Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - Bradley Flowers 2.0
Episode Date: January 13, 2022Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyIn this episode of The Ryan Hanley Show, Ryan Hanley is joined... by Bradley Flowers, entrepreneur-in-residence at Portal Insurance, for a tremendous conversation on what comes next for one of the most exciting and interesting young agencies in our industry.Don't miss this episode...Episode Highlights:Bradley talks about hiring someone to work on his various projects. (6:59)Bradley shares his definition of what a good salesperson and a good producer is. (14:14)Bradley tells us about his office space and the percentage of expenses that go to it. (20:20)Bradley shares that he does not think that there is anything wrong with being a mainstream generalist. (31:24)Bradley says that convenience beats price 98% of the time, and shares insights about retention. (36:45)Bradley shares that it is important to automate, outsource, and delegate. (41:56)Bradley talks about the two important things he has learned in the past two years. (47:49)Bradley shares a situation he had with one of the companies that offers InsurTech. (58:53)Bradley explains how agents are still important in a company's success. (1:02:42)Bradley and Ryan talk about NFTs and Cryptocurrency, and how it is going to revolutionize the video game. (1:05:37)Key Quotes:If you work with good independent agents, they are going to put you with the correct carrier for your risk. They're not going to try to fit something into a box that doesn't belong there. Generally speaking." - Bradley Flowers"Again, with your team. There are no better people than the people that work for you." - Bradley Flowers "The hardest thing, I think, is to delegate the things that you're not good at, but you like doing." - Bradley FlowersResources Mentioned:Bradley Flowers LinkedInPortal InsuranceReach 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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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to the...
show. I hope you're absolutely dominating this first month of 2022. I know we are here at Rogue,
just feeling real good about 2022. I know you just never know what a new year is going to bring.
And 2022 is already shaping up to be a kind of transitional game changer year where we really
start to execute on our vision here at Rogue Risk. And I hope you feel the same about your
business or whatever life goals you have. Today's guest really doesn't need much of an introduction.
It's Bradley Flowers from the Insurance Guys podcast.
You know, the less good-looking half of the insurance guys podcast, his partner in crime, Scott Howell.
You know, Bradley's just a tremendous dude.
We have gotten to know each other very well, chat quite often over the last few years.
I love the way he thinks about the business.
I love the way he handles this business.
It's not always exactly the same way I would do it.
but Bradley's a thoughtful dude.
He's an ambitious dude.
And I just so pumped to kind of reconnect on the show, you know, on the show and share that conversation with you guys.
I think you're going to love this episode, spend some time with it.
Guys, you know, one quick ask I have for you.
I don't normally ask these kind of things.
But if you're not subscribed to this show, I'd love for you to do that.
If you haven't left us a rating a review, love for you to do that as well.
that just helps push the show out to more insurance pros
so they can listen and join our community
and share in what we're doing.
And if you have guests that you want on the show, let me know.
I mean, I have always, I keep a list of guests that I want to have
and then some just pop up or some get introed to me, which is awesome.
I mean, that's kind of how we do it.
It's probably not as formal as you actually think.
Some people think I have some master plan.
I don't really.
But if you have someone you want to hear from
or someone maybe I just don't know.
And you think they'd be a great guest, send them over.
Ryan at Ryanhanly.com.
Best way to get that in front of me.
And I just appreciate you guys.
Appreciate you guys for listening.
I probably don't say that enough, but I do.
Before we get to Bradley,
I want to give a quick shout out to a couple of our sponsors to the people that make this show possible.
First, coterie insurance.
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Cotery is a great company.
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They're going to be a big part of the mix for us moving forward.
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because of the $250 licensing fee.
It's like, oh my God, is it really, that's really a barrier to entry, like, is that I'm not
going to make you $250.
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I want to give a quick shout out to my boy Chris Landgillette Advisory Evolved.
You know, Chris is not technically a sponsor of the show, but I always like to give him a shout
out because I do get a lot of people who message me about our website and about websites
in general and just digital presence.
And Chris and his team have been my web designer for more than a decade.
And I trust him implicitly.
I love the work he does.
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SEO built if you're going to do that work.
And then, you know, the whole local business marketing thing that he has
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So just want to give a quick shout out to Chris Landgill and his team at Advisor Evolved.
Advisor Evolved.
Go toAdvisorEvolved.com today.
All right, guys.
Let's get on to Bradley Flowers.
All right.
Say something.
Go bills. Check one, two. Go bills. Check one. Got it. Got it. Okay. Sorry. So my, my Wi-Fi at the office got awful. So I booked the studio just so we didn't have any issues. I'll rather that. I'm getting a pretty decent echo, though.
Shut the door. Can maybe turn this mic off? Okay. Shut the door. Let's see.
is bad Wi-Fi at the office like a is like an Alabama thing or yeah yeah
yeah so good now yeah I can hear you if you can hear me you sound good yeah yeah yeah okay
yeah we uh I just got out the call of Mathis Andy Matheson and uh it was awful so I came here
Dude, there's nothing worse than bad Wi-Fi, like legitimately.
Oh, it will send me over the edge.
It will send me over the edge, mostly because I'm impatient.
Yeah.
Well, it's that and it's like, I don't know.
I just, why is it not working?
You know, because I work from home most days.
And most days, you know, I'd say, you know, we have spectrum or whatever.
So the internet is fine.
and say that it's blazing fast, but at most days it's probably fine. And then you'll just have
these days where like nothing works and everything's like button click, hourglass spinning. And you're
just like, oh my God, I can't get in. In Alabama, that means you got to go put more diesel in it.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Pull the pull start. You know. Yeah. Crank. Yeah, get to crank out.
Start cranking something. So what's going on, man? Man, just trying to.
Just hired somebody new in the agency today, since the offer accepted.
Nice.
Starting January 3rd, planning our event with Glovebox and trying to manage my various projects that have gotten out of hand.
What position did you hire?
We call it an agent, but it's a producer.
Gotcha.
Yeah, I...
Yeah, we were...
Go ahead.
Sorry.
We were just really top heavy.
know we have one producer that accounts for about 80% of the office's production.
And I need to balance that out some more.
And kind of the answer was to hire somebody new.
I'm hiring a guy who's actually my best friend for 14 years.
And we're still friends.
We just didn't hang out every day.
And he reached out to me, talk about working together.
And I sent him a sales assessment.
And he like blew it through the water, like best assessment I've ever seen.
And I've assessed, you know, 200 people.
And so we're going to give him a shot.
He's got a couple niches he knows about industries that he's been in.
One of them is the fitness industry.
I'm sure you appreciate that.
And I don't know.
We're going to see what happens.
I'm having him work with Mick.
Mick looking at his personality test,
Mick thinks he can turn him into a rock star.
So when you do a sales assessment,
is that a special test or is like a,
you give him a disc test?
So I have a vendor that I use for it,
but I do a disc and a sale.
they call it sales IQ.
Higher sense is the name of the company,
but that's not the vendor I'm going through.
And the disc assessment is incredibly in depth.
It's like 68 pages.
And then the sales IQ,
it basically breaks down the sales process in 10 categories.
So like prospecting, closing, assessing, that sort of thing.
And it gives you the percentage of the amount of time
they get the right answer on the sales questions.
and the percentage of the amount of time they get the second right answer.
So it kind of can show you,
if somebody doesn't get it on both,
and it shows you where they compare to other salespeople.
And the test gets smarter as it goes,
because it's comparing you to the last person that took it.
And so it kind of shows you where they really struggle at.
And kind of what I always look for is somebody who's a natural closer,
and I can fill the other gaps in.
Most of the people that we don't hire due to the assessment
is because they don't have the closing piece, but they have the other pieces. And to me,
that person struggles indefinitely. I don't think you can teach closing. I think you can give them
some tools that help. So I always look for somebody that's kind of got that fire that they can
close and then we can fill everything else up. What do you mean by closing? Like, what is that,
what does a closer have? Like, what does that mean? So we've, the people that we have hired that
struggled sales-wise, just struggle to almost get people over the finish line. You know what I mean?
So, like, my old office was a square. It was a square, and I was in there with everybody, right?
And so I heard all of these conversations, and I would just hear them on the phone with deals,
and I'd be like, oh, if you just said this, they would have bought or like, you know, that was a
buying signal. You ignored it and things like that. And, you know, there's just things that you pick up.
I think being in it every single day that someone who is not in it or doesn't have those skills
can do just down to like asking for the business, you know? And I've had a hard time.
It's more me than it is them. I have a hard time teaching that, you know? So I look for somebody
that already has it and already knows like, okay, that was a buying signal. Let's move forward.
Yeah, for me, the big one is call reluctance. If you're willing to pick up a phone,
I feel like everything else falls into place.
So like I've, so I do a disc.
I do a disc tab.
We use Mick too.
So everyone that's listening,
we're talking about Mick Hunt,
premier strategy box,
the,
the G-O-A-T of RevOps.
And so we do a disc,
so our process is Sarah,
my operations manager,
she reaches out to everyone first.
Really what she's looking for,
like is this person an idiot or not?
not like will they get along with us are they a good fit do you know so she kind of does the first
pass after the first pass that way if you get somebody in there that's bad you're like hey you're
the one it's your fault i also know that she um she is much more she's probably a much stronger filter
than i would be you're to me like i i'm like oh this person's nice you're probably like me in
that you can see the good in everybody like somebody could show up not sober and not clothed but
you're like you saw this little sparkle in their eye and you're like, I could turn that into something.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But they were funny.
No, yeah, she's got a good, she's got a, she has a healthy mix of being able to, you know, kind of give people a shot, but at the same time kind of pick out the bullshit.
So she's a really good first pass.
Then after that, we give them a disc test.
And then we don't do a sales assessment, though.
I do kind of like that.
So we do a disc test.
Then I send that disc test to Mick.
Mick gives us thumbs up, thumbs down for the next conversation.
And then if that conversation is with me, only for producers or insurance advisors, for our client success or account management staff, then my head of account management interviews them.
I don't even get involved.
But for the salespeople, you know, then I come in.
I literally just pound them on the phone, on their phone work.
How much, what do you do?
You know, and it's a whole bunch of questions around all I'm trying to get at is,
are you going to pick up the phone?
Because I am convinced more than ever.
Every day I become more convinced that this is a phone business.
And I think at different times in my career, I would have fought that.
I would have said, ah, you know, you can automate this and automate that.
And I, and I'm positive.
There's definitely ways to do it.
Yeah, there are places.
But if you want to be really successful, you pick up the phone.
And it doesn't mean it has to be an hour long phone call.
I think that's the major thing that I'm figuring out is a three minute.
You can do tons of automation, digital stuff, comms.
And a three minute phone call is all.
It might be all you need.
But those three minutes are really important.
Right.
And if you're willing to do that, I feel like the rest, that is a, for me, a bellwet.
for you doing, being able to do all the rest.
Ask for the clothes, get info, follow up, all the things.
Because if you're scared to pick up the phone and talk to somebody,
you will never do any of the rest.
Because you can't close on text message,
not unless you know the person.
Yeah.
Well, a good, you know, a good salesperson too can,
we have found that as well.
You know, some of the biggest accounts that we've closed,
you know, our two niches right now are habitational and trucking,
which obviously have the potential to have some pretty big premium on them.
some of the biggest accounts we've closed
have been super short phone calls.
And a good producer can cut through all that BS
and get straight to the point
and the pain point of knowing
what that person's dealing with
where somebody else is out here at La La Land.
You know, but we've done that.
We have a similar process.
You know, we do,
we send people at our website,
which is crap right now,
but we're in the process of changing to a new one.
And they fill a form out.
They get an email that's our email interview.
and there's three questions. Two of them don't mean anything. The third one is,
do you prefer higher salary, lower commission, lower commission, higher salary? And I'm looking for
low salary, high commission because I want somebody that wants to go get it, you know.
And so they reply to that email. That weeds out a lot of people. And then they go to a phone
interview with me. And it's very much like this conversation. It's just tell me about yourself.
Like, we're just having a chat. I'm being, you know, good old nice Bradley. And then
after that we do the that's when we do the disc and the sales IQ and then third step is in-person
interview with me still very laid back and then the last interview is a team interview so kind of
what you do at the beginning I'm doing at the end we do a team interview with everybody and if it's
not a unanimous yes we don't hire them doesn't matter how much I like them because I want it to be
the team's decision because we've had those people that worked with us that didn't quite fit
in and this person had a problem with this person philosophically, you know? And it's going to be,
hey, y'all were the one that hired this person, not me. You know, so that's kind of our process. And we found
it to be pretty, pretty, I mean, it's, it's definitely time consuming. But what it does, too, is it weeds out
the people who just want a quick job. Yeah. You know, it also gives you a quality. Have we gotten somebody
that was really good that we skipped the process? Absolutely. We've had some people who are like, hey,
this guy's going to get picked up.
We need to rush through the process.
But for the most part, we stick to it.
Yeah, that team thing also gives you a good excuse
not to hire liberals.
You know what I mean?
You can do your team is just going to be like,
we don't philosophically agree with this person.
We have, we have had someone that gave an answer in the,
not whether Republican or Democrat, whatever.
I'm as pretty down the middle as you can get to be a 33-year-old white man in
Alabama. But you, we have had some people that gave answers that were extreme politically
on both sides. I don't want either one of those people. Yeah. Yeah, I agree. You may have to edit that
out, but, you know. No, I'm, dude, I'm with you. I think, I don't care. I don't care what you
believe. I support the fact that you can believe what you can believe, but don't bring the BS into
my office, you know. Yeah. I also, you know, my, my, when I'm, I'm with you, I'm with you there.
This is one of the ones that I struggle with is like, because I, because I don't, I honestly
don't care what your political affiliation is or, or your affiliation with anything, right?
I mean, Jesus, I'd hire a Patriots. I don't. I don't either. Um, Steve. Yeah. You know, but I have
Alabama fans at work. Yeah, but you got to, you know, I guess my, my, you're trying to find people.
who don't take themselves and their viewpoints too seriously.
You want, you know, that's kind of one of the things that I really like about our current team,
you know, and we're up to eight people, including me now.
We hired two account managers on Monday, or they started with Killer Hunt Monday.
We don't have an office, though.
So I was talking about this because someone said to me, like, how the hell do you have all
these people?
And I said, I don't have an office.
I don't pay rent.
It's called www.
W.ryanhanleypodcast.com.
Yeah, yeah.
I have people all over the place.
I have a podcast that subsidizes my agency, partially.
I have, I don't have an office.
I don't have to pay for, think about,
think about your total bill for your office.
I don't pay any of that.
Zero, nothing.
So, you know, yes, I pay for people.
You know, yes, I had this little setup.
It's about, it's probably about $1,500 that everyone,
gets when they start dual monitors, computer, camera headset, you know, they get this little,
so it's $1,500, but that's one time, bam, that goes out. We track that. That goes out to everybody.
We have that like all set up on Amazon. But then that's it. I mean, a couple, a couple 15 bucks here,
20 bucks here for like different, different services that we use. But I mean, the cost, not having an
office, as much as I do miss not having an office sometimes, I do. Um,
It has allowed me to add, like legitimately, I was doing the math.
It has allowed me to add two people that I couldn't have if I had an office.
I'd have two less people if I had an office.
You're in New York because I'm in Alabama.
So it's a little, you know, it's a little different, right?
You would be paying a lot more for the office that I have than I am.
Before anything, I'd probably be paying $17 to $3,000 a month in rent for a decent office space.
17 would be like little shady everyone go be be out the door by five you know
3,000 would be you know nice office park in one of the suburbs.
Um, and then all the other costs that come with it.
Electric, uh, Wi-Fi, internet, you know, all the all utilities, everything that you'd
have to pay as part of your rent in addition to, you know, just all the stuff to, to put in
there. Not having that basically gets me two extra people. And yeah, a big thing we have is like just
freaking like snacks and office supplies like printer ink and crap like that, you know, that has been
a big, you know, like that's like number three on my P&L of like the most expensive thing is just like,
I think I order something from Amazon every single day that we need in the office. You know,
I went to the grocery store this morning and spent 70 bucks on snacks and drinks and stuff for the office.
What are you printing?
We don't print a lot.
I just use that.
Every now and then, we don't print much.
In fact, I will purposely sometimes not by printer ink when the printer's low to encourage my people not to print.
Every now and then we have something we have to print.
But usually it's because we're pretty heavily agency built.
sometimes we have to print stuff and melt to clients.
Yeah.
I,
we could completely operate without paper, completely.
The only time we have to is,
so I,
so we just finished getting licensed,
licensed in the continental United States.
So we're within,
by end of this week, we will have,
we'll be licensed in 48 states.
Awesome.
I mean, I want to give a shout out to Ilsa, which I never know.
The insurance.
It's freaking awesome.
Yeah, insurance licensing service.
I don't know what the Ilsa stands for, but it's ILSA.
And if it wasn't for them, this wouldn't have happened.
This is like my thank you speech at the Emmys.
Like, if it wasn't for Ilsa, this would not have happened.
They just thought literally I get an email.
They're like, sign this and I got to print something out and sign it.
I scan it and send it back to them and then sign this.
and that's the only thing legitimately that I've had to print in months and months
are all these forms that go along with getting licensed in all these states.
So it's been that part.
They're killer, man.
Yeah.
Are they owned by Easy Links?
No, they did just get bought.
No, Resource Pro, I think, just bought them.
Their logo is eerily similar to Easy Links logo.
Yeah, yeah.
I've noticed that.
Yeah, we started using them.
Actually, I heard you mention them on the podcast,
because that's something that, you know, so, you know, Tim Ferriss talks about leaving your business for a month abruptly.
And then everything that breaks, it shows you what you need to fix.
And then also you knowing that you're leaving, it leads to you creating processes around that you otherwise wouldn't have.
And I went out on this two-month paternity leave, even though Joe Rogan thinks paternity leave is for whims.
And I had to think about a lot of that stuff.
It could be an awesome paternity leave and you could be a wimp.
I mean, both of those things could be true at the same time.
Yeah.
So when I got back from the leave, I took my entire team to lunch and one of my guys was like,
so what did you think about Joe Rogan saying that paternity leave was for wimps?
And I was like, when did he say that?
It's like, while you were out, I was like, I mean, the fact that I can walk away and this bad boy still run and make me money while I'm not here is not that wimpy.
But anyway, that was one of the things is I was like, crap, what?
happens if like somebody's license comes up and they need to handle it. So I reached out the Ilsa.
And it was a little clunky in the beginning, but we kind of got things going and it's good.
Yeah, I've kind of found that with them is that like the, you know, and I don't necessarily think
it's their fault. I think just this process of licensing and getting all the documents.
Like it takes, there's a little bit of like ramp up to kind of like, here's all my stuff.
Okay, they sort through it. What do you have? What don't we have? You know, but like one of the things
that they helped school me to was like filing with the secretary of states of the different
states is like when you get licensed a lot of people just get licensed and they're like,
oh, I'm good, right? Hey, I'm licensed. Well, yeah, kind of. But in most states, not every state,
but in most states, if you don't also file with the secretary of state's office that you are
operating in the state, you can get fines, you can have tax levies, there's all kinds of different stuff.
You know, I've, I mean, this is, I've mentioned this before, and I think you have too.
But I'm just an enormous proponent of as a leader of having the self-awareness to understand
what you're good at and what you're not good at and then outsource everything else,
which is a tough thing to do because you're spending money, right?
I mean, to outsource stuff costs money.
There's no doubt.
But in the back end, if I were spending the time to have to figure out how to get licensed
in every one of these states and then setting up mechanisms,
somehow in my agency to monitor when something is due. What needs to be, oh my God. Now, do I pay a fee for
that? Yes. But it is freaking nice to be able to email. It's like 25 bucks. Yeah. I mean, you know,
when you're doing that many states, there's a fee. They're, you know, they're getting paid for what they're doing.
There's no doubt. But that being said, I now have a person, Amanda, that when I have a problem, I just email
Amanda. And I go, hey, Amanda, this is happening. What's up? And she's like, oh, we got that.
Don't worry about it. Or, hey, we just need to sign something. I have zero brain cycles
associated with licensing other than every other year. I need to do my, my, my, my C.E.
so that I can re-up my New York license. Like, outside of that, I don't have to do anything else.
And that to me. One, it's like, too, you know, you and I have a mutual friend. I'm not going to say, say they're
name that had a producer that did their CE but did not renew the license and wrote business
for like a year and a half and didn't say anything before anybody noticed and had to like self
report and it turned into this whole cluster. That's like whatever I can pay to keep that from
happening short of putting myself out of business like I will do that. Yeah. Dude, I completely agree.
And, you know, it's just, these are the kind of things that I feel like, you know, it's just, it's, you really, you really don't want to be figuring out how to do this stuff. And I get it. Not, not, probably not many people listening to this are in multiple states or or are in as many states as maybe I or you are. But, you know, so it may not be that big a deal. But, you know, if you're just in one state and, you know, whatever, it's probably a lot easier just to.
to manage it in-house and that don't make sense.
But I can't help but believe that the days of the community-based single-state independent
agency are waning.
And what I mean by that is that's not a knock on the independent agency system at all.
I just don't know that we can be successful being a local general.
list moving into the future.
Can a local generalist sustain?
You know, we have to put all the caveats in there.
Can a local generalist sustain?
Yes, they can.
Are they going on the business?
No.
But could you spin up a local generalist agency?
Because this is my bellwether because we have a major talent transition that's happening.
Right.
We have an entire generation, really the first broad spectrum generation of insurance agents
in this country are phasing out, right?
like this is a new thing for our industry.
Like other industries have had multiple iterations.
We really, you know, I know there's third and four generations.
And those same people want to shit on you for saying what you just said,
but they're the ones selling the hub.
They're the ones selling to the big boy.
They're not selling to the other small independent down the street.
You can't have your cake and eat it too.
I know.
You know, that's one of my big beefs is I was talking to this.
I was talking to somebody at an event.
I had like four weeks in a row where I was on the road for different events that I was doing this fall.
And I was talking to somebody.
And I can't remember who it was or where I was.
So I apologize for this being so ambiguous.
But in one sentence, they were questioning a comment that I made on stage similar to what I'm saying.
And the next sentence, they brought up the fact that they were selling to like a big roll up.
And I was like, hmm, let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's let's
Let's just dissect this for a second.
So you're, you're giving me crap.
And he wasn't really giving me crap, but he was strongly questioning the merits of my
argument related to this comment that you couldn't spend up a local generalist community agency
and, you know, that's kind of stuff.
And, you know, saying, right?
Not taking into account the fact when you're speaking, you have to take a hard line on something,
right?
Yeah.
Also, I can give two flying shits about what anyone thinks who's on the floor because fuck them,
you know.
So I have the microphone.
I get to say what I want.
Yeah. So I got the bag, right? Yeah. Yeah. So also, you know, look, that's my perspective. So that's what it is. That'll be said, I'm fine with him questioning. And I was interested in his take. And I was interested in why he thought you could do that despite the fact that all evidence and all statistics would point otherwise. But then to take such a hard line on that old school tact and then to tell me that you're selling to a big roll up is like,
that just feels kind of smart me to me because it's basically what you're saying is
it can only be done the way I did it, even though I don't think that's possible.
But when you do, screw all you guys.
I'm I'm cashing out for the biggest nut I can get and rolling up into all the organizations
that are going to end up taking all your lunch when they backdoor and advertise
into your little community and create all the mechanisms as to why you can't build
a local community today.
So, you know, to me it's just.
It's like the people that post.
on Facebook that Facebook is ruining the world.
It's what it is, you know?
It's like social media is going to be the death of America.
By God, I'm not deleting my account.
That's how I reach my people.
I feel like in general, and, you know, I talk to some of my friends about this stuff,
but like I feel like in general, we're just living through like a big idiot test right now.
Like I feel like, I feel like God and the angels.
or whoever is up there doing whatever.
It's like, you know what?
They're probably scared and come down.
Let's play a little game.
Let's create all these nonsensical,
counterintuitive arguments.
Let's just throw all this nonsense out there
and see what these morons believe and do.
But, and you know, back to the Main Street Generalist,
you know, I don't think there's anything wrong with being a Main Street
generalist.
I don't think that, you know, I did a talk two weeks ago to NAFA, which is like, for those of you listening, P&C that may not be familiar, it's like the big eye of life insurance essentially.
Yeah, yeah.
State Association of life insurance.
And the talk was on embedded insurance or the kind of the center of my talk was on this embedded insurance trend that's coming, which I think is partly one of the biggest threats to the Main Street Generalist and also one of the biggest opportunities for the Main Street Generalists.
And I was kind of given this talking to a lot of the people in the room.
And I'm saying this because I asked and nobody raised their hand,
had never even heard of the term embedded insurance.
And what I told them and I said,
I'm not saying that independent agents are going away.
And I'm saying this towards the main street generalist.
Your target client base is going to get smaller and smaller and smaller,
is what I'm saying.
You're not going to be able to grow like you grew.
Are there exceptions?
Yes.
Are there people that are going to DM me after, you know,
We did it. Awesome. Like a lot of those people are my friends, but I think people need to be looking outside of that. And I tell people every single day, I've said it twice today. Portal has no interest in being the Main Street agency. That's not what we're trying to do. Yeah. If you have a problem with this, definitely DM Bradley. Don't DM me, because I could give two of your opinion. I will give you the political correct answer. It's not that I don't care. I just, look, I,
Here's what I'll tell you.
I don't see embedded insurance as an opportunity for Main Street General Estate Agency
because I don't think they're going to invest.
It's too big of a game.
It takes too much time, capital.
I think what I do, I agree with your first statement that embedded insurance is the largest,
it is the biggest.
It's the first concept that I've seen where I've said this could actually disrupt
a large portion of the independent insurance industry.
And here's why I believe that.
Because embedded insurance as a concept.
And I'm broad stroking, but just to give anyone who is also unfamiliar with the topic what we're talking about.
Embedded insurance is the idea that either inside a platform or inside a product, insurance happens natively.
Okay.
Inside a product would be Tesla sells you a car and a little smuggy box that you click when you're checking out is,
Do you want Tesla insurance to go with this for $107 a month?
Boom.
That's embedded insurance.
It's part of the checkout process,
just like adding in a larger screen or the ability to play asteroids on your game
counsel or whatever.
I haven't bought a Tesla yet.
And it's not just Tesla.
Toyota is doing this right.
Toyota, whatever.
I wouldn't be surprised someday purchasing a new home this doesn't happen or it happens
with a lot of products today, drones, right?
There are all these different things where embedded insurance is.
is starting to leak in. It's huge in other parts of the world. It is coming and it's coming
like a freight train to the United States. Now, we have natural governors to that based on the 50
state regulation system that we have, the state-based regulation system. Some of the lobbyists
and special interest groups obviously are not going to let that happen. So there's a bunch of things
that we have that will slow it, but it's coming. It's absolutely coming. So that's embedded in a product.
embedded in a platform would be like, I use Square for Business to run my restaurant and Square every time I log in says,
hey, want a better business quote? Click this button and we'll rate compare you against five companies
and right inside a platform that you use every single day, they're pushing insurance.
Okay. So why do I think that this is the first real disruptive case in our industry is that it doesn't allow business.
insurance to get to the local level.
That's what scares the shit out of me about it.
It's why I've done a lot of the things that I've done and why, you know, we're broad
spectrum, national.
And we suffer a lot of pain.
And I've talked about it.
We pay a hefty price in the early days of our agency for going the route we did.
But I saw very early, or at least I believe, whether this happens or not, I believe there
will be a day where a lot of business, a lot of personal insurance, a lot of personal insurance,
lot of small business insurance, it just will never get down to our level. Someone will sign up for
their LLC and they'll already have purchased business insurance. And I know like the major,
whatever that one is, a legal Zoom has it, right? These things are going to progress.
They're going to become more natural, more native, right? People are going to get more comfortable
doing it that way. People are going to get more comfortable doing it. And as they sign up for these
services and it's a button click to add insurance, they're going to do it. And more and more
more people are going to do it. And now all of a sudden, you're like, hey, I'm the local agency.
And they're like, yeah, I already got coverage here. And I got coverage here. And you're like,
you just started your business. You should have come to me. And they're like, yeah, but it was a button
click with legal zoom. And it was a hundred bucks. And I figured I'd just get it done. And now,
you know, now you got to wedge them out and talk to them. That to me is a major.
And guess what? Convenience beats price. Yeah. 98% of the time. Yeah. Yeah.
You know, and there's people listening to this.
You know, I'm hearing Scott Howell in my head right now saying,
well, what about retention?
Yep.
And that's true.
Like one of the things a lot of these DTCs have not figured out yet is a retention piece.
That's where the agent comes in a relationship.
But the problem is, is if the deal never makes it to you,
then that disrupts that entire process where you can no longer sell the way that you've always sold.
Yep.
You know, at the end, like insurance is not the thing.
Like there's not very many people wake up in the morning and say, man, I'm really glad I have good coverage.
It's the thing that gets you to the thing.
I've always said that, you know, we do one of our niches on personal lines are new homebuyers.
And one of the things that I think separates us from some of the people around here is we recognize that the insurance is not the crescendo moment of the home buying process.
It's the thing that gets you to the thing.
And one thing that I love about the embedded insurance movement is it's the physical iteration of that.
Right. It's the physical presence of this is just insurance to get you there.
Let me move this obstacle out of your way.
I do think there is an opportunity. Yeah, I think there is an opportunity for people to,
as long as they open up their minds to it and get comfortable with it.
Because like just to be completely honest with you, like, I'm working on an embedded insurance
play right now. I've been working on a year. It's about to come to fruition.
If we're able to pull it off, it will be the single biggest thing I've ever done in insurance.
if my broke ass can figure it out and do it.
And I know I probably have some built-in advantages with the podcast thing.
I get that.
But like if I can do it with the very, very, very small amount of money that I started my agency with,
I think anybody can figure it out.
What's up, guys?
Sorry to take you away from the episode.
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Peace.
Let's get back to the episode.
No, it is nothing to do with that.
That's, you're completely off.
It has to do with the fact that you're a hustler, you're smart,
you're a business developer, you're a networker.
That's how you got that done.
So when I think about that.
But anybody can do that.
Yeah, but look,
there's a reason that you keep getting asked back to the same conferences
to speak on relatively the same topics over and over and over again.
And it's because of there are a few core concepts that most business owners in general,
not just independent insurance agents do not get, which is find out what you're good at and
get out of the way for everything else.
So what happens is you have agency owners who are also chief service officer and chief revenue
officer and chief insurance officer and chief marketing officer and chief sales officer.
And nothing ever, nothing big ever gets done.
And they're constantly, I'm doing air quotes, even though everyone can't see me.
at least on my podcast, they're always busy.
I hate being busy because, and there's two reasons for that.
One, it means I'm working on shit that I didn't choose to work on.
In most cases, obviously sometimes you pick a project that makes you busy.
But in most cases, being busy means you're doing shit other people need done,
not stuff you want to get done.
And two, it limits your ability for serendipity, right?
That random phone call, that opportunity, that conference,
that, hey, you know, I got this ticket to this thing and there's going to be people there
that you should network with and you're like, oh, I'm too busy. I can't go so you don't go.
And so much of that, in my opinion, comes down to like, I've had people question the fact that I have
an operations manager, right? And she was my very first hire. Now, I hired her to be an AM,
immediately realized that she was not, her skills, even though she could have been a great account
manager. She was just a different skill set, right? She was a D.
all the way across just driver, get shit done, task oriented, like hard charger, smart.
So I just said, I'm making you an account manager. And I've had people for the last year go,
you're too small, you're too new. That's shit you should be doing. You're wasting money.
And I'm like, really a vulnerability of themselves. That's their insecurities talking because they don't
have that person. And they're going, I didn't hire my first person until I had a million dollars in
premium. And I'm like, well, then you're an asshole. I don't what I'm supposed to tell you.
Like I don't know what I mean? It also took you eight years, Gerald. Yeah. My timeline, I am, I am,
I, you know what I mean? Like, I am not going to be happy if I hit my first million in revenue a decade
into the business. That's, that is going to, that will be a complete and utter fail for me.
If that's the case. So like, I, I just, I look at, I look at these things and I'm like, yes,
do I have to sacrifice? Like, I don't take a salary out of the business. Now, granted, I am, I am
blessed similar to you. And then I have this podcast. I have some sponsors. I'm able to pay some bills
with that. You know, have a little walking around cash. We also have wives that are awesome too.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. It helps that my wife is a is a baller blocker, you know. So, um, but I just,
dude, I just think like we, we got to as leaders. We have to start getting out of our own way.
Have some self-awareness. And if you need help with it, sit down with someone and say like,
what am I good at? And what am I not good at? And then hire those things.
things.
With your team, there's no better people to answer than the people that work for you.
Now you're kind of coming back full circle to the delegation thing.
Yep.
So the hardest, when you said that earlier, but we moved on and you chance to say it,
I'm a big delegator.
I always say automate, outsource delegate, one of those three.
The hardest thing I think to delegate are the things that you're not good at, but you like doing.
That's, to me, that's when you can really scale your agency.
And, like, people ask me all the time, like, how do you do everything you're doing?
like I've literally outsourced and delegated everything.
Yeah.
You know, like even down to when we pick up a new carrier
and they want to do the agency owner like Zoom call,
they talked about the product.
I get either Kenneth, my main account manager or a VA just to do that call
and send me the high points.
Yeah.
Hopefully they turn the camera off.
And they're not acting like me.
But like I do like like I'm literally every single thing in my day,
I'm like, okay, how can I take this and outsource it so I don't have to do it.
Yeah.
You know.
And that.
And I'm not perfect.
I'm not bragging.
No, no.
No.
Dude, what that allows you to do is find work, nurture for a year, the largest
deal of your career, which probably won't be the largest forever, right?
I mean, this will be a stepping stone to the next one to the next one.
So by getting all that crap off.
your plate that's important, but you shouldn't be doing, right? Like, like, like,
you shouldn't be doing that stuff. By getting that off your plate, you're able to go bring in a
deal that changes the nature of your, of your agency. It changes the whole level that you're
playing at. And if you're, if you were in the weeds, hawking home and autos, because you're the,
you're the best salesperson in your agency and you got to thump your chest every day.
Like, I think that's perfectly fine. But that's, that's, that's, that's,
little fiefdom stuff. If you want to have a kingdom, if you want to be that if you want to grow
your empire, you have to work on bigger deals. You have to work on bigger fish.
You can't. And that doesn't just mean middle market. It could. Right. It could mean one big deal,
like from an insurance perspective or it could mean a big referral partner or it could mean nurturing
like like girl he's got a great story about nurturing Central and he had called him for all these
years. And then he went on Carler's podcast. And then he had more calls.
and then he was able to bring into his agency a carrier that was incredibly important to them.
You know?
So it's like it's stuff like that that we have, those things don't happen if you are also doing
all the little shit in your agency.
Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
Well, or a good example is, so we went to Hartford two, three weeks ago.
That's right.
And I did a podcast in the Medicare space.
my buddy Justin has a podcast over there. And we were just talking about, we were talking about
putting yourself in positions to succeed while also not having an agenda when you do that.
Because I think people sometimes miss those two pieces like, yeah, they'll put their self
at the right table. But then when they get there, they'll be so salesy and right hooky that it turns
everybody off. You know, an example I gave is, you know, I went to Hartford with no agenda whatsoever to
meet anyone. Now I happen to know that this program director is going to be there. This person's
going to be there. This person's going to be there. This person's going to be there. And what it does,
it allows you to do things like that that then set you up for future success because you put yourself
in that position. If nothing else, just that, you know. So yeah. Yeah. I think I just, you know,
My concern for our independent agency brothers and sisters is that if I think more than ever,
and I'm sure this has been said for 40 years and all the gray hairs are going to go,
I were talking about that in 1982 and we got the fax machine.
But like, I think more than ever the internet has created a situation where we have to think bigger.
We have to.
Maybe that means going from 50 miles to the entire,
your agency to the entire state.
Or maybe it means moving into small commercial from purse lines only or vice versa or
or bring you know, purchasing a small book to get another carrier that you need and just
thinking bigger or extending to a producer or or to a specialist in an area.
Like I think we really have to start thinking bigger than just show up and write insurance
every day because from Albany, New York, I can drop a pin.
in your town and market to your people and they will not know the difference between you and me.
And then talk about that.
Right.
And then there's 50 and there's 50 of me, right?
There's other independence like me doing the same thing.
There's all the nationals, all the carriers, right?
Liberty, who's supposed to be a friend of the independence has decided to launch 200 local
locations and compete directly with us.
Like, you know what I mean?
like, and I don't necessarily care about that.
I'm just saying this is happening and it's not going to stop and where nobody could
break into your backyard even 10 years ago, right?
So think 2011, even though yet the internet existed and YouTube and Google had some ads
and Facebook, you know, whatever, no one could break into your backyard even a decade ago.
Nobody could.
No one could get into your town.
If you had your signs up and had been there for any amount of time, nobody could break.
You had that town on lockdown. Today, that is just simply not the case. It just isn't.
Oh, it can be taken from you before you even realize it's at risk. Yeah. And, you know, there was two things that I learned. So my last two years when I was captive was me testing things to set up to open portal. I've never really talked about this. There's two things that I learned that last two years. And what's coincidentally, both things contradicts something that I think the majority of independent agents believe.
The first one is you have to be in the neighborhood.
You have to be the hometown agent.
Everybody has to know you, that sort of thing, right?
So I hit a stride with Facebook ads my last two years.
This was pre Zuckerberg testifying to Congress and them shutting the platform down,
essentially, from an advertising standpoint.
And I was running ads in Huntsville, which is where Scott is, six hours north,
it was before I knew Scott.
and I was writing business like my hair was on fire to use a Scott term.
And you know how many people asked where are you located or had a problem with the fact
that I was six hours south of them, literally zero.
Okay, so that's myth number one busted.
Oh, wow.
With this tool, I can advertise anywhere.
And the people don't, like, wait, if I's, all I have to do solve their problem.
they don't care that I'm not down the street from their house.
Okay, that's number one.
Number two was I was with a company called Alpha,
which is a captive Alabama's version of Farm Bureau.
Gotcha.
I didn't brand Alpha.
I branded myself.
I branded Sarah Land Insurance,
which is where I was located.
Nobody knew they were with Alpha.
Like they never asked,
what carrier am I with?
Or, oh, so what company do you?
It was like, oh, I'm buying from Bradley.
by them from Sierra Land Insurance.
So I branded myself, not the carrier.
And to me, that was two big lessons I learned that kind of play into this.
Like, people don't care.
Like, all they want you to do is solve their problem, you know?
Dude, yesterday we wrote, yesterday we wrote an account in Oregon, an account in New Jersey,
and an account in Maryland.
Guess how, guess how big of a deal it was that we're low, that our headquarters is in Troy, New York.
They didn't care.
They don't even ask.
They don't care.
They literally.
And they don't care what carry you put them with.
Don't care.
Like they don't care.
Don't care.
And that's not to say that it doesn't matter.
I want to trust that you're asking, acting.
Yeah.
It's not that that is not to say that the carry doesn't matter because the carrier does matter.
Quality coverage matters.
The paper matter.
I get all you super nerds and CPCUs.
You want to pick every comma.
And, you know, but to the customer, you know what they got.
They got a phone call immediately.
after they filled out of form, they got their problems solved within a few minutes,
and they got the insurance covers they need to do whatever the hell they called us for in the
first place. And that's the game. In my opinion, granted, when you're prospecting,
middle market, you're doing the killing commercial thing, that's a little different, right? You
are targeting customers you want to work with that you think you have a solution for who can
help, much different thing. We call this business rogue select, 25,000 and premium
or less. These people do not care. They have an insurance problem. It is our job to solve that
problem. It is not our job to be their best friend. I'm not sending them a basket of cupcakes or whatever.
We're going to be professional. We're going to do the right thing by them. We're going to service them
well when they need it. And we're to solve their problem. That is in a timely manner. And dude,
that's the thing. I had a guy fill out a form on our website at, uh, at, oh shit. It was like,
it was in the afternoon one day. And we just missed it. We just didn't get to it right away.
And the next day, I saw that we hadn't reached out to him. So I called him at like 10.30.
So this is 3 p.m. 10. 30. I'm like, I'm so sorry. It took us so long to get back to you.
He goes, you, he was, you kidding? He had kind of a country accent. I can't do it.
You know, he's like, are you kidding me?
Like, I've reached out to like four other agencies.
You're the only person I've heard back from.
Like, that to me is the big opportunity.
Everyone listening to this call, to this podcast is not going to call their leads back in a timely manner.
You're just not.
Guys, if you did, Bradley and I wouldn't have businesses, right?
So like, like the fact that our industry as a whole thinks weeks are an acceptable time period to get back to people, to me, just simply getting back to
them in a few minutes just changes the whole conversation. They are blown away. They are,
if we get back to somebody within an hour, they are like, oh my God, who are you? What is this magic
that you're doing that you got back to you so soon? You know, I'm like, it's crazy. So you just
detailed exactly why I stay in the insurance industry. So everybody that I have that's in
another industry. I have a friend that's in the marketing, marketing industry, and he has a printing
company. He does, like, big print jobs and concert posters, things like that, and really cool guy.
He comes over my office last week. He did a print thing for us. And he was like, so tell me what
you're working on. And I kind of told him a couple of my projects. You know, he's like, huh,
so you're really serious about this insurance thing, aren't you? It's like, why not like going to
another industry? So I was like, dude, I was like, the white space in this industry by white
I mean, the gap is so large that you can be a crappy businessman and be Uber successful.
Yeah.
Like just doing the bare minimum a lot of times is better than what everybody else does, you know.
Yeah.
And I give everyone listening, I hope you realize that when I refer to you specifically,
I'm sure it's not actually you because you're taking the time to listen to Bradley and I.
Yeah, it just, it is.
And I think, you know, use what we're saying.
as keys that you can work off of to say, look, like, you're listening to this show,
which means that you are in some capacity, probably light years ahead of most of the people
that you would have to work against, including, you know, other captives, other independence,
certainly carrier people, certainly digital brokers who are some of the worst at this.
And, you know, take this as opportunity.
Oh, dude, I went, I went through the intake process with a digital broker,
recently. And I'm not going to say who it is because I'm friendly with one of the founders.
And they just effed it up. Like it was just awful. And they positioned themselves. And granted,
I'm in a coastal area, which is what I was testing to see like, okay, did that, you know what I mean?
And it just proves the point that you and I have talked about, like a lot of these insure techs,
like all they're good at is the easy stuff. It's the more the stuff on the outskirts where the real
problems are that they don't do well. And it's like I go to this whole buying process.
And it was through like a chat thing.
And the guy's like, and it was a guy.
It wasn't a robot.
He was like ready for me to buy.
And I'm like, okay, does this include when?
Oh, hang on, let me see.
And it was three days.
And he emails me back.
He's like, oh, yeah, sorry, there's no wind on this.
And I'm like, what's supposed to be so great about this?
Yeah.
And then they're required for like $50 million.
Yeah, it, you know, it is, you know, you know,
I don't know how to say this, but being in the where rogue is going, where we're going,
I've had the opportunity to have quite a few conversations with digital brokers,
people who have invested in digital brokers, just that whole space.
And what I found, and this is why our mantra is no customer left behind,
is that they have figured out the technology piece.
They just have no clue about insurance in most cases.
you know, they have, they know insurance and they can't figure out the tech.
And there is an incredible amount, I'll use your term, white space for the agencies,
for the carriers, for anyone who can bridge that gap, who can be both things,
who can be both a great insurance agent and a great technologist.
That is incredibly rare in our space.
And that is, that is like the new frontier, are the,
these hybrid professionals or organizations who are both good agents and stewards of an agency,
as well as technologists, because, dude, the easy stuff is so easy.
Like, you know, I was looking at this company layer the other day because I consider them
a competitor of sorts.
And, dude, just they got a couple carriers you can rate quote bind with, which is great,
but nothing special.
if it doesn't fit those, what happens to it?
Nothing.
And you're like, oh, that's not really spectacular to me.
That's kind of freaking boring to me, actually.
And nothing against them, I'm sure they'll improve.
But I just was like, this is a company I just saw.
And I only used them because they just had a,
they just raised 10 million bucks, right?
So I'm like, wow, there is someone out there willing to give a company
$10 million just because they can rate, quote, bind,
Main Street, bought this.
business online. That's the, that is the bar, my friends, for insurance and technology mashing
together. I just, to me, that means that we have just started to scratch the service on what's
possible. And what cracks me up, I bet you, I bet you, especially in commercial, this is the case.
When you go to bind it, you have to have a one day in the future effect date.
Yeah. That's because it's not API. It's because they have somebody on
the other end that actually is physically binding it. It's just an agency with a slick front end is all
it is. Yeah. Yeah. It's, you know, look, I'm not saying you can't make a boat ton,
a boat load of money that way. Yeah. Or that it's a bad business model. Get after it. I think all I'm
trying to convey, and I, you know, and I know you are too, is that there is so much opportunity.
I just no longer believe that opportunity exists in owning the local market.
I'm not saying that can't be one of your value propositions,
but if that's what you're hanging your hat on moving forward
and you're not coming up with a statewide vertical
or a big time referral partnership with a multi-year contract or whatever,
I feel like you are creating a major vulnerability in your agency.
Well, it's like all these direct-to-consumer insured texts, you know, they all to some
degree subscribe to the mantra of, we save you money because we don't have to pay agents 15%
when in reality, so there's an insure tech, some of us know of that's direct-to-consumer,
no agents, that sort of thing. Somehow they're speaking at insurance agent conferences,
but that's beside the point. I pressed one of the founders. It's like, no, why, like,
I pressed like, why not agents?
Like, why not do that too?
And then I eventually got the real answer, which is, we don't have the infrastructure to
handle all the appointments.
Yeah.
Which is the real reason a lot of them try the directed consumer thing first before going
with agents.
And then you see them do the kind of in the middle, which is, hey, we're going to, you know,
we're going to use Agent Arrow and some of these MGAs.
And that's how you get actually.
We're going to let them handle the burden of handling the.
agent appointments. And then eventually, I'll eliminate, they all come back. And okay, now we're
doing direct. Sorry about all the, sorry about the fact that we were an abusive spouse three years
ago and we were nasty to you, but we want you back now. Like that's, that's the, that's the play
right there. You know, Ken Insurance is pounding Florida right now. And like, I'm friends with the
founder on, on LinkedIn. And Gary Vaynerchuk is one of the biggest investors in Ken.
And I'm sitting here in his DMs like, like you are royally effing up right now by not working
with agents because your customer acquisition cost is high.
By the way, Ken was not the one I was talking to,
but your customer acquisition costs is high
and you're pissing off every single agent
where because you want property in Florida,
you could solve a huge problem for every single agent
in the state of Florida.
Yeah.
Yeah, you know how you solve the appointment process?
An Excel spreadsheet to start.
That's all you need.
Hey, send me your, send me your copy of your license.
and then just once a day notify the state of the new agencies that you're appointed.
Like this, I get it.
I get that it seems overwhelming.
I just, you know, again, you got to remember that when you're given a boatload of money,
these guys have major, major pressure on them.
And you have someone, and I'm not saying that he does,
but you have people like Gary Vaynerchuk who are investing in your company,
they're going to ask questions like, have you tried the,
the least expensive option or the seemingly least expensive option first.
No, we went right to agents.
Man, you're not really taking care of our money because you could have figured it out
by going direct and you didn't.
So this is what this is why it happens.
It doesn't it's not some nefarious, you know, again, this is, I think this same thing about
about lefties, right?
Like they're trying to do their best.
They're just misinformed.
So they, you know, these people think face value.
If we just go direct.
It's a second to figure out what you were saying lefties.
Yeah, that's going to be the cheap.
Left handed batters?
What are you talking about?
That's going to be the cheapest, right?
If I just go direct, that's the cheapest.
And then you go, oh, that's not the cheapest.
We'll go through MGA's.
That's the cheapest.
And you try that.
And you're like, oh, we're still not getting any volume.
Well, I guess now we'll do major appointment.
We'll go to Marsh.
Man, if we just get Marsh, we're good.
And they get Marsh and they go, ah, well, they already have 400 other appointments.
So we're not getting.
we're only getting limited flow from them.
And mostly it's bad, it's the bad shit that they don't want to send it.
Well, now we got to go to independence.
And then all of a sudden they start to get the flow.
But if they don't go through that waterfall, you know, they're not,
they have to report to a board and tell them why they've made these decisions.
And a lot of times it's just if they don't cycle through all those decisions,
then they somehow are not being a good steward of that business.
And, you know, so if you think about it on the surface.
Yeah.
Yeah.
on the surface, it appears that agents are the least attractive option, right?
When in reality, you know, theoretically speaking, the way an insurance company makes money
is writing the correct clients, that way they can maximize profitability and that premium, right?
You're not going to get that with the direct and consumer.
I don't care how good your targeting is, and this is coming from a marketing person,
you're still going to have business that gets bound that's not your target client.
Whereas if you work with good independent agents, they are going to put you,
with the correct carrier for your risk.
They're not going to try to fit something into a box that doesn't belong there,
generally speaking.
Yeah, part of my pitch to the VCs that I've been talking to is that by using humans,
we will probably write 20% less than we would if we just had a direct button.
But what I believe on the back end is I'll get 40% back in retention.
Because none of these guys can crack 40% retention.
That's the little secret.
The little dirty little secret, all these companies, all these companies that are getting
tens of millions of dollars, IPO in.
Except for Goosehead, they can't crack 40 to 45% retention.
They can't crack it.
None of them.
They can't figure it out.
As fast they get them in, they go out the back.
So it's all about acquisition, blow your numbers up as big as you can, sell to a
P-E, IPO, whatever you got to do to recapitalize at a bigger number.
but they're not making money and they can't crack 40% retention.
The reason is because they don't respect the humans, all of us.
So part of my pitch is, and look, I haven't got VC funded yet because no one believes
me that this is true, but I will eventually find the right partner for us.
And it's, I'm going to give up 20% in acquisition because I want a human to spend
two minutes on the phone with somebody at a minimum to figure out if they're the real deal
or if it's nonsense.
You know, if it's 20 minutes, that's fine.
I don't mean only two minutes.
I just mean at least kind of.
But I believe that by doing that
and having humans involved in the process throughout,
we'll get that back and be able to push standard independent agency
retention rates to 84% or higher.
And if I, as a digital brokerage, can produce 84% retention,
we're going to slay.
Like, we'll be Scrooge McDucking into my bat of gold.
coins or maybe Bitcoins, right? And because retention is the whole game. We all know that.
And, you know, I just think that's what put that, that's what has always put us as the
mechanism for selling insurance. You just, you know, it is very difficult to sell people
who have never lived our life on why that's important.
So one more story and I'll let you go. Yeah. So about a week ago,
my wife wakes me up at 4 a.m.
And she's like, Bradley, your phone just buzzed 23 times.
What's wrong?
Somebody's been in a car accident.
I said, no, I said, I texted Ryan Hanley at 8 p.m. about crypto.
That's probably him responding.
And sure enough, it was every single, which I appreciated it, it was every single crypto.
Ryan thought I should buy one after the other.
Anyway, I thought you would appreciate that.
Well, I wouldn't buy them all, but, you know, you kind of, based on your risk tolerance, there's a portfolio in there for you.
Yeah.
That's my little, my little crypto secret.
Lerna.
VRA, VRA, VRA, VRA, Veracity.
It's, it's, you'll be into it.
Paperview, pay per view technology, patented, pay per view technology.
It's going to revolutionize the video game.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we're doing some, uh, or it could be cool soon, some insurance guys, NFTs.
really soon.
Nice.
Just like a fun little project.
Nice.
They come with,
each one comes with a prize,
some really,
really juicy prizes.
And just to just,
just have fun,
you know.
I'll be honest with you.
If I,
if I were doing a conference right now,
NFTs would be an enormous
part of that conference.
Speaker pictures.
Yeah, like just
there's all,
venue pictures.
different, different NFTs that could get you into special rooms, special one-on-ones with
speakers, like, I think there is so much.
What we're doing.
Yeah.
When will this?
Sorry, I didn't interrupt you.
We've got a delay here.
That's why I keep interrupting you.
Yeah, yeah.
What, when's this going to drop?
I have no idea.
Okay.
So this may have dropped, it may already be over with.
But so what we're going to do is we're going to have a very, very small amount of NFTs.
There are going to be a higher price point.
So we've already sold all our tickets.
for our event, but we've got, I think it's five or six NFTs in Colorado with glove box guys.
Correct.
Yep, correct.
That you won't come to.
Yeah.
I'm,
I'm efforting to be there.
I have not.
I may just show up.
This is going to be a game time decision for me, but yes, I'm trying to be.
That's great.
Hey, we found out today we're going to have access to the Jumbotron.
So our speakers are going to be up on the Jumbotron.
I'm going to get the throw passes on the field.
Yes, yes, you get a tour of the field.
Yeah.
You need to come.
You need to come set Mile High Stadium.
Anyway, so we've got six NFTs.
Each NFT comes with a prize.
So prizes like insurance guys interview, one-on-one coaching with David Carruthers for a year.
Wow.
My marketing team does their content for, I think, six months.
And then one or two more prizes like that.
They also get lifetime access to the conference.
So whoever owns that NFT at the time of the conference, because we're going to do this every year, gets to come.
I see that idea I love that lifetime pass like if you're a conference organizer that
NFT lifetime pass idea is awesome because then it has market value you could sell it like
someone could have that and sell it to me off market and now I just show up you don't
care whoever has the NFT gets in I love that and they can also sell it prior to like it's like
let's say they don't use the coaching with Carruthers they could sell that piece of it as well
and the
and we're going to do a dinner the first night.
So everybody that buys the NFT
gets a dinner with me, Scott,
glove box,
Mick and David and Daniel Song.
When are you?
Cool little intimate dinner.
Yeah, that's awesome.
When are you dropping this NFT thing?
Probably Monday.
So Monday.
So this will not be out by Monday.
Although I could just drop it tomorrow.
But it still may be available.
It may flop.
I mean, it may flop, but I told, so like, no, I told Andy we're on a call earlier.
I was like, I just want to do this to say we're the first ones in the insurance space to do it.
Like that's, even if it flops and nobody buys it.
But the thing is, is so our ticket price is really low.
Our ticket price is $199.
Most of these conferences are in the 700 range.
Yeah.
So that's what the NFT costs.
It's going to be $750.
That's cool.
Assuming Ethereum doesn't skyrocket.
Well, it'll be $750 and $38.
or something like that.
Yeah, it's something stupid like that.
But I got to run, man.
I got another call.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, I didn't even realize what time it was.
Dude, appreciate the hell out of you.
Love what you're doing.
Thank you so much.
It had been too long.
I'm glad you sent me that message.
You just for those this, everyone thinks that there's like some strategic plan on
on guests and stuff.
And I'm always just like, nope, Bradley just text me and said, hey, it's been too long.
Let's talk.
And I was like, done.
Really.
Wednesday, let's go.
Let's do it.
Cool.
Well, hey.
Well, it's funny because, like, things, the things we're working on change so much from week to week that when you and I go a year and a half without doing one of these, it's like there's so much more to talk about.
Yeah.
You know, and I like your show because I can keep it real, you know.
Yeah, I also forget, like, we talk so much offline that I don't know.
It feels like, if you had said we did a podcast month ago, I would have been like, oh, yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, right.
I remember that.
Because you're probably like me.
You don't listen to your show.
Be good.
Appreciate you.
You've got Gena Fliss.
Yeah.
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