Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - 3 Things I’ve Learned 120 Days After Rogue Risk Was Acquired by SIAA
Episode Date: August 4, 2022Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyIn this solo episode of The Ryan Hanley Show, Ryan Hanley brea...ks down three things he's learned about growing a digital, commercial insurance agency after the first 120 days of Rogue Risk being part of the SIAA ecosystem. This is an episode for the ages...Don't miss it.Episode Highlights:Ryan opens the episode by sharing his feelings lately about being creative. (2:00)Ryan explains that he looks at everything as an obstacle, and how he surrounds himself with great people. (7:14)Ryan shares that he has been happy with SIAA, and there are so many things that they are doing. (12:52)Ryan shares why they are currently getting from Hubspot from an insurance perspective. (17:43)Ryan shares that they are now in the process of transferring from Hubspot to using Nexsure. (25:58)Ryan explains that the vision and process for Rouge is on the right path. (29:34)Ryan shares that the biggest issue they always had was not having enough producers to do all the business. (35:12)Ryan shares how important it is to find a great producer, regardless of their location. (39:00)Ryan explains how to build trust with clients and validate them through that process. (44:27)Ryan discusses how clients always want to hear that you’ve got them. (52:52)Ryan shares that the last step to closing a sale is to send the video proposal. (56:17)Key Quotes:"There are amazing people out there who want to help clients who want to grow, who want to be successful, who want to make money, who want to help your agency, they're just not always going to be in your backyard. It's just that's the reality." - Ryan Hanley"The vision for Rogue, the process for Rogue, it only continues to solidify in my mind that we're absolutely on the right path. We're just seeing the results." - Ryan Hanley"Right now, growth is what's most important to Rogue. We need to grow, we want to grow, we can grow. We have everything in place, and we're starting to grow, which is great." - Ryan HanleyResources Mentioned:Reach out to Ryan Hanley--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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Food laboratory in the basement of his home.
Hello, everyone and welcome back to the show.
Today, we have a solo episode for you, something we haven't done in a long time.
I wanted to update you on what's going on with Rogue.
I wanted to make sure that I connected with you guys in general.
I feel like lately I haven't been as motivated to help to share.
Not that I don't want to or that anything has changed with my desire to help you guys do better.
You know, it's probably worth sharing this with you guys now just because I've had some people reach out to me and it's kind of some people know, some people don't.
but I'm no longer married.
And that has been a personal struggle for me
that I've been kind of going through since December.
And for a whole bunch of reasons, that has...
It hasn't really impacted my work at Rogue
because I've just kind of doubled into that work
and really put my mind to making sure that Rogue Risk
is everything that I dreamed that it could be
and that I made good on the promises that I made in my deal with SIA because obviously I want to be,
you know, you always want to make good when you say you're going to execute on something.
And that's not even really a question.
Like obviously, anything I committed to with them, my actual dreams slash personal goals for Rogue are probably 3x, 10x, who the hell knows, just bigger for the most part.
So I didn't really impacted that too much, but I haven't felt inspired as such a bad word because you get inspiration through doing work.
And maybe this is step one of doing that.
But inspired, motivated, whatever, like the creative side of me has been kind of dead lately.
I've been trying to coax it back into existence.
If you follow me on Instagram, I've been posting a lot about,
you know, just working out, have used lifting weights in particular.
Also added some yoga, some hot yoga recently, which has been awesome as like doing that twice a
week to mix in between lifting weights and then just always being active.
I hate running, so I don't run very often.
But go for walks and stuff, long walks and listen to podcasts or just think.
And I'm trying to use physical activity and rogue to, you know, take my mind off some of the
stuff that's going on in my personal life.
So, but all of it kind of coming back to the reason that I started this little contextual
diatribe, I guess, has been to say that I realize I haven't been as good with you guys.
I haven't been at, I haven't shared as much lately.
I haven't been as open.
I haven't been as willing to make phone calls with people.
I always pride of myself on taking phone calls and even if they're 15, 20 minutes,
just talking through helping someone with their problems.
I scheduled a lot of those on Fridays and stuff
and have done that for years.
I mean, geez, I've been public in the space for 10, 12 years now.
I guess 2009, so what's that 13 years?
I've been in insurance for 17 years, or 16 years, I think, 16 years.
16 years in the business.
I've been sharing online for 12 years and helping you guys
and doing speaking gigs and, frankly, haven't taken as many speaking gigs.
I don't have any.
Right now I have.
I have zero speaking gigs booked.
Some of that is I just wasn't taking any,
and some of that is I haven't been as active in the space,
creating and helping,
which is something that I absolutely love to do.
It's cathartic for me.
I also feel a sense of obligation to this industry
for everything that it's given me.
I've said that a bunch of times.
Not obligation in a negative way.
I feel like I owe in the most positive sense.
You guys, listeners, the industry, the people of our space.
everything that I have in my life has come from all the obstacles, challenges,
amazing experiences, friends, colleagues, competitors,
people who've called me at 2 o'clock in the afternoon on a Tuesday to yell at me.
Most of those were board members of the National Big Eye.
But, you know, all those battles have just turned me into the professional that I am today,
the leader I am today.
hopefully the person that I am today, someone that, you know, I just enjoy.
I enjoy who I am and I owe that so much in large part to the people of our industry, you guys.
So when I hit a spell where I don't feel creative or I feel like I'm not adding value to you guys, that impacts me too.
But, and this isn't an excuse, but just being, you know, kind of authentic and transparent with you guys as much as I can be,
You know, I just, the last few years have been really tough.
You know, getting fired, let go, whatever, from trusted choice.com, having that kind of fall apart.
I mean, I loved working there.
I loved what we were doing.
And having that kind of fall apart was tough.
Bold Penguin was never a good fit.
And then, you know, I took the job at the fitness company and thought that that was, though different and not what I expected, I thought it was going to be a good thing.
and then that came to a screeching halt
when that A-hole fired me for no reason.
Ego is a mother.
So, you know, and then starting Rogue
and then having the COVID hit
and feeling like I was never going to get it off the ground
and I just put, you know, $30,000,
my own money into this startup agency
that, you know, was kind of felt much of the time
dead on arrival.
kind of getting through that and then having everything happen between my ex-wife and I
just has been tough and some of it is I just got to shake it off and get through it some of it is
you know surrounding myself with good people which I've tried to do and some of it is just
life right like it's it's I have to look at all of it as an obstacle to be overcome to learn from
it's life this is this it's far those things are far from the worst things that could possibly happen
to me and keeping that in perspective is very important um my kids are doing amazing my relationship
with them is amazing um you know uh you know just restarting my life in a new apartment and you know
all that kind of stuff has been tough but um but so many things are good too and uh and that's
really what I want to talk about. So we're what, six or seven minutes in. I apologize for being so
negative. I just wanted you to know that I'm aware that I feel like I haven't been living up to my
end of the bargain and sharing with you. And I'm going to try to be better about that because
I love delivering value to you guys. And in return, I do get a lot out of it, right? I get
I get a lot of joy out of helping other people
and helping seeing that light bulb come off
or come off, go on over someone's head,
especially when I am doing speaking gigs
and I'm out in the world.
And you say something and you see somebody
sitting at a table or in a chair,
kind of their eyes change
because like, whack, something hit them.
Or you get a message from somebody
on one of the socials or email or whatever
that they listen to the show
and one episode just caught them
and it turned a switch for them.
Man, guys, that stuff is, it turns me on so much.
It's what I live for, right?
I don't know how to be, you know, to a fault probably in many ways.
I don't know how to be selfish.
I don't get very much joy from my own wins.
I just don't.
I get joy from helping other people have wins
and watching them grow and evolve.
And it's always been the case.
It's why I'm not a great negotiator in my own contracts and stuff like that.
And I think, you know, I just don't care about my own success as much as I care about the people around me.
And that's been something that I've really seen at Rogue.
I love my team and I want them all to be so incredibly successful.
And I tell them every day, you know, like, I am in my job as the president of Rogue Risk is to
be in service of you guys. That's my job. What do you need to be successful? How do we get you there?
What do we need to do? You need training. You need a tool. You need time. You need freedom.
We need to have a tough conversation with another teammate. Do we need to have a tough conversation with a
carrier? Or do we need to, you know, where do we need to be? Do you and I need to have a tough
conversation to get through something? We need talk through something, right? Like my job is to be in
service of other people. That's very much become clear to me why I was put on this earth is to be of
service to other people and help them go as far as they can go. And in turn, I get to have a great life.
And I just felt very much like I wasn't holding up at my end of the bargain to you guys,
the listeners of this show, who I just, you know, maybe you don't always realize it, but I absolutely
love you guys. And the fact that you spend 30, 45, 60 minutes and something,
some cases with me or my guest or whatever, you could spend that time with anybody and you spend
it with me and that is never lost on me. I want you to know that. So with that, we'll stop all
this mushy stuff. I love you guys, but let's talk some stuff. So I just said I'm going to add
some value. I'm not going to spend the entire episode blabering the obstacles that I face in my life.
Let's talk about how some of the things that I've learned in the first 120 days,
the first 120 days of Rogue being part of the SIA ecosystem.
And that's how I'm going to refer to it because we're not a master agency
and we're not an agency underneath a master agency.
We're a new vertical inside of the SIA ecosystem.
They're essentially holding company ecosystem.
There's master agencies.
there's member agencies, there's some owned agencies,
it's all different stuff that SIA is doing.
And it's really exciting and fun.
And a lot of it is just, you know,
they're starting to push boundaries
and to look out two, three, five years where they're going.
Matt, Masiello, the entire team,
they've been absolutely incredible to us.
I want that publicly on the record that, for what it's worth,
you know, I obviously had a very good feel for Matt
before we started talking about the rogue deal
and throughout the entire negotiation process
and all the due diligence and stuff,
you know, obviously he was very good,
his entire team was very good.
You know, shout out to Kristen Collins,
to Sean Kenny,
both of them in particular,
from both a legal and finance perspective,
been amazing.
Christy Jarvis and accounting.
There's just a lot of great people.
people inside SA. I'm going to butcher it. If I missed any of you, please don't take that offensively.
I just wanted to name a few people, but in general, the entire team has been amazing to us.
You never know what you're going to get, right? Like, it all seem good. And then you sign that
contract and it's like, okay, you're part of the family now. Here we go. And, you know,
they could press all kinds of crap upon us and slow us down. And it has never been like that.
It has been absolutely amazing. So I just wanted to go on a record and just say, hey, you know,
If SAA comes calling on an acquisition, at least from my experience, it has been absolutely,
absolutely tremendous.
A one plus one equals five kind of scenario, to be honest with you.
Just couldn't be happier.
Felt like part of the family day one.
And, you know, you just never know.
And they've been awesome.
My people.
And, you know, I can't, you know, I look after my employees like their family.
So even the ones that, you know, that, you know, that.
that even on the days where we don't always get along,
which is always going to happen.
I think of them as family,
and, you know, they've been great to everybody.
So that's a really good thing.
So just kind of broad 40,000 feet or whatever,
however many feet you can go up,
SA has been tremendous and very, very, very happy with them.
And excited because seeing many of the things that they're doing
and that, you know, in small part,
rogue's going to be part of testing different things,
trying different things, sharing,
you know, I'm on the executive leadership team and, you know, being part of some other projects
and helping deliver more value to member agencies who are part of SIA ecosystem.
You know, I haven't dug too much into that yet, but there's been some initial conversations
on different projects and different stuff like that.
And that's exciting too because, man, I'm in, like, just thinking about, you know,
this is kind of similar thoughts to what I used to think about when I was at trustedchoice.com.
you think about all these agencies and you're like, man, if we could just get some of these ideas,
some of these concepts, some of these tools into some percentage of these agencies who are looking to
grow, who want to push the envelope, man, we can do some real damage.
We can really put some premium on the books.
We can help clients.
We can help change people's lives by improving their career, not just financially, but being happier,
more fulfilled, more engaged, finding more meaning of what they do in the insurance industry.
I mean, it just excites me on so many levels.
So tons of really great stuff to come.
It's still very early days.
You know, we're only, you know, four months, 120 days into, you know, our acquisition or being acquired by SAA.
So lots to come.
And we've got so much work to do at Rogue, too.
It's not like I'm dipping out of there all the time.
I don't always have the time for that.
But, you know, it's been really good.
So I wanted to share that with you.
You know, I wanted to talk about two just kind of.
you know the the the hub spot thing so um i mentioned a long time ago or not a long time ago i've
been talking about it for probably since december um we made and again this is this is this is
this is me um we made the decision um i made the decision to try to make hubspot essentially our
a ms i wanted to do everything we could to um see if if the fully integrated from website to
marketing to advertising to sales to service to retention to renewals to have it all in one place
utilizing you know 20-22 technology right like so um you know i really i i saw what was possible
the tracking the communications the the the collaboration potential inside and um i went for
it i i i figured and i said this i've said this on air before if you you
using the same tools as everybody else, then you have the same limitations as everybody else.
And I didn't like that. I knew what we were doing from a marketing perspective was different and
bigger and bolder than many agencies of similar ilk, right? Like while I say acquired us, it's not like
we got some $50 million VC bucket dumped on us. You know what I mean? We still have budgetary
constraints and we need to think through a level of reasonableness, I guess you could say. And
I just was, I was very excited.
So we were on now CERT's as our agency management system in HubSpot.
And I can tell you unequivocally, our HubSpot experiment as an insurance, particularly service
tool is just a, it was a fail.
It was a hard fail.
There just is not to build back into a system like HubSpot insurance, lingo, fields, functionality,
the way that the way our particular business works that that is unique it just was too much i am positive
that someone who is smarter than me that understands hubspot better that understands development better
and that has a bigger budget and more time could absolutely positively turn hubspot into something
that would be electrifying i think it's possible just not us it's not me i'm not willing to do that
and in the words of both my head of service and my head of sales who said almost the exact same thing,
although maybe they coordinated this, who knows, in different meetings, why are we reinventing
the insurance part of our business? And as much as I hate to admit it, they're right. They're right.
Like right now, growth is what's most important to rogue. You know, we need to grow. We want to grow.
We can grow. We have all everything in place. And we're starting.
which is great um but the systems were holding us back the systems that the the lack of clear insurance
functionality was holding us back so about three months ago i two months ago sorry i made the decision
that we needed to get off of hubspot at for from an insurance perspective so we are currently in the
process of carving out all of our insurance operations out of hubspot hubspot hubspot will continue to
host our website, they will continue to be where we do, you know, track all our marketing,
run all our marketing, social, we run our, or at least have all our ads accounts connected
so we can see attribution. We don't do a ton of ads. We're mostly just doing remarketing stuff
for website visitors right now. And we can track it all, we can see it all. I can tell you
which posts are doing what, how they're doing. It is from a marketing perspective, just an
unbelievable and undeniable tool. That all being said,
So we'll keep our marketing, our website, our recruiting function, and, you know, our channel
partnership, business to business development sales process, that will be all done through HubSpot.
So we're going to use HubSpot.
We're going to just dial back basically the insurance functionality and dial back our overall,
you know, all the seats we need and stuff.
But it is an incredible, almost from like an internal insurance operations standpoint, it is
a tremendous tool. I mean, your ability to track and community. It's really, I mean, I love HubSpot.
I, to be honest, I love it. It just, the work it takes to turn it into an AMS is daunting. And I am not
willing to continue to feel the pain of trying to build that out in exchange for, in exchange for
growing. So that being said, we went out into the market and started doing demos with all kinds
of agency management systems again. Now, we had done this about a year ago. And so I knew kind of what
was out there. We looked at applied. We looked at better agency. And we looked at now certs.
Those are the three systems that we looked at. I throughout applied almost immediately, mostly because I wanted to see
the functionality and what it was all about,
but I'm not interested in paying that price,
nor even though I like a lot of the stuff
that Taylor Rhodes is saying and I don't knock him
and it does feel like in general applied is on a better path,
I still don't trust them.
I'm hoping over time Taylor can change that.
He seems like potentially the guy that could,
but also he, you know, he's got bosses
and those bosses need returns.
And to get those returns,
you need to do things like lock your clients in,
overcharge them, nickel and dime them, you know, all that kind of stuff. And truth be told,
when you look at the total, when you get all the things you need to buy to really run your
insurance agency operation out of an applied system, it's like, oh my God, holy crap. Like,
it's just a lot. So we didn't go with applied. That being said, I'd like to carve out just for
purposes of conversation. I think a lot of the things that Reed, Holdsworth is doing at Ivins are
actually pretty fantastic. And I know applied owns Ivans, technically are two different organizations.
but I do think that Reed and what he's doing at Ivins is wonderful.
I got to see Reed and chat and catch up with them a little bit at InsureTech Boston,
which was awesome.
That was a month or so ago, maybe a little more.
So I do think the stuff that's going on in Ivins is good,
which kind of says to me maybe stuff with the Plyde is starting to change too,
which would be awesome, but I'm just not willing to go down that road with them,
not at this time.
They're just, they're still my perception, and I think this is not just them.
This is certainly, you know, what's going on at Vertefor still.
although the QQ agency Zoom setup is not bad.
It's not bad.
I still think you have a lot of people who don't understand,
have never worked in nor have never really sunk their teeth into
what it means to be a next generation agency,
the digital hybrid model that you need to have.
I don't think any of them really understand what we're trying to do.
I mean, we're kind of pioneering this.
The way we think about geography, the way we think about carrier appointments,
the way we think about sales, it just, it still does not fit the general mindset of the standard
agency management system and the standard technologist's vision of what our agency should be, right?
And that's where we get this, you know, kind of yin and yang of the insure tech, you know,
these insure tech people who come in and make bold claims and don't necessarily understand our business
but are trying to push the boundaries.
And then you have the other side of the coin where you have these old school who understand
the old school way of doing.
business really well but aren't willing to, you know, I talked to one, I talked to one,
this is just completely anecdotal, but it kind of makes my point. I talked to his carry the other day,
and I was like, you know, da-da-da, do you have this? And his response was, well, not a lot of
agencies are asking for that. And I was like, well, I feel like you're talking to the wrong
agencies then because this is absolutely something that every agency is going to need.
It's killing me that I can't remember what it was. It was something, I think it was this
your connection for something. We're looking for a Zapier connection for something. And you're just like,
I'm like, oh my God, I get that like you got to go out at West Podunk and talk to the agent who still
sends in paper files because they've been with you for 30 years. But if you're making your business
decisions based on that agent, you're toast. You're absolutely toast because you can see it in
the way the market is trending. So, well, we'll see. I don't know. Maybe I shouldn't say toast.
That's probably too bold. You guys will all be like hyperbole.
But I just, I can't imagine that.
But that all being said, basically the final decision came down to two agency management
systems.
One was better agency and one was next year.
Better agency, we gave a super hard look to.
I love better agency.
I love what they're doing.
I think this is a serious, serious platform for the future.
I recommend better agency all the time now.
I really, really like where they're at.
You know, I've been back and forth on them at different points just as they grow.
That's normal for a company that's growing as fast as they are.
But I just think they're going to be a player.
I don't know how long it's going to take or how much damage they'll actually do to the big guys,
considering, you know, they, you got to remember,
vertifor and applied don't care about a 10-person agency.
It just doesn't make them any money.
And that's not a knock on them.
If you have, you know, if you have 25 of the top 50 agencies in the country using your platform
and they're paying you millions upon millions of dollars a year,
why would you waste any time on someone that's spending $20,000 a year?
Right.
So, you know, you look at it someone like better agency.
Right now, if I'm a 20-person agency or below and I have a 60-40 or 70-30 personal
commercial split, I'm looking at better agency going, holy shit, this is the platform for me.
Like, basically everything is there.
The accounting piece is almost there.
I think it's in beta right now.
I don't want to overstep my bounds on where they're at.
But that was really the last piece.
There's some more configuration on commercial,
some of the more sophisticated commercial you may struggle with.
But I think the benefits drastically outweigh any type of drawbacks,
especially if you are like a 60, 40, 70, 30, 80, 20, personal commercial type
agency with 20 less people you're going to be able to dig into this thing it's going to make
sense and you can fly i really like it that being said um for some of the things that we needed to do
um you know for some of the more sophisticated accounting that we need to do because we have a lot of
referral partners that we that we you know have different deals with and joint venture stuff that
we're doing and then you know with the with the no ceiling insurance career being able to split out
like kind of subco all the different things that we need to do um it just wasn't there yet and
and we need a solution now.
So Better Agency continues to be on our radar,
but we did not go to them.
I just wanted to make sure everyone didn't think it was
because I think the platform was crap.
I don't, not at all.
The exact opposite, actually.
We went with Nexture.
So we will be, you know,
we're going to be in the process
over the next month of making the move to Nexture
from NowSerts and HubSpot.
So basically we're taking everything out of HubSpot
that was insurance related
and everything that was in NowSerts
and we're putting it into Nexture
and our entire insurance function will be run out of Necture.
Our marketing, our operations, our recruiting, our channel partnerships will be run out of HubSpot,
everything else will be run out of Necture.
And I'm not going to say Necture is a perfect platform, it's not.
However, I like a lot of what they do.
I think they have solid, solid system.
Their pricing is right on par with where I think it should be.
They have all the functionality that you can need and more.
I think a lot of people don't consider NextShur because NextShur traditionally has been
kind of the agency management system of networks to a certain extent and MGAs and wholesalers
and stuff like that.
But their retail option is tremendous.
And to be honest with you, I was shocked.
I mean, Nexure was referred to me by Michael Blake, who's a good friend of mine and
the show.
And he's great technologist, great agent.
He recommended in some talks with him that I look at them.
They weren't even on my radar.
and then about a year ago I took a look at them really liked it we weren't ready at the time
and now we are so just kind of wanted to give you guys an update there I firmly believe that your
sales and service operation have to be run out of the same system this is the drawback of many of the
traditional agency management systems because they for some reason have not figured out basic sales
functionality certainly do not prioritize digital sales functionality and I found that next year didn't
didn't inhibit any of those things.
And so I was pleasantly surprised there.
They actually have some really cool functionality
that we can use in some of our marketing stuff
and then the service team fully robust.
But I just cannot stress enough.
Sales and service have to work in the same system.
That is my belief.
I'm sure there are cases out there where that's not true,
but sales and service need to be in the same system.
And we went with next year.
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creating the show for you. All right, I'm out of here. Peace. Let's get back to the episode.
So I'm excited about it. I'll have more updates as we go. I just wanted to kind of put that out there,
put some of that thought process out there, why we were thinking the way we were. And I also just
wanted to be candid. You know, I'm fully capable of admitting when I make mistakes and bringing our
entire insurance operation and trying to shove our insurance operation into HubSpot was a mistake.
It just was. For where, for us, you know, like Crothers always talks about HubSpot and
Chris Green talks about HubSpot. And I think both of them for what they do, it's a wonderful
tool. You know, for if you're doing, if you're doing huge B2B middle market accounts,
then the functionality of HubSpot actually works really well for those type of accounts.
Where we were struggling in particular, if I'm, you know, if I'm just, you know, I just want to be
candid.
It's the small business stuff.
It just wasn't capable.
It didn't have the right setup.
The U.S. just wasn't set up right for high volume, fast-paced small business sales.
It just wasn't.
Large B2B middle market enterprise type accounts.
Oh my gosh.
I mean, it's the holy grail for that stuff.
So if you're doing David Crothers middle market stuff,
I still to this day recommend HubSpot.
But if you're going to get into personal lines or small business,
it is not the tool, not unless someone builds it out for you.
It's just not ready.
It doesn't have download,
so all that kind of stuff just made it.
It didn't work.
So I just wanted to talk through some of that stuff.
You know, this Rogue's vision,
the vision for Rogue, the process for Rogue,
it only continues to solidify in my mind
that we are absolutely on the right path.
We're just seeing the results,
more leads, better leads, routing leads.
There's some work we need to do.
But if you go back and listen to the Alan Ringwald episode that I did,
he's the founder of Relativity 6,
I talk a little bit about this front-end tool that I want to build.
We still need to build that.
That doesn't exist in the world.
But outside of that,
you know, just where does the business go answering that question?
Where does the business go in real time?
Because remember, carriers' appetites are a guess.
They don't really know what they're going to write and what they don't.
There's no marketing rep in the industry who can tell you unequivocally what they write consistently.
They just, and it's not marketing reps' fault.
There's algorithms and underwriters and, you know, all kinds of stuff.
And then once you break out of, you know, any kind of geographic constraints,
meaning you work nationwide, there's just no way because you could have, you know, you could have,
you know, if the, you know, my underwriter at Hartford paints me a picture of what Hartford will
write in New York or even just in the Northeast, as soon as you go to the Midwest or the West Coast
or the Southeast, that all changes. And that's not, you know, she has no way of knowing.
It's not her fault. So my point saying all that is that you where, when you get into small
business, high volume small business, and if you start to break traditional geographic boundaries,
of state lines, you immediately have a where does the business go problem. That needs to be solved
still. But outside of that, I think we're dialed in in many ways. Some more process, both in service
and retention and renewals, and just solidifying that and tracking it and all that kind of stuff,
just like every other agency. But our kind of human optimized vision for our agency, every day I get
I just feel stronger about the model, the model.
Every day I feel stronger about the model.
Every single day.
It just, it's working.
It's working.
It just is.
And it's not finished.
I'm not ready to stand on a TED stage and give a,
you know, this is the be all end all way of blah blah.
I mean, not that.
But it is working.
And we've learned so many, so many things.
And so that's kind of how I want to finish this episode.
It's just what are a few of the things that I believe, you know,
that have been absolutely solidified over these first 120 days in my mind.
And kind of why those 120s, because I've, one of the things SA has been great about
is we got to offload some of the internal operations functionality that was really bogging my time down
and my operations manager, Sarah.
It was really just crushing our time.
SIA has been able to kind of economy of scale, take some of that flow it through them and take that
off our shoulders. So I've been able to kind of get right back into the business, you know, with both
hands, which is where I want to be. And three things are absolutely positively clear to me.
You could not, no matter, you could not push me off of these three things. Okay.
First, content is the greatest weapon that we have for generating new business leads in 2022.
We create a lot of content.
In the last 365 days, our YouTube channel has had over 100,000 views.
An insurance agency's YouTube channel done on a zero budget.
I've now made most of the videos with my, I've now made most of the videos with my,
iPhone 47 or whatever the hell I have here.
It's got the three cameras on the back
and it's got cinematic video mode.
With that and a little three-leg, $100 gobi tripod
that I bought off Amazon like five years ago,
I am creating almost all the content
that goes on our website now.
You couldn't tell the difference
between the quality of the video.
And we just continue to crank
and our little channel has done 100,000 views.
Now you may be saying,
Ryan, views aren't revenue.
You know, that's like the classic bitch that I would get is views aren't revenue.
What's the sales?
Well, so basically we're doing out of those, you know, over the course of the year, I actually
don't have that number.
But right now we're averaging 12, nope, that's not true.
That was last month.
This month, we're currently averaging nine and a half form fills a day, a week day, Monday
through Friday. And that's down, which is normal because it's July and then in August it'll be
down too. That's the natural cycle. So if you're seeing your numbers go down right now, don't worry
about it. That happens every year, cross the board. You know, second half of June, early June,
July, August, are always down for everything. And then, you know, towards the end of August,
September, you're going to see a ramp up, September, October, beginning of November, should be
big months for you from a content, new lead perspective. And you'll see that ramp down a little bit.
and then January really through to May and June is, you know,
that's the prime time season.
That's the go season.
So we're down a little bit, but nine form fills a day.
That is an incredible number.
You know, our biggest issue has always been.
We didn't have enough producers to write all that business.
We're starting to change that.
And we saw a 5X jump in premium written last month.
And that's a huge.
huge for us. Absolutely huge. And it's because, and my second thing is you need producers to sell,
right? You need producers to sell. I know that codery's got this thing and there's another thing
over, another carrier's got this thing, this widget that you can put on and the people go in
and buy it themselves. And if you can set up a marketing campaign that consistently drives
profitable revenue off of those buy-it-yourself tools, and I love codery, don't give me,
I'm not knocking coder, I'm just saying they have a tool. I like codery. They're not a knock-on-cotry.
just a bunch of people have tried this tool.
You know, if you can create consistent traffic that leads to binds,
that sticks long term off of those do-it-yourself tools,
God bless you.
God bless you.
Please, I will pay you to teach me how to do that.
But here's the thing.
It has to be profitable and it has to stick.
I believe you can drive shit tons of unprofitable.
And by unprofitable, I mean,
you're paying more for leads and marketing than you are actually getting back in revenue,
not just unprofitable in terms of class of business, like the traditional insurance way.
I'm talking about actual revenue in your agency.
I don't think long term that you can write profitable business that way,
that you can be profitable paying for and driving people in to buy themselves.
And I also don't believe you can retain the business that way.
So while I think that from a snapshot new business perspective,
if you're thinking just new business snapshot perspective,
these buy-it-yourself tools can be successful
from an actual business sense,
like, am I making more money that I'm spending?
And then long-term is the business retaining?
I just haven't seen it work.
I've seen plenty of people use that methodology
to drive their new business numbers up to look awesome,
but I haven't seen them be profitable doing it.
And even in our own, we've tested this shit.
I mean, we've tested it.
I test everything.
I have not seen it be profitable.
Now, there is some stuff that you can do with niches.
So if you have like a pet, a specific pet thing that's special program or something like that,
that can work.
But, you know, general personal lines, general small business, I just don't see it.
I don't see it.
I haven't seen the case.
I'm waiting for the business case because I would love to be wrong about this, but
I just haven't seen it.
So you need producers to sell because what a producer does is create,
the emotional trust relationship connection during the sale,
even if it's a tiny sale, during that sale
so that the person renews the business on the back end.
That's why the human is important
because without the connection, there's not the renewal.
Without the connection, the renewal doesn't happen.
So you need that human connection.
You have to have it.
It's why GEICO is starting all these agencies.
It's why you see these franchise models taking off.
You have to have boots on the ground.
You have to have someone talking.
You have to have video connection or whatever.
There needs to be that emotional human connection that this person has me.
He, she, whatever.
It has me.
See how I went woke there for a second.
I'm learning, right?
Got it.
The consumer has to know that.
They have to know that.
They have to know that you have them.
And it doesn't have to be an hour-long conversation.
It can be just a email that says, hey, I got you, you're good.
This is the right coverage, best price I have, shopped you on 17 people,
maybe a little vidyard video or loom video, something like that.
Like, that stuff builds the connection, locks in the retention.
Without it, you're not going to have the retention number.
So, you need producers to sell.
That being said, you do not need producers to be in your town
or walk into your agency to sell.
I have a producer here,
Albany. I have a producer in Florida. I have a producer in Arizona. And I have three producers
in California. I have another person who may be joining us from that's in the Midwest. And we're
talking to someone who's in Michigan. I have a CSR in Michigan. I have two in Florida. I have,
you know what I mean? So my point in telling you this is you need producers to sell, but those
producers don't have to be doing hand-to-hand combat. Go, you can find a great producer. You can find a great
producer who doesn't live in your town but can write in your town there's no reason that person can't
write in your town or in your state or whatever and they just don't live there or they live you know
they live an hour away they don't need to come into the office that is 100% true if you believe
today that your people producers still have to come into your office understand that is a you decision
not a not a reality that is not react that's not an absolute truth of the universe that is your your
personal opinion slash preference.
So if you're struggling to find producers, expand your search, is really my point.
You need producers, you need humans.
Those humans do not have to be geographically located in an area to do a massive amount of sales
in that area.
They just have to be good at what they do, which is building relationships, understanding
coverage, and helping people feel good about the decision they make to purchase insurance
from them.
If they can do those things, it doesn't matter where they live.
It just matters that they give a shit.
They care about your agency.
They care about your clients
and they're going to show up and do the work.
They don't have to be in your same area.
They just don't have to be.
I am so sick of hearing,
it's so hard to find producers.
It's not hard to find producers.
It's only hard to find producers
if you are geographically pigeonholing yourself.
There are amazing people out there
who want to help clients,
who want to grow, who want to be successful,
who want to make money,
who want to help your agency.
They're just not always going to be in your backyard.
That's a reality.
Okay, but you need producers to sell.
So the last thing I want to talk about today,
I hope this has been valuable to you guys,
just giving you some insights.
Guys, you have thoughts, questions about any of this stuff,
LinkedIn DMs.
I'm on all the socials.
Just DM me in one of the socials.
I check them all because I'm a neurotic crazy person,
which probably leads to some of the anxiety
that I live with day to day.
But I still do it and will be for the foreseeable future.
So whichever your favorite social is,
feel free to hit me there, DM,
just email me or whatever.
The last thing I want to talk about is answering inbound leads because I get a lot of
questions around, well, Ryan, we heard you get a lot of leads, but, you know, those people
are just price shopping, you know, which some of them are for sure.
Guys, an inbound lead is different than an outbound lead or referral.
You cannot treat someone who picks up the phone or emails you or fills out a form on your
website the way the same way you treat that person who was referred to you by your cousin or your
golf buddy you can't treat those two people there's two completely different scenarios a person who
was referred into you is starting with some modicum of trust some level of trust they were
referred to you they may not trust you enough to purchase from you yet you may still have some work to
do if it's a referral but they've coming in with something right they trust john your golf buddy
and John, your golf buddy, said that you are the right person.
So they're coming in with a little bit of that.
So you cannot talk to inbound leads because inbound leads don't know you from Adam or Eve.
And they don't, their assumptions, their base assumptions are you're a call center,
that you don't give a shit, that you have limited options and that you're going to do everything
you can to hose them.
Those are their assumptions when they fill out the form.
They chose you and they still believe you're going to hose them.
them, you don't give a shit, you're going to overcharge them, and that you're somewhere in
some big faceless enterprise.
Even if they fill out a form on your little agency website, that's the mentality that
they're coming in with, okay?
For good reason.
Because most of the people who do digital marketing and have the money and create content
are not independent insurance agencies.
It's progressive or it's GEICO or it's, you know, whatever.
insert other well-funded large organization that is looking for volume right that's that's what
they're assuming they're getting somehow they found their way onto your website or wherever your
youtube channel and they filled out some form or they called some phone number and they got you
you cannot go into this thinking that they already trust you they don't they don't trust you so
what you have to do is and Carruthers does a great job of talking about this mick hunt does a great job
talking about this.
Billy Williams is a great job of talking about this.
Kelly Dono-Puro does a great job of talking about this.
Like, you have to build trust.
You have to then validate them through that process.
So what does that look like?
It is like you have to ask them questions.
Like when someone calls me, so I'm going to walk through how I, so I'm not a great
cold call or middle market guy.
I'm never going to go into killing commercial and be a trainer on the shit that like
Josh Gurley talks about or or Crothers talks about.
I'm just never going to be that guy.
I'm not a great outbound guy.
I'm just not.
For whatever reason, it doesn't work for me.
I own that.
It's a thing.
I have successfully executed it, but in no way, I'm a C-minus player at best.
Just put that out there.
Okay.
Referrals are easy.
That's why I don't give any, that's why I give very little credence to and or,
I don't want to say respect because that sounds disrespectful, but like,
I don't hold in high regard people who work only on referrals.
It's like, who cares.
If you get referred business and you can't sell it, like, you shouldn't be in this business to begin with.
So referrals are easy.
Outbound is incredibly difficult, but a different skill set.
Okay.
So with inbound, I'm pretty freaking good on inbound.
I can spin an inbound lead and get them to buy shit from me like it's no one's business.
So first, you have to give a shit about them, right?
You have to care about the person calling you.
You can't immediately think there's some A-hole who's just price shopping.
You have to care about them.
You do.
maybe you got to psych yourself up, maybe you got to write yourself a note,
maybe you got to listen to some love music or whatever, you know,
Marvin Gaye before you get on there, before you start taking inbound calls,
but you got to care about the person.
Because if you don't, it's going to come through the phone.
Now, this isn't like some of that crappy smile when you talk, so you're,
maybe that works, maybe it doesn't, I don't know.
But I do know that you need to actually care about the person you're talking to,
even if they're an idiot.
You have to care about them.
So when someone calls, or let's say it's a form fill.
So if form fill comes in, I'll pick up the phone, give them a call, and say, you know, I'll just say it's Sally.
Hey, Sally, Ryan Hanley here from Rogue Risk.
I saw you filled out an interest form on our site.
It looks like you need some help with your workers' comp.
What's going on?
That's all.
That's all.
Shut up.
What's going on?
And I'll let Sally talk.
Sally's going to say, well, you know, we've had this business for a while, and it's always just been me and my husband, and we both own the business, and, you know, we didn't need workers' comp, but we just decided to hire our first employee, and, you know, now the state requires workers' comp.
And I'll say, that's amazing. Wow, I'm so happy to hear your business is growing. That's great.
Oh yeah, you know, we had a great year, blah.
Okay.
Sally, just tell me a little bit about what you do, right?
And then she'll tell me what you do.
And let's say it's something relatively easy like, let's just say it's like a janitorial business, right?
So janitorial business.
So I know I have pie, we have guard, we have nationwide.
All three of those guys will write janitorial workers' comp.
So, okay.
So now I know I got markets, right?
So by understanding what she does and what's going on, I now know.
I now know one, she has a real issue.
She's hiring her first employee.
So there's urgency and she's not 100% sure what she's doing.
And so it's not like someone who's had comp for a while.
So I understand the level of detail that I'm going to have to go into with her.
And I now understand that she's got an urgent need.
So she's kind of checked a couple boxes there.
And now I know the industry she's in and that I have markets for it,
assuming she's in a state that those really, I'd say Florida and California would be the only
real problems with that class.
But so let's say she's in New York where I live.
Those three carriers all right janitorial businesses.
So I know I got three markets.
I'm in good shape.
Okay.
So we've gotten to there.
So now I'm going to say, well, so tell me a little bit about your insurance.
Like, do you have general liability?
And, you know, she's probably going to hesitate a little bit because she's going to wonder
why I'm asking that question. I'm going to say, I'm only asking because, and I love to do business
with you, I'm just surprised that you didn't call whoever had your general liability insurance.
And, you know, she'll say something. She'll either say two things. One, she'll say, I don't think
my agent does workers comp, which is awesome, because that means the agent wasn't doing their job
and probably stinks at their job because if one of your general liability clients doesn't know
that you do workers comp, then awesome. I'm going to capitalize on that. Okay.
Maybe she'll say, hey, I'm with Next, or insert some other D to C player that, you know,
the person who she talked to originally, maybe she bought the policy herself,
or she talked to someone who could give two flying craps about her.
So, you know, she has no real connection.
Let's assume, because we do get a lot of these, that especially for a janitorial class,
she went to someone like Next and purchased the policy herself all the way.
So I now know she's got probably not the right general.
reliability coverage. She has absolutely no connection or loyalty to the carrier that she's doing business
with. And she has an urgent need for her workers' comp. So I'm not, you know, I'm kind of taking this
in. So what I'll say is, I'll go off. Regardless of what she says, she could say it's, you know,
really I'm trying to find out, is it her, is it like her cousin or something and assuming it's not,
which it rarely is on inbound form fills. That's much more of, that, that's much more of like a myth
that that happens all the time than is reality,
we just almost never hear that.
So much more often someone who comes to us
is either with some crappy agent
who isn't really doing their job
or doesn't understand commercial insurance
or they're with some D to C player
and that's like almost a home run
because, God, you give me someone
who does business with Next
and I'll just cash that register all day long.
Even though we write next,
we do write some next policies.
It's just that there's no connection.
The initial sale has zero relationship
so I can take.
that. Okay. So regardless of what she says, no matter what she says, I'm going to say to her,
hey, Sally, I just want to let you know, we're workers comp specialists and we're going to get
you scored away. So, you know, if you can make a commitment to me, I'm going to make this
commitment to you, that whatever your timeline is, I'm going to turn my proposal around inside
that timetable, get it to you. I'm going to explain everything about the policy that
I can so that you know all the information I know about it. I never want to have a discussion with you
where I have the power because I have the information. Okay. I said in three, I am going to offer you
out of the 42 carriers that we have, I'm going to offer you the best coverage and price combination
that I can find. Now truthfully, there's only three carriers that are going to write your business.
That's Guard, Hartford, or Guard, Pye, and nationwide. Okay. So there's only three. I said 42.
there's only three. But what I'm telling you is, we have access to all the companies.
There's only three that write it. We're going to quote those three. But I'm going to come back
to you with the best pricing and coverage that I have in the timetable that you need and I'm going to
explain everything you need to know. If I do that, it makes sense to you, are you willing to do
business with me? And if she says yes, I got her, 99% of the time. That's how you handle an
inbound lead. You got to do a little bit of qualifying that isn't negative, right? So here's the
keys. Here's the high levels. And I'm going to get to the 89% in a second. So the keys are
qualify without being an asshole. Because look, I used to work for trustedchoice.com and listen to
thousands of phone calls that independent agents take from inbound leads from a platform like
trusted choice.com. And what happens is we pre-qualify like the decision is to send this person to jail.
or not, right? Like, we pre-qualify like the person is a complete jerk and we're just trying
to get rid of them. We need to pre-qualify with caring. Just simple questions. Hey, you know,
why'd you call us? What's going on? You know, I love that first question. Or I just, how can I
help? That's another version of my first question. Hey, Sally, thanks for reaching out. It really
means a lot to me. How can we help? And just let them talk, right? And then dissect a little,
dissect a little, but always with the, hey, we're going to get you there. I always try to
reinforce with, oh, that's great. You know what? No problem. Seeing it before. seen a thousand times.
It's all good. We're going to get you squared, Sally. No worries. I say that all the time. We're
going to get you squared. That's like my line to them. We're going to get you squared. We're going to
squared. Don't worry about it. We'll get you squared up. Sally, if it's possible, we're going to get
you squared. Don't worry. And what I'm reinforcing to them is, like, we got you because that's what
they want. That's what they want to hear. All they want to hear is we got you. That's what they
want to hear. They want to know that when the shit hits the fan that you're going to be there for them.
And I completely understand that. I completely understand that. So, here's, so, so, okay.
So after we, we've kind of done our prequalifying, we've done that, you know, and she says,
yes, I'll say, okay, here's the next steps. And this is the key to the 89% close ratio on
this stuff. Okay.
And dissect the 89 a little bit more because it's not 89% of all leads that we get in.
So basically, I'm working a situation where all the, you know, where the tumblers lined up.
She could have said, hey, we do, you know, excavation, you know, 10 feet below the surface of the
year.
I'd be like, yeah, you're going to stay fund, right?
Or she could say, you know, we're a dynamite factory.
She could say, like, we clean asbestos out of walls, you know, stuff like that where
there's just not a market. Okay, so in this case, there was a market. She did have a need. That need was
urgent. If her need is not urgent, we will pause them. We will not quote them now. So if she says,
hey, yeah, I'm just kind of figuring out what pricing will be. I'm thinking of starting a business
in January. Hey, Sire, I really appreciate you reaching out. I'm going to give you a ballpark off the
top of my head. That ballpark is not bindable, guaranteed in any way. I'm just giving you a
ballpark but then I'm going to call you back three months you know I'll pick you know
whatever three months is so in this case I'd say October November I'm going to give you
call back and then we can rate it up because I can't lock in any pricing for you right now so
okay so that would be one that wouldn't happen okay so let's see we're gone all the way through
she's committed to if I can deliver on her timetable that I'm willing to explain everything to her
and and that she believes that I'm going to give her the best coverage and pricing
combination that I have that she'll do business with me. If she agrees to that,
okay, then this is the key. This is the absolute key to inbound leads. It's really a key
to all sales, but just particularly inbound leads, and then we'll be done with this episode.
I set expectations for her. What's going to happen next? I don't want Sally to be surprised
by anything. So what I say to her is, okay, Sally, the next step is I'm going to get some
information from you. There's some information that I need to run this quote.
She goes, oh, okay, good. Once I have that information, I'm going to take it.
and I'm going to go to my carriers,
and I'm going to shop your insurance
and figure out who's the best fit for you.
Okay, there may be some follow-up questions.
In this case, I'm assuming there really won't be,
but there may be.
If there are, I'll hit you up with them.
Is it okay if I text you?
Yeah, great.
Okay, I always go for text because people respond to text.
Okay.
So, you know, I have her cell phone number, whatever,
and I always, is this, can I text this cell phone number?
Yes, okay, okay, I say, okay, I'm going to get,
once I get that back,
if I have any follow up to terms of this,
I'm going to text you.
Once I have all the info I need and the quotes back,
the next thing that's going to happen is I'm going to send you a video proposal.
Very simple.
It's going to have a copy of the carrier's proposal,
and it's going to have a video from me breaking down why I chose that company,
why I chose that coverages,
and why I think that pricing is the right pricing for you to purchase for this policy.
I'm going to send this to you before we get back on the phone.
The reason is I want you to know everything I know,
because if you know everything I know,
then when we have our next conversation,
we're operating as equals,
and that's what I want.
How's that sound?
That sounds great, Ryan.
Some people will even say, like,
I've never heard that before,
you know, they fucking love it because, one, it's genius.
But setting that expectation
and telling them exactly what they're going to get,
they're locked in now.
They're pot committed.
They're like part of the process.
They have like a schedule.
It's on their calendar,
their mental calendar.
This is happening, right?
I've described a deliverable that they're going to get.
It's real.
I just made insurance tangible in a video fucking proposal.
Once they get that video proposal, 89% of the time.
So now, okay, so this is how we get to the 89.
So then I got to go shop it.
Sometimes my understanding of the market doesn't work.
In New York, we're not already janitorial anymore.
You know, again, right, all carriers lie about their appetite.
So assuming I get a competitively price,
the coverage I need at a price that is reasonable, you know,
is I get that back from one of the carriers.
If I do that video proposal for them, they close 89% of time.
89% of time.
That is how you sell inbound business.
And if you can do that at scale, you will make a shit ton of money.
My friends, I absolutely love you for listening to this podcast.
I hope you know that.
If you enjoyed this episode, share it with a friend.
Share it with someone who needs to hear this stuff.
Leave me a rating, review, whatever.
You know, just whatever you want to do.
You don't have to do anything.
Frankly, you know, either way, it's all good.
I just love you for listening to the show.
I appreciate you guys.
I hope you absolutely crush the remainder of the summer.
Have some fun.
And it'll be football season soon, so go bills.
I'm out of here, bitches.
Peace.
Twice as many deals by this time next week.
Sound impossible, it's not.
With the one-call closed system, you'll stop chasing leads and start closing deals in one call.
This is the exact method we use to close 1,200 clients under three years during the pandemic.
No fluff, no endless follow-ups, just results fast.
Based in behavioral psychology and battle-tested, the one-call closed system eliminates excuses and gets the prospect saying yes, more than you ever thought possible.
If you're ready to stop losing opportunities and start winning, visit master the close.com.
That's master of theclothes.com.
Do it today.
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please take a moment to rate, review, and subscribe.
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Thank you for listening.
Happy holidays.
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From all of us at Believe,
have a Merry Christmas, everyone, and a happy holiday.
