A blog for those trying to boil down the hundreds of pages of their insurance policies into straightforward, understandable english.
Monday, March 5, 2012
The Importance of an Educated Broker
The only requirements to become a licensed insurance broker in most states are to be 18 years old, not be a felon, take a one week class and pass an exam. Oh, and just to make you feel better, we all take the same exam. The licensed office assistant that put you in good hands and protected you from mayhem, the call center rep that helped you save 15%, and me the broker that you trust with your directors and officers insurance for your board of directors. Now there is a scary thought.
So what separates those qualified to click through some computer screens and quote auto insurance, a task that some companies have moved online because it is so simple, from those that write complex commercial insurance? Quite simple experience and training. But how can businesses be sure that they have a broker with the experience they need? The insurance industry uses designations. We have a few industry associations that grant subject mater and general designations based on passing specific courses and experience. The most general designations are Chartered Property Casualty Underwriter (CPCU), and Certified Insurance Councilor (CIC), Associate in Risk Management (ARM) is also popular, as so many brokers serve as risk management consultants for their clients. CPCU consists of eight exams that are all recognized as college or graduate level. ARM is all graduate level exams. I carry both of these designations. There are also more subject specific designations, such as Associate in Reinsurance, Associate in Claims, Registered Professional Lines Underwriter and a few dozen others. They all show that the person you are dealing with has made some level of additional commitment to their industry education. While there are many well qualified commercial brokers that do not carry a designation, this is one of the easiest ways for a non-insurance professional to evaluate a broker.
In short, it's perfectly fine that most of us don't have a college degree in insurance. But, it makes continuing education and industry specific post college training all the more important. Everyone deserves a broker well qualified to obtain the insurance they need. Make sure your broker is qualified to be your partner.
Monday, October 11, 2010
Broker and Insurance Policy Value
People are always talking about the commoditization of insurance and the future of independent brokers. I believe that brokers will always play a role in certain insurance. However, brokers add cost to insurance, so clients have to see value. Some do see value, some will never see value (or perhaps there isn't much) and some are in the middle and can be pushed either way.
It's always tempting to compete on price. Everyone understands money in their pocket, and it doesn't take much expertise as an agent or broker to do it. And if you compete on pure price and nothing else, the broker will eventually get squeezed out of the transaction.
Those that have moved to buy their insurance online believe that they don't need professional help to buy insurance. And, in some cases that's true. The people who buy state minimum auto insurance for their 20 year old junker car don't care about claim service or higher policy limits.
And I think for low claims frequency accounts this will always be an uphill battle. People are bad at preparing for the 100 year flood, but much better at preparing for the storms that come every year. If you have an insurance policy that you haven't had a claim on in at least five years, it feels more like protecting against something that will never happen. You're apt to keep buying it at bottom dollar, if at all.
However, the larger accounts that have a few claims every year, tend to care about more than price. They know they need a broker to help navigate the waters. Perhaps even risk management consulting. For them, the cost of the policy isn't the only cost. It's also the dollars they recover from first party claims, minimizing third party claim payments, claims reps that care, nuanced coverage that fits unique exposures, choice of council and 100 other things.
It's easy for me to sell value and knowledge to my clients that have the storms. The challenge comes to show value to the smaller clients. And that's why those clients end up with policies that don't cover everything or an agent that doesn't understand the exposures....they want bottom dollar. For these clients, until they have a claim, the policy is a commodity.
A good broker takes on clients that have a real need for his services. He adds something to the transaction in exchange for what he is paid. Those are the brokers that understand the coverage available, the difference between carriers, and have the risk management experience. There will always be room for anyone providing a service with real value.