for an after-hours surcharge is to cover the extra costs associated with operating and staffing a facility outside normal working hours, including generally higher salaries for overnight work, said Richard Gundling, a senior vice president at the Healthcare Financial Management Association, an industry group for executives. It’s used to varying degrees by emergency physicians, he said.


It’s legitimate to charge patients extra for visiting the emergency department during overnight hours, said Dr. Rebecca Parker, president of the American College of Emergency Physicians. “You’re paying people to be on staff during nighttime hours, and there are potentially extra costs there,” she said. Still, she said, emergency physicians rarely use it.


Please visit khn.org/columnists to send comments or ideas for future topics for the Insuring Your Health column.


Cost and Quality, Health Industry, Insurance, Insuring Your Health, Syndicate


Emergency Medicine, Hospitals



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After-Hours ER Care May Come With A Doctor’s Surcharge

UIIC Recruitment 2015 – Apply Online for 750 Assistant Posts

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United India Insurance Company Limited (UIIC) has released notification for the recruitment of 750 Assistant vacancies

United India Insurance Co. Ltd. is a leading Public sector General insurance company wholly owned by Government

of India with a gross premium of more than Rs.10,000 Crores. A rapidly growing company with more than 1600

offices, highest network in the non life insurance industry throughout the country.


Company proposes to recruit young and dynamic candidates for its Offices all over India. Applications are invited

from eligible Indian citizens for the post of ASSISTANT.

Please note the important dates:


Online Registration commences from 07/07/2015

Last Date for Registration of Online applications 20/07/2015

Dates for Payment of Application Fee 07/07/2015 to 20/07/2015

th

Date of Online Exam (tentative)* 30 August, 2015

th

Download of Call letter for Online Examination 20 August, 2015

Educational Qualification:(As on 30.06.2015)


Graduate from a recognized University OR

th

Pass in HSC / equivalent (12 pass) examination with 60% marks (50% for Ex-servicemen, SC/ST &PwD) and

knowledge of Regional Language i.e. Language of the State of Recruitment is essential.


4. Age (as on 30.6.2015)


i. Minimum Age : 18 years and Maximum Age : 28 years (as on 30.06.2015).Candidates born not earlier

st th

than 1 July, 1987 and not later than 30 June, 1997 (both days inclusive) are only eligible to apply.

HOW TO APPLY:

DETAILED GUIDELINES/PROCEDURES FOR


A. APPLICATION REGISTRATION

B. PAYMENT OF FEES

C. PHOTOGRAPH & SIGNATURE SCAN AND UPLOAD

Candidates can apply online only from 07.07.2015 to 20.07.2015 and no other mode of application will be

accepted.


IMPORTANT POINTS TO BE NOTED BEFORE REGISTRATION

Before applying online, candidates should-

i. Scan their photograph and signature ensuring that both the photograph and signature adhere to the required

specifications as given under Guideline for photograph & signature scan and upload.

ii. Have a valid personal email ID and mobile no., which should be kept active till the completion of this

Recruitment Process. Company may send call letters for the Examination etc. through the registered e-mail ID. In case a candidate does not have a valid personal e-mail ID, he/she should create his/her new e-mail ID

and mobile no. before applying on-line and must maintain that email account and mobile number.

APPLICATION FEES/ INTIMATION CHARGES (NON REFUNDABLE)

PAYMENT OF FEEON LINE: 07/07/2015 to 20/07/2015

Bank Transaction charges for Online Payment of application fees/intimation charges will have to be borne by

the candidate.

871

source



UIIC Recruitment 2015 – Apply Online for 750 Assistant Posts

Thursday, 15 December 2016

The Trump effect on Canada

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The Trump effect on Canada


Compiled by Gloria Cilliers on December 14, 2016


donald-trump-bobblehead

INSURANCE


“The President-Elect campaigned on a pledge to repeal the North American Free Trade Agreement; this could have implications on the insurance industry in Canada in terms of insurers’ ability to bring in American adjusters to assist in special circumstances, like we saw following the Fort McMurray wildfire.”
– Andrew McGrath, media relations manager, Insurance Bureau of Canada


“RIMS is ready to monitor new regulations that could impact insurance markets, as well as organizations’ ability to effectively manage risk. We look forward to ongoing engagement with government representatives to ensure the best interests of our members are served.”
– Julie C. Pemberton, RIMS president


TAXES


Trump has pledged to scrap estate and gift tax, which means Canadians with U.S. real estate or operating businesses could benefit from a new capital gains tax planning avenue and easier estate planning. “You’d see a lot more Canadians using flow-through structures rather than corporations.”
– Abe Leitner, director of tax planning at Goulston and Storrs, New York City.


CROSS-BORDER RELATIONS


After a call to congratulate Trump on winning, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters in Sydney, N.S.: “… it was a strong beginning to what is going to be a constructive relationship.”


TRADE


Trump plans to axe the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which would lower trade barriers, allowing Canada to import goods at lower prices, facilitating “higher productivity, higher GDP and higher incomes.”
– Trevor Tombe, assistant professor, Department of Economics, University of Calgary.


Trump has threatened to renegotiate or withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), but could face resistance from legislators in states that have reaped the benefits. “You tear that up, my mother used to say, ‘you’re cutting off your nose to spite your face’.”
– Brian Mulroney, former prime minister and architect of NAFTA.


IMMIGRATION


An anti-immigration president will likely mean tougher border crossings for Canadians, suggested Heather Segal of Segal Immigration Law. Canada may even see an influx of American citizens seeking a new home – on election night, Canada’s Immigration and Citizen website reportedly “crashed” and searches in the U.S. for one-way flights to Canada more than doubled, said Cheapflights.com.


ENERGY


Trump’s win could breathe new life into plans to build the 1,900-kilometre Keystone XL pipeline from Alberta to Nebraska, as Trump has said he would approve it. However, Trump favours oil and gas drilling on federal lands, which could stifle appetite for Canada’s oil and gas production.


CLIMATE CHANGE


Trump has called global warming a “hoax,” pledging to cancel the landmark Paris Agreement. In response to Trump’s opposition to Canada’s carbon-tax plan, Trudeau insisted “there is tremendous economic disadvantage” to not taking strong action in the fight against climate change.


Sources: The Canadian Press; Advisor.ca; CBC News; The Globe & Mail; Huffington Post; Macleans.ca; CTV’s Question Period
__________________________________________________________________________
Copyright © 2016 Transcontinental Media G.P. This article first appeared in the December 2016 edition of Canadian Insurance Top Broker magazine



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The Trump effect on Canada

A.M. Best rates Fairfax Financial Holdings’ unsecured notes

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A.M. Best rates Fairfax Financial Holdings’ unsecured notes


Firm gets a bbb, with a stable outlook.


Staff on December 15, 2016


Finance_general_4

A.M. Best has assigned a Long-Term Issue Credit Rating of “bbb” to Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited’s recently announced CAD 450 million in aggregate principal amount of senior unsecured notes due 2026. The senior unsecured notes will be obligations of Fairfax and pay an annual fixed interest rate of 4.70%.

The outlook assigned to the credit rating is stable.


Following the senior notes issue, financial leverage and coverage measures at Fairfax are supportive of the assigned ratings. Fairfax intends to use the net proceeds of the offering to refinance or repay outstanding debt or other corporate obligations of Fairfax and its subsidiaries and for general corporate purposes. This may include the redemption or repurchase of certain of Fairfax’s previously issued senior unsecured notes.



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A.M. Best rates Fairfax Financial Holdings’ unsecured notes

D.C. Circuit Court refuses to block DOL fiduciary rule

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NAFA must now consider whether or not to take their case to the U.S. Supreme Court. (Photo: iStock)
NAFA must now consider whether or not to take their case to the U.S. Supreme Court. (Photo: iStock)

A federal appeals court on Thursday refused to block Obama administration regulations that were adopted to minimize conflicts of interest in the retirement-investment industry, a significant setback for financial planners, insurance agents and other advisers who said the rule will disrupt the marketplace.


Related: Senate panel clears retirement savings bill




The National Association for Fixed Annuities in November urged the Washington court to freeze for at least ten months the April 10, 2017 start date of the new rule, which requires financial professionals who give retirement advice to put the best interest of their customers before commissions or fees. The U.S. Labor Department in April adopted the new regulations, a project more than six years in the making. Rules governing retirement investment advice had remained unchanged for decades.


Related: NAFA to appeal DOL fiduciary rule decision


NAFA earlier told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that its members “will be forced to accelerate irreversible, costly, and industry-altering actions in the weeks ahead to restructure their entire distribution system, which has been in place for decades.” The group on Friday said the Labor Department engaged in “far-reaching rulemaking, well outside its area of expertise.”


In the order Thursday, D.C. Circuit judges Karen LeCraft Henderson, David Tatel and Sri Srinivasan said the annuities association “has not satisfied the stringent requirements for an injunction pending appeal.”


The annuities group was represented by the law firm Bryan Cave. The association could ask the full appeals court to reconsider, or take the dispute to the U.S. Supreme Court.


The fiduciary rule requires firms and advisers “to make prudent investment recommendations without regard to their own interests, or the interests of those other than the customer.” Investment advisers must charge what regulators call “reasonable compensation” and firms cannot make any misrepresentations about recommended investments. The regulations expanded the scope of “fiduciary” responsibilities in the retirement investment market.


“Together, the rule and exemptions impose basic standards of professional conduct that are intended to address an annual loss of billions of dollars to ordinary retirement investors as a result of conflicted advice,” the Labor Department said in rolling out the regulations.


The Justice Department on Dec. 6 urged the D.C. Circuit to “not take the extraordinary step of enjoining lawful regulations issued after six years of public comment and consideration, whose continued operation is essential to the nation’s retirement security.”


The department described as “speculative” the contention that the new regulations will cause “irreparable” harm to members of the annuities group.


“Any economic injuries plaintiff’s members might sustain are outweighed by the harm to retirement investors whose savings are threatened by conflicted advice,” Michael Shih, a Justice Department lawyer, wrote in court papers.




Other fiduciary suits pending


Lawsuits challenging the fiduciary rule are pending in Texas, Kansas and Minnesota federal district courts. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is a plaintiff in consolidated cases in Texas. A judge in Dallas heard argument on Nov. 17.


A Kansas judge last month refused to enjoin the new rule, rejecting a challenge from the insurer Market Synergy Group Inc. The ruling was the second win for the Labor Department in defending the regulations.


U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss on Nov. 4, presiding in the NAFA case, was the first judge to reject a challenge to the new rules. Moss both denied a preliminary injunction request and also ruled on the merits of the regulations. He later refused to stay his decision pending the outcome of the annuities group’s appeal in the D.C. Circuit.


“The new rules were adopted to protect retirement investors from conflicted advice and potential losses to their retirement savings,” Moss wrote. “Enjoining the rule would delay this protection. It would also interfere with the implementation of three regulations that were lawfully adopted after nearly six years of study, public comment, and consideration.”


The Trump effect


Looming on the horizon: How will Donald Trump’s Labor Department respond to the fiduciary rule? Trump on Dec. 8 said he would nominate fast-food chief executive Andrew Puzder as the Labor Department secretary. Puzder’s thinking on the fiduciary rule isn’t known, but he has widely advocated for a deregulatory labor agenda.


Barbara Roper, director of investor protection for the Consumer Federation of America, said Puzder is “an unknown quantity as far as the fiduciary rule is concerned, though his general antagonism toward regulation is of concern. We can only hope that he’ll live up to the president-elect’s pledge to make Washington work for average Americans.”


The fiduciary rule, Roper said, pits the interests of workers and retirees against financial firms that are fighting to preserve their ability to profit. “So, if that pledge was more than just empty campaign rhetoric, the rule should be safe,” she said.


The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said Monday it is “already working” with Trump administration transition officials to “undo” the Department of Labor’s fiduciary rule.


Advisers, lawyers and lobbyists said the Trump administration could move to repeal and replace the rule, or expand some of its exemptions. Trump would not be able to undo the rule with a stroke of a pen.


Industry officials, speaking at a conference in Florida on Dec. 6, predicted implementation of the rule could be delayed but not altogether derailed.


Skip Schweiss, head of advisory advocacy at TD Ameritrade Institutional, said he doubted the rule will outright die. “To undo the rule would require a new rulemaking,” he said. “While I do think a delay is likely, I don’t see a flat-out repeal. Maybe delay by a modified rule [via] a deal in Washington.”


Contact Melanie Waddell at mwaddell@alm.com and Mike Scarcella at mscarcella@alm.com.


See also:


Analyst: Brace yourself for a BIG, post-DOL rule revenue dip


3 peeks inside the Trump DOL pick’s benefit plans


Check us out on Facebook and Like us!




Originally published on National Law Journal. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.





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D.C. Circuit Court refuses to block DOL fiduciary rule

Ice busting ship preps for trip amid push to replace fleet

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Ice busting ship preps for trip amid push to replace fleet


Demand for icebreaking ships is expected to grow as climate change melts sea ice.


Audrey McAvoy, The Associated Press on December 15, 2016


Iceberg above and below water level

The only U.S. ship capable of breaking through Antarctica’s thick ice is getting scrubbed down, fixed up and loaded with goods in balmy Hawaii this week as it prepares to head to the frigid south.

The voyage by Coast Guard Cutter Polar Star comes as the U.S. looks to replace and expand its aging fleet of polar icebreakers so it can maintain a presence in the most remote corners of the world. The demand for icebreaking ships is expected to grow as climate change melts sea ice and lures more traffic to northern Arctic waters.


“The spectre in the future is more marine use in the Arctic, more shipping, more offshore development, more tourism,” said Lawson Brigham, a professor of geography and Arctic policy at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.


The Coast Guard needs to be able to enforce U.S. laws as well as search for and rescue people in the Arctic like it does in other waters, Brigham said. Though sea ice is melting faster than before, the Arctic Ocean is fully or partially covered by ice for about three-quarters of the year.


The Seattle-based ship has stopped in Pearl Harbor to stock up on food and fuel. It was scheduled to leave Monday to carve a channel through 30 miles of ice in Antarctica so ships can resupply a U.S. research centre, but it was delayed by last-minute repairs.


The Polar Star specializes in the Antarctic mission because it can handle the thicker ice, leaving the jobs in the Arctic to a medium icebreaker called the Cutter Healy.


The 40-year-old Polar Star was built to last only three decades of grinding through thick sheets of ice. It forces its way through by riding up on ice and crushing it. When it can’t break through, it backs up and rams the ice.


Brigham, a retired Coast Guard captain who commanded a heavy icebreaker in the Arctic and Antarctic in the 1990s, said policymakers have debated boosting the icebreaker fleet for decades. Climate change adds a new element to the discussion.


More cargo ships already have been taking Arctic routes as the planet warms. Last summer, a luxury cruise liner sailed to Nome, Alaska, then farther north to become the largest ship to ever traverse the Northwest Passage. Melting ice also will attract those seeking to extract oil, metals and other natural resources.



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Ice busting ship preps for trip amid push to replace fleet

Practical strategies to build a million-dollar practice



The definition of success is different for every advisor, but the steps to achieve that success are similar. (Photo: iStock)
The definition of success is different for every advisor, but the steps to achieve that success are similar. (Photo: iStock)

Building the million-dollar practice of your dreams doesn’t have to be complicated.


In fact, when you break down the financial advisory business into its core functions, it can be made much more simple, according to Shawn Sparks, vice president of advisor development for the insurance marketing organization Advisors Excel. Creating success relies on focusing on three crucial areas that are all equally important, he says.




“You have to have marketing, which is the act of bringing people in that need help,” says Sparks. “You then have the sales component, which is really converting those people to clients, or helping them in a way that they want to be a client. Then there is operations, which is everything else from administrative duties to how you manage your time and how well your business provides those clients with great service.”


Sparks likened these three components to a three-legged stool. If all the legs are in place and functioning properly, the practice will have a steady foundation on which to build success. But if one leg of the stool is weak, the whole thing will fall over.


Sparks imparts this and other advice he’s gleaned over 10 years as a business coach for financial advisors in his debut book, “The Advisor Breakthrough.” The book packages all the lessons Sparks has learned and provides a step-by-step guide designed to help any advisor build their dream business without having to reinvent the wheel.


Sparks sat down with LifeHealthPro to talk about his new book and some of the advice he has for advisors.


LifeHealthPro: What have you found is the biggest key to an advisor’s success?


Shawn Sparks: We cover that in the book from a lot of different aspects. But to be honest, not everybody’s definition of success is the same. So before you can really answer that, you’ve got to know what success means to the advisor, then build from there.


LHP: Tell me more about that.


SS: Some advisors that I’ve worked with over the years have wanted to build a large business with hundreds of employees, while others wanted to just be the “advisor in charge” with a very lean office and very little management responsibilities. One advisor may want to bring in 100s of millions a year in new assets while another advisor may just want a business that supports their lifestyle and gives them a lot of free time where they can work as they please.


You first have to know what you really want your business to look like, then mold it and shape it into that. That’s ultimately what will be most satisfying in terms of success. So many advisors see another advisor on stage with huge numbers, and they try to reinvent themselves to be more like that advisor. But it’s not a match. They build something they don’t ultimately want, and end up being less fulfilled.




Shawn Sparks


Sparks compiled advice he gathered over a decade of working with financial advisors to create a guide to success that any advisor can follow. (Photo: Shawn Sparks)


LHP: What made you want to write this book?


SS: Over the past 10 years, I’ve worked with thousands of financial advisors. In my early years, I’d work with just about anybody. As my business matured, I have been fortunate to work with many of the top financial advisors in the industry. Advisors bringing in 10s to 100s of millions a year in new assets.


After working day to day with all of these advisors over the years, I’ve been able to experience a lot of what they’ve gone through at all levels of production. I’ve seen firsthand some of the biggest issues advisors face in their business and how they can overcome them. I’ve also seen little tweaks they can make to create breakthroughs in production at the same time. 


I’ve found that while no two advisors are the same, most advisors do face similar challenges, but they are limited to learning from only a very small group of their peers. I wanted to package up all that I’ve learned over the years from a broader sample of advisors and put it into a step-by-step guide so that anybody can learn from it — from an advisor who’s new to the business to those who have been in the business for decades.


LHP: What makes this book unique?


SS: My passion over the years has been helping financial advisors succeed. I learned I would never do that if I didn’t first become a student of the game myself. So I’ve read book after book, and I’ve studied what you see online and I’ve never found a comprehensive guide that will break this complex business down into a simple easy to follow guide.  


There are a lot of books written about specific components of the financial services business, like sales, or how to give your clients a great experience. But I haven’t found one that broke all the components down into a simple-to-follow method.


In this book, I break it down from the way top producers think, their mindset, which is honestly one of the biggest differentiators in the most elite. We discuss marketing in detail, selling as well, and how to structure an office. We also share how to build a great team so you can ultimately scale your business and create freedom at the same time.


We also explain how to create an incredible client experience. This is crucial. Bringing clients on is one thing, but keeping them is another. Creating a great client experience will increase the lifetime value of the clients to your business as well as lead to a lot more of the most profitable business there is — referrals. I really took all the lessons I’ve learned over the years, from all aspects of the business, and packaged them into one book.  




There are three equally important keys to success for advisors: marketing, sales and operations. (Photo: iStock)There are three equally important keys to success for advisors: marketing, sales and operations. (Photo: iStock)


LHP: That’s a lot of information. How is the book broken down?


SS: There’s the psychology and how top producers think. You have to think like a top producer first. But then, really, we break the business down based on its core components of marketing, sales and operations. Some advisors are really good at one or even two of these components, but struggle with the third which is ultimately what’s holding them back.


If you are good at marketing, but not at sales, you may bring people in but not convert them to clients. You end up broke and it doesn’t matter how good the operations piece is. If you are good at sales but bad at marketing, then you sit around all day with nobody to see and wonder why your business isn’t growing. Some advisors have great operations, but if they don’t have clients, it’s meaningless. You have to be great at all three to compound your success, which is really what the book will show you how to do.


LHP: What was your favorite chapter to write and why? 


SS: It’s not a chapter, it’s a whole section. Marketing. In this business, no matter how hard you work or how much you know, none of it matters if you don’t know how to bring the right people in to see you.  It’s the key to jumpstarting, and scaling in this business. The best advisors tend to be very good at marketing.


LHP: Is there any one particular success story you encountered that helped you when writing the book?


SS: About 5 years ago I was working with a top producer. He was a young guy and he was just knocking it out of the park. Most people who heard about the numbers he was putting up honestly thought it wasn’t even real.


I had the pleasure of working with him, and still do. The thing I was most impressed with about him at the time was his ability to get retirees to work with and trust him while he was literally half their age. It kind of went against everything I was told as a young guy myself.


I asked him what his secret was and how he was doing it. He handed me a piece of paper with six bullet points written on it and said, “Here’s my sales process. I have found that when I complete each of these six steps, I tend to bring the client on. When I take shortcuts, or get in a hurry and don’t follow them, I don’t.”  


He then allowed me to share them with my other advisors over the years and I have them outlined in this book, in detail. Over the years, in observing the best practices of top producers, I have found the majority of them do follow each of these steps in one way or another.


Sparks is offering his book at a discounted price for a limited time.


See also:


How the military creates successful financial advisors


How to succeed as a multigenerational advisor


Anatomy of a Successful Advisor


We’re on Facebook, are you?





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Practical strategies to build a million-dollar practice

Brokers vs. Underwriters

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Brokers vs. Underwriters


For years, there’s been an unspoken uneasiness in the relationship between some brokers and underwriters. But both parties are learning to rely on each other to win…


Sarah Cunningham-Scharf on December 14, 2016


superheroes-boys

Before Matt Croswell was a partner and broker with Jones Deslauriers in Mississauga, Ont., he was an underwriter. Sitting on both sides of the table has given him insight into the benefits and burdens of the relationship between the two parties.


“It’s not competitive, but in some cases, it can be tense and contentious, because our first responsibility is to our customer. And sometimes we, as brokers, don’t see eye to eye with a wording’s intent or perhaps a rate increase that an underwriter might give. The underwriters themselves might feel we have to navigate that and figure out a way that we can strike a balance so we can achieve everyone’s goals,” he says.


Some brokers might feel as though underwriters are an obstacle to providing clients with the policy that best fits their needs, but that’s not always the case; underwriters face pressures that brokers don’t necessarily see. Croswell has learned of those challenges firsthand. “It’s given me a broader understanding of the internal challenges that underwriters can face – management approvals, head office underwriting philosophies. They don’t go out to the customer’s location and see what’s going on, so we’ve got to give them what they need in order to make their arguments. We are the eyes and ears of the underwriter.”


An Equal Reliance


Nancy Brady, vice-president of professional liability at Creechurch Underwriters, says they view brokers as their clients. “Brokers ultimately provide us with access to the insured. We rely on our broker partners to understand the needs of their clients and to relay that information in an open and honest manner so that we can provide the best coverage. Brokers are valuable in balancing our needs with the needs of the client.”


But brokers rely equally as much on underwriters, Brady says. “We are valuable to brokers in providing a risk overview, required coverage and assistance with any loss prevention and risk management needs. We also help our brokers navigate the claims process, ensuring matters are being dealt with in the quick and efficient manner required to give the insured peace of mind.”


Croswell says he frequently relies on underwriters to provide superior customer service. “We depend on them as partners in creating the most competitive and comprehensive insurance package for our customers. Sometimes we’ll need them to compete on risks that don’t fit their appetite. Some underwriters are willing to go to their management and make a case to write a risk that wouldn’t otherwise fit their appetite.”


The Trust Strategy


That’s why forming trusting relationships with underwriters is a good idea for brokers, and is a strategy Croswell employs daily. “Connecting on a personal level always helps, so getting out socially, getting out of the office, not talking about business and just forming that personal bond with people. In this business your word is your bond, and after enough kept words and solid handshakes and a willingness to work together, you tend to form very fruitful relationships out of that.”


Brady agrees that mutual respect is vital in every broker-underwriter relationship. “It’s important to put yourself in the other’s shoes. Brokers require quick and correct answers, as insureds most often leave insurance matters to the last minute. Underwriters need detailed and specific information in order to make sound underwriting decisions. Having mutual respect and open, honest communication goes a long way to providing each other and our mutual clients with the best service possible.”


Creating that exchange of trust should be a focus for brokers, since, after all, forming strong relationships is the basis of the broker profession. “Our customers depend on us having relationships out there so we have people who are favourable to negotiate with us,” Croswell says. “At the very basic level, our clients depend on us to be intermediaries between them and the underwriters; that’s the basis of what we do.”


__________________________________________________________________________
Copyright © 2016 Transcontinental Media G.P. This article first appeared in the December 2016 edition of Canadian Insurance Top Broker magazine



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Health Insurance Buyer's Guide

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Shopping for health insurance can leave many people confused. Knowing which insurance company to choose or which insurance plan is the best may seem …


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Health Insurance Buyer's Guide

Driving high, legally

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Driving high, legally


Michael McKiernan on December 14, 2016


Marijuana_hand_plant

More than a year on from the election of Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government, the smoke has yet to clear on his promise to legalize and regulate the sale of marijuana.


And the view is just as hazy for the country’s drivers as they try to figure out what effect legalization will have on their auto insurance rates. But they could be forgiven for fearing the worst, considering the prevailing upward trend in auto insurance rates across Canada.


The government-run Insurance Corporation of British Columbia applied for a fifth consecutive annual rise in rates this August, although the 4.9 per cent boost it requested would equal the smallest individual hike since 2011. In Ontario, home to some of the highest average premiums in the country, a two-year effort to reduce rates by 15 per cent from 2013 levels fell well short despite significant cuts to accident benefits coverage. By the August 2015 deadline, rates were down by around seven per cent from 2013, but approved rates have since edged up in each of the second and third quarters of 2016.


Brody Stonehouse, general manager of AC&D Insurance, a brokerage in North Vancouver, has developed a niche in obtaining equipment and premises liability insurance for legally licensed growers in the marijuana business, as well as dispensaries, who operate in a much greyer legal environment. He says they often face steep prices, but puts that mainly down to a lack of competition and the tenuous legality of some operations.


Many of his clients prefer to take their chances and turn down expensive policies, according to Stonehouse, but he’s confident that drivers, who have no choice in the matter, will fare better. Stonehouse remains skeptical that legalized marijuana will have much impact on the auto insurance market, particularly in urban areas such as Toronto and Vancouver where it is readily available, despite criminal laws surrounding its use and sale.


“I don’t think we’re going to see a huge jump in people using the drug, or driving around intoxicated by it. Anyone who wants to can already do that,” he says.


Until the federal government gets its legal marijuana regime up and running, and accident data begins coming in, Julia Marshall, the president of the Insurance Brokers Association of Alberta, says drivers should be insulated from premium hikes as a direct result of the policy.


“I don’t see any justification for raising rates just in case more people are going to start driving while impaired by marijuana,” she says.


We want to make sure people know that [marijuana] can affect your driving, and…can put your own life and other road users’ lives in danger.



Awareness is Everything


However, the omens don’t look good beyond that to John Bordignon, a spokesperson for State Farm Canada. A survey by his firm found more than 10 per cent of respondents had driven while under the influence of marijuana, and that 44 per cent of those people believed it would have no effect on their driving ability.


With availability of the drug set to increase, Bordignon says State Farm wants to raise awareness about the dangers of impaired driving and encourage people to take road safety more seriously.


“We want to make sure people know that this is a drug that can affect your driving, and that how you act can put your own life and other road users’ lives in danger,” he says.


Tim Brown, a researcher with the National Advanced Driving Simulator in Iowa, says complacency about driving under the influence of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active ingredient in marijuana, may have its roots in users’ awareness of their own intoxication while smoking up.


A study by his team showed that while drivers who consumed alcohol were more likely to speed, participants who smoked joints tended to travel at a speed well below the limit. However, Brown says that doesn’t make them safe drivers, comparing a stoned driver trundling along the road to a texting driver who slows to a crawl to compensate for their distraction.


The study concluded that drivers who consumed both alcohol and cannabis performed poorer than those who took either substance alone, but Brown says there are few clear answers on marijuana’s impact on driving ability at this stage.


“We don’t have a solid idea of all the impacts. I’d like to say it’s not a concern, but any time a substance crosses the blood-brain barrier, that gives us pause,” he says.


Brown says his task is made even more difficult by the way THC breaks down in the body. The drug absorbs very quickly, he explains, but metabolites left behind linger for hours after, meaning there is no real correlation between the level detected and the actual level of impairment on the driver at the time of testing.


63%
The amount of Canadians who fear roads and highways will be more dangerous once marijuana is legalized.

Source: Canadian Automobile Association poll, November.


26%
The amount of Canadians, aged 18 – 34, who believe a driver is the same or better on the road under the influence of marijuana.


Source: Canadian Automobile Association poll, November.



“With alcohol, the level in the breath is a pretty effective way of measuring how much the person has taken in and how impaired they are,” Brown says. “For THC, the same is not true. There is no good way to measure the amount in your brain, or the effect it has.”


Jeff Brubacher, an emergency room doctor in Vancouver, has done his own research on Canadian data about the role of cannabis in auto accidents. Blood tests carried out on injured victims at seven trauma centres around B.C. found 7.3 per cent had levels of THC that indicated recent use of the drug. By comparison, alcohol was detected in 17.8 per cent of victims.


Brubacher wants to continue collecting data after legalization. But when it comes to assessing its effect on the total number of car accidents, he says, the bottom line is “we don’t really know what is going to happen.


“A lot will depend on how legalization is rolled out, and how the police enforce it,” Brubacher adds.


Learning From Other Countries


Luckily for Canada, considering the multitude of unknowns surrounding the effect of legal marijuana on auto accidents and insurance levels, the U.S. states of Washington and Colorado volunteered as effective guinea pigs back in 2012 by voting to legalize the drug.


Last year, a report by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety caused a stir by showing that the number of fatal crashes involving drivers with marijuana in their system doubled between 2013, when around eight per cent of drivers in fatal crashes had used the drug, and 2014, when the number jumped to around 17 per cent. However, the level of impairment by marijuana could not be measured, and many drivers had also used alcohol and other drugs in combination.


In Colorado, Carole Walker, the executive director of the Rocky Mountain Insurance Information Association, says 2016 was a banner year for auto insurance premium rises, with rates going up on average by about 15 per cent.


Although the state recorded its deadliest year on the road in almost a decade in 2015, Walker says a local population spike was likely the biggest factor there, thanks to an influx of new drivers. Insurance claims costs have also hit all-time highs, but she says hail damage and legal quirks have significantly impacted that realm, citing legal marijuana as just one among a series of factors that have created a “perfect storm” for car insurances rates.


…legal marijuana [is] just one among a series of factors that have created a “perfect storm” for car insurance rates.”



“We can’t draw a direct line to marijuana, but we are concerned that it could be a contributing factor,” Walker says.


Difficult To Prove


At the Insurance Bureau of Canada, spokesperson Andrew McGrath says they have similar problems isolating the causes of high insurance rates. Fraud, accident rates, repair costs and injury claims, among others, all play their part.


“It’s impossible to tell if one factor is going to move the needle,” McGrath says.


On an individual basis, McGrath and others say alcohol will likely provide a template for insurers’ treatment of marijuana use, meaning drivers who land a conviction for drug-impaired driving will find their premium going through the roof.


Getting those convictions could prove problematic though. State Farm’s survey found a majority of respondents doubtful about the legal system’s ability to handle drug-impairment charges. While detection methods are in the works for THC, including breathalysers and saliva tests, Toronto criminal lawyer Stacey Nichols says it’s still “much easier to poke holes in the prosecution case” for drug-impaired driving charges than drink-impaired charges backed up by the longstanding and reliable testing system for alcohol.


Other than DUIs, Marshall can’t see questions about marijuana use going into underwriting calculations though.


“We don’t ask if people use alcohol, so I can’t see people being asked about marijuana. But then anything is possible,” she says. “We’ll just have to wait and see.”


__________________________________________________________________________
Copyright © 2016 Transcontinental Media G.P. This article first appeared in the December 2016 edition of Canadian Insurance Top Broker magazine



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Driving high, legally

Wednesday, 14 December 2016

Unoccupied Property - Types of Locks

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Unoccupied Property - Types of Locks

2017 Front, Centre & on the Spot…

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2017 Front, Centre & on the Spot…


Once again, we reached out to top execs of major insurers to find out what they’ve got planned for next year.


Gloria Cilliers on December 14, 2016


microphones

Innovative solutions in both the customer and broker experience will be top of mind for many insurers in 2017. While most carriers will continue to broaden their product and service offerings, quite a number of insurers are setting their sights on expanding into new growth markets.


In addition, brokers will garner even more attention, as some insurers will be growing their broker channels, and investing in broker relationships will be a key priority for most…


Economical


They invested greatly in a multi-distribution strategy, including the launch of their direct channel, Sonnet, however, Economical also has “significant growth plans” over the next few years for its broker channel, which represents 60% of its business, says Tom Reikman, senior vice-president and COO.


For example, it’s investing $125 million in customizing GuideWire, a new policy administration system geared towards making the company’s legacy systems more customer-focused, and enabling its more than 900 brokers across the country to be more efficient in processing transactions.


Economical’s also targeting bigger fish next year. “We’ll be partnering with our brokers to expand our commercial lines offerings and capabilities,” Reikman says.


Advancing pricing sophistication and improving ease of business in personal lines are also top priorities.


New CEO Rowan Saunders says he is excited by the bold growth strategies at Economical. “Following successful demutualization, we will introduce the market to a strong, independent Canadian insurer.”


Brokers will continue to be at the heart of Economical’s success, Saunders emphasizes. “Traditional models of business will continue to shift, resulting in new ways of working together,” he says. But the insurer will continue to “aggressively support our broker partners with their sales and service efforts,” Saunders says.


Zurich


Zurich is setting its sights on the service sector in 2017, says Patrick Lundy, president and CEO of Zurich Canada. “While we’ll continue to enhance customer service in construction, manufacturing, technology and commercial real estate, where we have a longstanding footprint, we’ll start to write retail, high-end restaurants and other professional services. There are great opportunities in this space across Canada, and we’ve developed a clear go-to-market strategy for obtaining this business.”


In addition, next year will see continued focus on innovation and technology, with Zurich’s underwriting staff benefiting from a significant investment in a single web-based user interface that streamlines efficiency in the underwriting process, leveraging Salesforce technology that will enable Zurich to better understand customer needs.


“There’ll be a big emphasis on writing good quality, profitable new business with the help of technology, and a renewed focus on our middle-market-sized business, where we’ve re-focused our appetite. Given this, we’re excited to announce we’ll be lowering our minimum premium threshold for SMEs in order to expand future opportunities.”


Another focus will be innovative solutions in cyber liability, tailored to Zurich’s SME customers. Educating its brokers across 500 distributor locations in Canada on their role in cyber exposure awareness will be key, says Lundy.


RSA


For new president and CEO Martin Thompson, 2017 will be a year in which RSA remains focused on broker channel growth and creating valued broker experiences. “We’ll do this by being easier to deal with, more responsive and consistent,” he says. “In the past, brokers may also have felt that we have only been competitive for a small segment of personal lines business. But, we aim to restore broker confidence by undergoing a massive transformation of pricing for a broader range of customers.”


According to Thompson, RSA’s broker channel, which represents about 65% of its business, will be fundamental to its future success. That’s why RSA will be actively seeking to appoint new brokers – a testament, Thompson says, to RSA’s investment in the broker channel. “Over the next three years, we are looking to expand our broker footprint, while still maintaining our niche broker distribution strategy.”


Thompson sees a “bright independent future” ahead for RSA. “Our financial position is strong again and the noise around RSA as a takeover target has disappeared.” The insurer is ready to start winning again on all fronts, he adds.


Allianz


Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty is on an ambitious journey of growth, aiming to become a $500 million organization in the next four years. To help them do this, says Ulrich Kadow, chief agent for Canada, the company will focus on four key areas in 2017.


“Firstly, we want to maintain our market leader position in aviation, construction and international insurance solutions, as well as build out our capabilities in other selected industry segments. In addition, we want to develop new growth markets, such as cyber. We started writing cyber about a year ago and are investing significantly into developing products and hiring people. We’ll need to have our finger close on the pulse of the market and adjust our products as the market quickly develops.”


Allianz is also delving deeper into certain segments in manufacturing, programs and agricultural growth, he adds. The second focus area is growing Allianz’s broker distribution presence in Vancouver and Montreal. “We are a broker market and I don’t foresee that changing. We want to deepen our relationships and alignment with our main broker partners.” Thirdly, Allianz will invest in “becoming an employer of choice,” while the fourth goal is to optimize performance to return profit to its shareholders.


Aviva


A multi-disciplinary approach to access customers is Aviva’s top priority for next year, says Greg Somerville, president and CEO. And that includes digitizing its broker channel. “An accessible, digitized, innovative broker solution can be equally as attractive to the customer as the alternatives,” Somerville says. Aviva will help its brokers on their digital journey through a digital consultancy group that assists with assessments of digital capabilities, supporting technology and propositions to attract and retain customers.


Over the next three years, the majority of Aviva’s growth will continue to come from its broker channel, Somerville says, so the insurer “will continue supporting brokers who are willing to make the required investments to stay relevant and deliver value to their customers.” “The broker value proposition of advice, advocacy and choice is a strong one, and we want to enable our brokers to deliver this in a way that respects the preference of the customer.”


“Innovation” is synonymous with Aviva’s future plans, Somerville adds. The insurer will continue creating innovative solutions in response to the emerging needs of consumers, but with a focus on “moving from protection to prevention.” One example will be premiums levels that recognize the “reduced risk associated with cars that have collision avoidance technology,” Somerville explains. Aviva will also take an active interest in the FSCO Mandate Review discussions.


The Guarantee


While he remains coy about the details, The Guarantee’s CEO Alister Campbell says 2017 will be another year of innovation for the insurer. “I’m confident that there will be true innovation in each of the categories we specialize in, including trade credit insurance, transportation, fidelity and D&O,” he says. “I don’t want to let the cat out of the bag, but one example will be expanding our trade credit insurance product. Trade credit is an under-appreciated opportunity in the Canadian market. Many brokers have clients who are buying it directly from the government, but would buy it through their broker if they knew their broker offered it. Ours is an innovative, proactive solution offering the broker the opportunity to grow new business from existing clients.”


The Guarantee will also launch its overland flood product in January, Campbell adds. “We’ve spent time getting broker feedback and monitoring the market before launch.” GUARANTEE GOLD will offer broadened coverage for increased value to differentiate it from competitive products.


Innovations like their water shut-off valve, offered to its highest value homeowner clients under the Gold Watermark Program, has set a new benchmark for The Guarantee that will continue to drive its innovation agenda as a specialist market leader, Campbell adds.


The Co-operators


Client engagement, competitiveness and wealth management will be the top priorities next year, says incoming president and CEO Rob Wesseling.


“We’ll be developing and expanding our advisor network, contact center, self-service and mobile capabilities to enable better client engagement and interaction. It’s a critical requirement that consumers are able to interact with insurers in the way they choose, and mobile is, increasingly, becoming more important,” Wesseling says. “Every product or service being consumed is increasingly being facilitated through mobile, and advisors and brokers should be paying attention to the opportunities around these changing consumer preferences. The industry will need to catch up in this space.”


Next year, the insurer is also rolling out its flood product, Comprehensive Water, to the rest of the country after having launched it in Alberta and Ontario. The plan offers coverage to 100 percent of its homeowner clients, Wesseling says. “In Alberta we’ve had a take-up rate of more than 90 percent. Flooding remains a critical, growing issue for Canadians, and we’re not close to getting this right from a societal basis. But our hope is that, by putting a price on the risk, even in extreme risk areas, we’ll move the conversation along significantly,” he says.


Northbridge


Continuing to create truly innovative experiences for brokers and customers will be Northbridge’s key priority next year, says Silvy Wright, president and CEO. “Great customer service remains a key differentiator,” she adds.


The insurer is investing significantly in an innovative claims experience that is already being piloted with great success. The unique mobile app will see a seamless and transparent customer experience, and reduce turnaround times in claims settlement. In its pilot phase on small auto claims, 73 percent of claims processed through the app were closed within one business day. Wright wants to bring more innovations to market like the insurer’s eDelivery, which enables broker partners to send policy documents to customers electronically; and the epostTM solution, which gives personal customers real-time access to policy documents online.


Industry specialization is another key priority in 2017, Wright adds. “The winning solution to our long-term success will be the customer seeing both Northbridge and the broker as an expert in their particular industry,” Wright explains.


The insurer works with a limited number of brokers, which allows it to invest in strengthening broker expertise in the industries they cover. “We’re focused on building the right expertise in Canada’s largest industries, including construction and transport.”


Chubb


2016 marked one of the biggest years in Chubb Canada’s history when it was formally acquired by ACE Limited, creating the new P&C company Chubb Insurance Company of Canada. The new Chubb offers significant opportunities for brokers, says Ellen Moore, president and CEO of Chubb Canada. “2017 will be an exciting time to be part of Chubb, as we bring wider distribution of more products to the market,” she says. “Whereas ACE worked with just a handful of brokers in Canada, the new Chubb does business with over 500 brokers across the country in four branches, offering at the local level greater commercial products and cross-selling opportunities in both commercial and personal lines.”


Brokers are viewing the merger positively “as an industry game changer,” Moore says. The four integrated segments Chubb now specializes in have begun to gain momentum and will guide how the company performs in 2017, Moore adds. These are two commercial lines segments (large and middle-market), and two personal lines segments (private risk and A&H).


“With the majority of the integration behind us, in 2017 we can continue to execute the growth strategy Chubb brings to the Canadian marketplace with more products and enhanced relationships with our broker partners.”


Travelers


Investing in its people and brokers will be top priorities for Travelers Canada in 2017, says newly appointed president and CEO Heather Masterson.


Masterson categorizes the insurer’s 2017 plans into three key priorities: financial and operational excellence, employee engagement, and broker relationships and customer-centricity.


“We’re deploying an employee engagement strategy to increase recruitment and retention success, as well as service and productivity.”


Brokers can expect even better attention going forward. “We’ve revisited our broker compensation model and introduced a new compensation agreement to market for our brokers, effective January 2017, which has been well received.”


Travelers will be rolling out TRAVELERS OPTIMATM to Atlantic Canada in late 2017, while enhancing its E-CLIPSTM portal. It’s also looking into technological innovation for its main platforms, which can provide its brokers with an opportunity, Masterson says, as an answer to the “digital relevance” strategy for brokers.


One such innovation is their Digital Marketing Tool, launched recently to a pilot group, which gives brokers access to their digital content library, including educational sales materials.


“Emerging technologies are creating an exciting time for the industry. We are committed to understanding the potential impacts, so we can be strategically positioned to help brokers best serve customers in the future.”


__________________________________________________________________________
Copyright © 2016 Transcontinental Media G.P. This article first appeared in the December 2016 edition of Canadian Insurance Top Broker magazine



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2017 Front, Centre & on the Spot…

Front-loading F&I cuts transaction time

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eLend CEO Pete MacInnis: “There are so many bottlenecks in the process today.”




Transaction time in dealerships is improving, but lengthy buying processes are still a pain point for stores, a survey by eLend Solutions shows. To speed deals and gain efficiency, the company says, dealerships should move F&I to the front of the sales process.


In an October survey of 100 dealerships, 36 percent said they wanted transactions to be completed in less than an hour on average, but only 11 percent of them achieved that goal. The majority of respondents, 79 percent, said completing transactions in less than two hours was the goal, and 42 percent of them achieved it.


That means more than half of the dealerships surveyed have transactions that last longer than two hours. A quarter of them have a start-to-finish time of more than three hours, but that’s a significant improvement from a year ago. In 2015, 43 percent of those surveyed had transactions lasting longer than three hours on average.


The transition time between sales and F&I and the disconnection between online shopping and in-store purchasing are two drivers of the slow transaction process, eLend CEO Pete MacInnis says.


“There are so many bottlenecks in the process today,” he said. Most customers shop for a vehicle online before going to a dealership, but “when the consumer gets to the store, they start all over again. The disconnect is that the consumers want to do more of the transaction online, but the dealer is still looking at [online shopping] as primarily a lead generation.”


Consumers want to negotiate, evaluate trade-ins and learn about financing online. In many cases, they can, but the dealership needs to have that information right when the customer enters the store, MacInnis said.


“If that happens, that’s going to create that connected car-buying experience for the consumer and efficiency at the dealer level,” he said.


Eliminating silos


Another frequent slowdown to the transaction process is the transition from sales to F&I. “There is so much redundancy that it is very frustrating to the consumer,” MacInnis said.


“Sales and finance need to start together at the front of the shopping process, whether it’s online or in the dealership, which would eliminate that silo process,” he said.


Dealers can improve both issues with pre-qualifications, MacInnis said. eLend’s ID Drive product scans the customer’s driver’s license before the test drive and extracts information from it. “Before they are back from a test drive, the salesman can have a deal ready,” MacInnis said.


In a case study of Huntington Beach Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep-Ram in Huntington Beach, Calif., more than half of customers chose to pre-qualify before the test drive. Those customers were 43 percent more likely to buy than customers without pre-qualification during the test drive, MacInnis said.


Most of them were very creditworthy; the average credit score was 702, he said. “The credit-qualified people bought into that [pre-qualification] would improve transparency and speed the process.”


Front-end F&I


The dealership survey respondents also said that the time it takes to complete the F&I process is a major obstacle to customer satisfaction.


But if stores introduce the finance process at the beginning of the transaction, they can cut the time in the F&I office by 30 minutes, MacInnis said. By pre-qualifying customers early in the buying process, F&I managers will be able to “take the guesswork out,” he said.


Typically, after the sales associate makes a deal with the customer, the F&I manager has to verify that the customer information is correct, review the credit file and make sure that the finance offer presented by the sales associate matches a lender’s actual offer. “If you move finance to the front of the sales process, you’re going to immediately eliminate 10 minutes between the [customer’s] end of negotiation with the salesperson and going into the finance office,” MacInnis said.



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Front-loading F&I cuts transaction time

A Reason to Celebrate

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A Reason to Celebrate


Trisura President and CEO Mike George values relationships over profits, we learn, as he opens up about starting an insurance company on a napkin and what catching chickens taught him about business…


Gloria Cilliers on December 14, 2016


trisura-president-mike-george

When president and CEO Mike George co-wrote the business plan for Trisura on the back of a napkin a little over 10 years ago, the dream was to become a significant player in the specialty lines insurance market.


Little did he know that, today, the company he built with partners John Garner and Bob Taylor would go on to exceed their financial and growth expectations, against the odds.


It’s a truly Canadian success tale of the David and Goliath kind, say those in the know. And Trisura just keeps on growing, at a consistent rate of 17 percent year on year, and, in the process, collecting accolades and attracting the best talent in the field.


In September, Trisura was ranked on the PROFIT500 list of Canada’s Fastest-Growing Companies for its five-year revenue growth of 136 percent. The insurer was recently also named as one of Canada’s Best Small & Medium Employers for 2017, having won this ranking for 2016 as well.


“It started with a dream and a napkin”


Insurance startups in Canada are rare. Starting one completely from scratch with the support of Canadians and run by Canadians? Virtually unheard of.


But that only made the challenge more appealing, says George from a boardroom at Trisura’s headquarters in downtown Toronto. He’s collected, confident and unconventionally candid. “But that’s Mike,” you’ll often hear his colleagues fondly say. “He’s dynamic and brilliant, and so down to earth…”


On the back of that napkin 10 years ago, Mike, John and Bob (who’d worked together for a long time) mapped out the ambitious Trisura plan: within five years, with 50 employees, achieve $50 million in top line revenue and $5 million in underwriting profit.


$1,520
first policy in 2006
$200M
2020 revenue goal
Winners
Canada’s Best Small & Medium Employers 2016 – 2017


Before long, they had the financial backing of Brookfield Asset Management, a global alternative asset manager with over $225 billion in assets under management, and the support of three multinational reinsurers.


At their first meeting with the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI), Trisura’s tagline was born: “One of the OSFI representatives said our presentation was ‘a step above a step above’. I’m not kidding!” George says, amused.


It’s the same motto with which the three founders wanted the company to operate from day one, and the same manner in which the company does business today, he explains.


By March 2006, Trisura recorded its first revenue: an Ontario policy with a premium of $1520.


This year, Trisura will write close to $125 million in revenue, equally split between its surety, specialty insurance and warranty products, with 105 employees and a distribution network of over 150 brokerages in six cities across Canada.


That’s a long way from inhabiting borrowed office space and begging for office furniture 10 years ago. And double the napkin numbers since.


“And we’ve grown it all organically. Less than 2 percent of our business growth has been through acquisitions,” George says.


Personally witnessing (through the sale of London Guarantee in 2002, of which he was senior vice-president) “how an acquisition by a multinational company can change the culture of a business” was the spark to starting Trisura.


“Not all large international companies understand the uniqueness of doing business in Canada. And I wanted to get back what we had lost.”


When you start a company, you have the advantage of hand-picking staff. At Trisura, we have a ‘No Jerks Allowed’ policy



Bringing some of his old team back together was the foundation of the unique Trisura culture, he adds.


His wife of the past 27 years, Pat Hoddy, who, at the time had left her job as a high school teacher to raise their three sons, Spencer (23), Trevor (21) and Tyler (20), did not hesitate for a second when he told her of his dream, says Mike. “She said: ‘Go for it!’”.


“No Jerks Allowed”


Trisura was founded on relationships, George says.


“When you start a company, you have the advantage of hand-picking staff. At Trisura, we have a ‘No Jerks Allowed’ policy,” he smiles. “No. Seriously. I want only solid, standup people on our team. And when people love working together, everything else becomes easy. Growth just happens and profitability follows suit.”


Not that the insurer hasn’t seen its fair share of challenges.


“The 2008/2009 financial crisis impacted our investment portfolio hard and we had another bad loss early on, when an Ontario contractor disappeared, leaving us to foot the bill on a significant claim. But it’s how you cope with the situation that matters.”


At Trisura, they rally around challenges like a SWAT team to find a solution together.


It’s a tactic he’s learnt from several influential people in his life, George says. Taylor is one of them, as is George Petropoulos, to whom George owes his first big break in the insurance industry. And then there’s his dad, Peter, a retired McMaster University president, who instilled in him a strong work ethic.


“My parents gave me a really good education and moral values, but if I wanted something, I had to work for it.”


“What my mom taught me about giving back”


George’s late mother, Gwen, was a massive influence in his life. “She taught me to be a decent human being,” he says, getting emotional. As a young child, George sometimes accompanied Gwen, a nurse, as she tended to sick children while volunteering for the Red Cross in Tanzania. It’s no surprise then, that today George is an active supporter of Covenant House Toronto and chairs their Executive Sleep Out event. And he regularly volunteers for and serves on the board of Ontario’s Children’s Wish Foundation.


And it’s no wonder that, of all Trisura’s core values, giving back resonates with him the most.


His mom’s also the one who encouraged his financial career.


“After completing a B.Sc and not knowing what to do next, my mom told me I’m a born salesman. I then ended up falling into insurance through playing hockey,” he laughs, explaining how, after meeting Petropoulos in a hockey league change room, he got offered his first surety financial analyst job in 1988.


His mother was right.


“I fell in love with the insurance industry right away,” George recalls. “More particularly, with building relationships with clients and brokers.”


Trisura’s brokers are its bread and butter, George says, and that won’t change. While there’s growing concerns around broker relevancy, especially in personal lines, George says there’ll always be clients who need brokers. “But I do see the broker role changing to more of a professional specialist service, rather than just selling product.”


Ten years from now, the mediocre, generalist brokers will be in a tough spot while the cream will have risen to the top.


He has so much faith in the broker that he’s encouraged his sons to follow in his footsteps. George’s oldest is now a broker at AON, while the younger two are studying business.


“These days, our industry is attracting the brightest and best; it’s no longer a last-resort career. I’ve always told my sons insurance is a fascinating and challenging business that you can do very well in, if you’re good at it.”


And being good at it means adapting and innovating, like launching Trisura’s online portal, which has enabled brokers to write $14 million from over 20 000 online transactions this year.


Apart from being described as an all-out nice guy, George has been heralded as an innovator who thinks outside the box in an industry desperately striving to stay on top of technological advancements.


But he insists he alone can’t take the credit. He recognizes team achievements, and sometimes even rewards mistakes with the office “Blunder Award,” all in the name of learning and moving on.


“What catching chickens taught me about business”


He’s learnt a great deal through working hard from an early age, George says. “I delivered newspapers at 10, worked on a vineyard, swept steel mill floors and cut lawns all through high school.” But it’s catching chickens at 16 that taught him one of the most important lessons in his career, he says. “I grew up in Dundas Ont., a community surrounded by farming. Catching chickens for harvesting was very lucrative and I caught 3,000 to 4,000 a night!”


But he worked with a group of other kids and they divvied up the pot at the end of each shift. “It really taught me the value of teamwork. Of showing up and doing your fair share.” That’s why Trisura’s future success depends on his entire team, George says. The “napkin with the 2020 plan” expects the company to reach over $200 million in revenue, with around 150 staff. And there’s no doubt in his mind they’ll achieve it.


A Step Above


He’s that confident because he knows Trisura will “strive to remain a step above the rest.” “We put our brokers first so they can put their clients first,” George says.


That’s why he welcomes change.


“Relationships get diminished in this move towards going direct,” he says. “So I say: Let other insurers go direct. In the end, people still want relationships. And the insurance industry is big enough for us to carry on evolving where relationships still rule the day.”


__________________________________________________________________________
Copyright © 2016 Transcontinental Media G.P. This article first appeared in the December 2016 edition of Canadian Insurance Top Broker magazine



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A Reason to Celebrate

The best marketing ideas for now : Part 2

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The more you know about people with whom you're networking the better you'll be at talking about your business in a way that matters to them. (Photo: Thinkstock)
The more you know about people with whom you’re networking the better you’ll be at talking about your business in a way that matters to them. (Photo: Thinkstock)

Everyone tells advisors to “network.” It’s a challenging concept if you don’t think you’re a good networker. In reality, networking isn’t any more than having conversations with people at an organized event. That event can be social or professional. But no matter where you are, having good networking skills is important.


I have had two mentors to help me with my own networking skills: Andrea Nierenberg and Michael Goldberg, who are both my friends and colleagues. I have learned A LOT about what “networking” really is from them.




Related: How to create a practice with little (or no) natural market


Last summer my husband and I left New York and moved to Tennessee. It surprised many of my professional friends since I have always seemed to be a “typical, quintessential New Yorker.” But, like my husband, I always wished to have been a country child and we made our wish come true when we moved to a 50-acre horse farm outside of Nashville.  


After a year of taking time to settle in, I realized I wanted to “network” in my new community. Williamson County has an incredible Chamber of Commerce, which goes by the name Williamson, Inc.


There are many scheduled events every month and for my first outing, I chose a “leads exchange” meeting. It is not an “open” networking opportunity, but rather a structured event with strict rules.


Everyone can share their brochures and business cards with all attendees by just placing them in the middle of the lunch tables — or not. But you had to present yourself and your company, in one minute, during the formal introductions after lunch.


You can imagine how important it was to be precise when you have exactly one minute (yes, it’s timed) to discuss your work. And you aim to make a good impression. We were all given a list of the attendees, with space next to their names to write notes. That was very helpful. I was able to write key take-aways from the members whose businesses interested me.


In the weeks following, I have found help with my website videos and health insurance — just from this one meeting. I also had two lunches: one with another consultant who wanted to “compare notes” since he’s new at being a consultant; and another with a member who is on the “engagement committee” and discussed how to best use the chamber.


Related: Building a practice the 2016 way (one person at a time)





If you’re a naturally curious person and armed with good “conversation starters” you’ll be a great networker, writes Gail Goodman. (Photo: iStock) 


Going to this first leads exchange meeting was easy for me since I have been well trained by my buddies on how to engage other people in conversation. If you’re not good at getting others to talk about themselves, and don’t see networking as being about the other person, it won’t work for you. But if you’re a naturally curious person and armed with good “conversation starters” you’ll be a great networker.


Related: When calling a generation older, showcase your process


Too many people think networking is about telling others who you are, instead of first learning about them. Once you hear the other person’s story, when they say “So what do you do?” it’s easier to reframe your business in a way that relates to your listener.


The more you know about them the better you are at talking about your business in a way that matters to them. Speak in benefits, not boring descriptions of your work. The best way to start describing your work is to be able to say “You know when you said……., well in my work I …….” And make it relate to their story.


When I meet other business owners, the best thing I can say is I help them to find new customers (or prospects). I tend to be attracted to people who are in sales (it’s like an internal honing device at this point). And it makes it easy to share the value of what I do with other salespeople.


Keeping in mind the concept of conversing instead of networking will take the pressure off you to “make a sale.” Networking is not selling. It’s not about even setting up a sale. It’s about creating a new relationship. And most relationships start out with the two people getting to know each other. That’s a good start at any networking event.


Here are 6 key points:



  • Networking is a social event, not a sales event.





  • Keep your sales monster at home and enjoy meeting new people.





  • Ask about others.





  • Don’t monologue.





  • Get your contact info into their phones and vice versa.





  • Try to set phone dates with people you like.



Remember: Words Matter! 


 


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The best marketing ideas for now : Part 2