Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - David Gritz on Why Bespoke MGAs are Changing Insurance
Episode Date: March 25, 2024Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyUnlock the secrets behind the burgeoning InsurTech industry wi...th David Gritz, the co-founder and managing director of InsurTechNY.✅ Join over 5,000 newsletter subscribers: https://go.ryanhanley.com/**✅ For daily insights and ideas on peak performance: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanhanley**✅ Subscribe to the YouTube show: https://youtube.com/ryanmhanleyConnect with David on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidgritz/Our enlightening conversation peels back the layers of how MGAs and MGUs are revolutionizing insurance, offering targeted risk solutions and reshaping the industry for independent agents and consumers alike.Hear firsthand about the incubator-like MGA lab where innovation thrives, and the transformative impact these entities have on both commercial and personal insurance realms.Navigating the tech sphere's entrepreneurial waters can be a tumultuous journey, one that often serves up equal parts laughter and frustration. We swap stories of customer service mishaps that remind us of the importance of accessibility and efficiency—key ingredients to a successful InsurTech venture.The dialogue veers into the potential of artificial intelligence and the seamless integration that entices even investors to become customers, as exemplified by the ease of policy purchases with companies like Chase. The insurance world is a complex tapestry, but this episode cuts through the intricacy with precision, revealing how aspiring MGA businesses can scale and prosper. From the nitty-gritty of actuarial strategies to the tactical maneuvers of geographic expansion, the keys to a thriving MGA enterprise are laid bare.And for those eager to dip their toes into the InsureTech revolution, we extend a warm invitation to join the vibrant community at InsurTechNY, your launchpad for networking and innovation in the heart of New York.--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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Happy holidays. Want to give your host a gift? Consider subscribing, rating, and reviewing the show this holiday season. It really helps the show grow. From all of us at believe, have a Merry Christmas, everyone, and a happy holiday.
Crude Laboratory in the basement of his home.
Hello, everyone and welcome back to the show. There we have a tremendous episode for you, a conversation with David Gritz, the co-founder and managing director of Insure,
Tech, New York. And David and I have connected over the last few months just chatting about all things in SureTech. And I really enjoy David's perspective. He has worked in the equity space in the past, done a bunch of different things as partners in different development firms. And ultimately, settling here in the insureTech space, he has a unique perspective.
specifically with an expertise in the MGA, MGU space.
And these types of products, these managing general agency products have been, you know,
listed as one of the kind of future trends in our industry, these specific companies
that focus on very niche opportunities, very niche risks, and provide what I believe
are independent agents with a very important set of tools in their tool belt, maybe not
necessarily a tool they're going to use every day, but something that they can have when they
need it or they run into a great opportunity that they can grow in or if it is something that
they want to focus on. And MGs and MGUs are filling the gaps where many traditional carriers
just maybe aren't interested in working in a particular space or don't have necessarily
the capacity to be as micro-focused as they need to be.
And, you know, I agree with David.
And what I wanted to know was where do these companies come from?
How are they created?
What do we need to know as independent agents about MGAs and MGUs?
And InsureTech, New York has their MGA lab.
And David talks a lot about that, which is a place to cultivate, incubate, and nurture
MGAs and MGs as they're released into our space.
So this is a tremendous conversation.
If you are interested, particularly in the commercial space, I think MGA's and
MGOs are going to play a huge role, but this also goes in personal, right?
Property accounts, investment property accounts, et cetera.
There are a lot of MGAs focused on that.
And David gives a lot of great examples and just couldn't be happier to have him on the show
and just beginning to know David and learn more about his expertise.
So, guys, I'm going to leave you with that.
Before we go, just want to give a quick shout out to the new program that I have going,
this free course.
It is how to build a foundation around your YouTube.
channel, the first 10 videos, absolutely free. The first 10 videos that you need to create to grow
your YouTube channel, I don't care if you're an insure tech, you're a carrier, you're an agency.
These are the 10 videos that you need to create in order to build that foundation to start
generating inbound traffic. And if inbound traffic isn't necessary, your goal, just brand awareness.
When someone Googles you, what are they finding? Having a, having these 10 videos as the foundation
of your YouTube channel are going to make it so that when someone Googles you and sees your YouTube
channel, what they find is a clear, accurate, and valuable representation of you and or your brand,
which is what we're trying to do here.
So go to Ryan Hanley.com.
Right on top, you'll see YouTube course.
Click on that, enter your name and email, and you'll get the course for free.
It's 12 videos breaking down these first 10 videos that you need to have.
That's a little meta.
I created a 12 video course, which breaks down the first 10 videos that you need to have on YouTube.
So go over there, Ryan Hanley.com.
Find the link right on the top.
Click that, enter your name and email,
and you'll get that information for free.
And otherwise, guys, I love you for listening to this show.
Let's get on to David Gritz.
What's going on, man?
Hey, Ryan.
You have a pretty nice setup there with like the background and everything.
Oh, thanks.
Yeah.
I like can't help myself.
So if you were to look,
so basically the way I set it up is just in the frame.
of the shot.
If you were to look at, like, even like right here,
it just looks like a regular office.
I mean, it's just, you know, whatever.
The only weird part is I have like sound dampening blankets
that hang from all the walls to keep the sound from echoing in the space.
Nice.
And that works well for you?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, they're pretty cool.
they um you know they're just yeah actually they're moving blankets i say they're sound dampening blankets
if you go to amazon and you can buy like six moving if you if you type in sound dampening
blankets they'll send you the same exact blankets as if you type in moving blankets they're the same
exact thing and um they're like maybe 50 bucks for five or six of them and they're kind of
heavy and i just drape them from the walls uh and it makes it so that you don't get that echoey signed
that's great no i i think i do need to kind of upgrade my equipment at some level so when we started
doing amplified i got this mic and yep um you know i used the headphones to at least prevent some of
the reverberation but i think there's definitely a lot more i can do it up my game i have one of those
um so this also has an xLR jack uh so i i can go out and and i have uh i forget what it's called but
It's basically a mixing box for one to two mics,
and I could probably clean up the audio a little bit from that too.
When I grow up, I would love to be, do you know Chris Williamson?
Do you know his podcast?
Have you heard of him?
I've heard of him, but I haven't listened to his podcast.
So not that he listens to the Finding Peak podcast,
but if he did, I would want him to take this as a compliment.
He, to me, is like, he's like a younger Joe Rogan.
He's like a 20 years younger Joe Rogan.
Like the way he approaches it is much more calculated.
And so much as like, you know, he spends a lot of time thinking about the presentation of it,
the questioning, that kind of stuff.
Rogan just kind of like is a curious individual hits and goes.
I'd say Chris is thoughtful.
He's got notes.
He has a laptop up that he, you know, has notes on and questions and different things he wants to talk about.
But like the presentation.
the visual and audio presentation that this dude puts out is so good.
Like, just, you know, and he's gotten to the point where he's got a couple people that
help him on every show.
But like two people, they're usually in a fairly large room with a smaller table.
So it's like this very kind of like intimate but open feel.
The audio is just like deep and rich and crisp.
And man, I like sometimes I will watch.
I don't particularly care for listening to podcasts on YouTube.
but I will sometimes like watch the YouTube version of the podcast just because it's like so good.
It's like watching, it's like watching an interview on like what used to be like the major
broadcast channels.
And I'm like, man, that's that's aspirational right now.
It'd be pretty freaking cool to have like a team and a setup and like this cool place and like
the people came in and did it live with you.
Like that's pretty awesome.
Yeah, I know.
I follow a bunch of YouTubers that have pretty good.
quality. Like, I don't know if you ever follow Andre Jick. He's one of the millennial money people.
And he does magic tricks in the middle of some of his just videos. Most of them are, you know,
one person. He doesn't really do interviews. But it's just really interesting how he flips
between the different formats and the different views. Like he has a dark style view and a light
style view and he just must put a lot of energy into post production.
I think that, so I was listening to someone the other day, talk, a thought leader on one
of these channels. And they were, you know, there's this, there's, there's, there's two schools
of thought on this. And I, and I think it goes for everything when it comes to branding and marketing and,
you know, you and I have been having some conversations about different stuff lately, which have been
really interesting. And I want to talk a little bit, get into a little bit. Get into a little
bit in our space and as we talk into the industry a little bit, but there's two schools
of thought on this side. There is the raw, I'm going to do air quotes for those watching
on YouTube, like authentic version where it's just get it out and get the message out.
And if the message is good, people will come and listen. And I think there's merits to that.
And then the other side of it is like, like this Chris Williamson guy that I really like,
where he, part of his presentation is how much thought and effort in time he's put into the sculpting, right?
Like the guy that you just mentioned.
And I go back and forth.
Like I kind of vacillate between the two because I think both can be right.
I think what we don't do is spend enough time figuring out which one is right, if that makes sense.
Like is our brand raw and uncut and fast and furious and get it out and tell the story?
or is a little more methodical, a little more planned, a little more, you know, higher quality
post-production, et cetera.
We just kind of pick one and go with it.
And I don't know that we always properly align that with where we want to be.
Well, and I think there's even some nuance there because I think there's a lot of delineation
between the person and the brand behind them.
And I don't think people take advantage of that separation.
and to use my two examples, the raw guy that I follow is like James Altiture.
Yeah, I love James Altacher.
For basically being a digital nomad, even to the point where his kids were kind of embarrassed to be around him.
And then on the other side, I listened to some pretty professionally done podcasts on NPR, like Radio Lab is one of them, even to the point where they have like a full-time sound design person.
And I think if you think about your brand or business, like in some sense, you know, we want
InsureTech, New York to be the polished brand and the experience they get when people come to
our events or participate in activities that we have like formal programs.
But then, you know, me personally going out on other panels or meeting people in person,
you know, I would prefer to be genuine, not reserved and not.
not methodical about everything.
I mean, obviously thoughtful,
but everything doesn't have to be planned out in appearances.
And I think people are interested in who you are, right?
So, you know, having the opportunity to go skiing with me at InsureTech Slopes
is very different than people that, you know,
hide behind EAs in order to get access to just simple conversation with them.
Yes.
It, I, uh, it's funny.
I don't know that I have a,
solid personal philosophy on this yet.
It is definitely one area of my life that I find I'm,
it tends to be like what day of the week it is or what season or which way the wind's
blowing from because there's part of me that loves like the Cody Sanchez,
be easy to find and hard to get a hold of.
I think there's a lot of merit to that, especially when you are heads down building.
And I was reminded to this a little bit because now that I'm in this kind of consulting role,
advising role, et cetera, I want to be, I want people to have more access to me.
I want to make myself both easy to find and easy to get a hold of because part of what I want
to do today is have tons of conversations, figure out what companies I think I can help,
what companies I want to invest in, what companies I can connect with other individuals.
And that's the value I'm bringing today.
during my rogue wrist days when I was heads down on a, you know, a startup agency pulling out of COVID,
I didn't want, if you weren't contacting me to buy insurance from me, I did not want to speak to you.
You know what I mean?
Like I didn't put content out into the world that was whatever.
So I feel like we have to, I think a part of it, a factor in what you're saying is also like what season are you in?
If you're in build mode, a lot of times being difficult to get a hold of is good.
but I think there are other time seasons in our career or our lives when that's it doesn't help you.
Like if I'm trying to get a hold of you to do business with you or I want to make a connection with you like like, hey dude, I got this great person over here that I'd love to connect you with that.
I think it'd help your business.
And you're like really hard to get a hold of.
I'm just, I'm going to be like, you know, whatever.
I'm not going to bother because it's like now it's work.
Now you're making me do work.
I mean, the funny thing about that, Ryan, is you can pull up almost.
any insuretech website.
And I would say, you know, 70% of them don't have a phone number.
And they're paying a lot of money onto Google ads, going to conferences.
And people might meet them, but forget their email.
And now they're stuck, like when there could be an easier channel to get a hold of them.
And, you know, it's not that hard to set up Grasshopper.
Yeah.
I, I mean, this is a rabbit hole.
I'm happy to go down if you want to.
but I find that so many insureTech founders are incredible product designers and just awesome nerds
and just so bad at distribution of their product.
Just horribly comically bad at distribution of the product.
Like you just said like basic stuff like if you want people to buy stuff from you,
having a way to call you is probably a good idea.
Like even if it's your cell phone, like early days, like just have a phone number.
Maybe say, look, like the best we can do today is text me or something, right?
If like you're, if it's, but some way to get a hold of you, I remember we're trying to
purchase a tool one time back at Rogue.
And I can't remember that.
And I wouldn't say the name of the tool even if I could remember.
And I can't remember what it is.
So, but we were trying to purchase a tool.
And for whatever reason, the like credit card thing.
wasn't working.
You know, sometimes stripe isn't connected properly or whatever it was.
For some reason.
And I was like, but I still wanted the thing.
So I was like, okay.
I told my person, I'm, I told my, my operations person, I was like, oh, well, just give
a buzz.
And she's like, there's no number.
And I was like, okay, well, email him.
And she's like, I can't.
She's like, the contact form isn't working.
She's like, I don't know what to do.
I'm like, and like, we're literally having a chuckle on a Google meet about how like,
we want to give this company money.
and they're they like there's no way to do it like there's no way to give them money to do the thing
and eventually we end up getting a hold of them and it ended up being fine and whatever but
I mentioned to the founder I'm like dude like if I didn't really want to use your tool
I would have just went someplace else and and he had no idea you know what I mean he was so heads
down on product design and that kind of stuff that you know the marketing and sales portion
had kind of been left aside.
Well, and the funny thing is it's refreshing when you see someone that's aware of it
because a lot of these insured techs are direct-to-consumer.
We have one portfolio company that's direct-to-consumer called Chase
that is a marketplace for extended warranty for your car.
And just by random happenstance, I was in the market for it and considering it.
And it was on a weekend when I had the time to actually think about, hey, you know, I want to make sure I protect my car.
So I texted one of the founders and we jumped on a call.
We figured it out.
And then, you know, over the weekend, I was able to not just get a quote, but actually get a bound policy.
So I think that's an example of what can actually work.
And who knows, maybe one of your investors will become one of your customers if you make it easy to buy from that.
Yeah, no, that's a great point.
I've always said you could have an agency that was only open on the weekends
and market it as such and probably do really, really well because no one else is open on the weekends.
But, well, I don't want to, I don't want to thrash and sure techs and stuff because I, again,
having just recently gone through, you know, my own entrepreneurial journey with Rogue Risk
and growing it and selling it and all the things that I went through.
I understand how many different directions you're pulled in.
And, you know, sometimes you could just, you could set something up.
It could be working today.
You were like, okay, that's fixed.
Let's go on to other checklist items.
It breaks.
And you just don't come around and even know.
You know, and these are hard things to stay on top of.
But, well, dude, I want to talk about a whole bunch of stuff.
I'm so glad to have you on the show.
And, you know, we've kind of recently got to know each other a little better
and enjoying that and all that.
And I'm going to be speaking in the fall at your event.
And I'll be at the AI one that's coming up here in March, which is going to be awesome.
This will probably come out just before then.
Nice.
You may be the week before.
So if you're listening to this in the New York area or I want to travel an incredible event in New York that's coming up on AI and other things, I'll be there.
I know a bunch of friends are coming.
So I'm really looking forward to it.
And, but, you know, the thing, the thing, the kind of like first question that I wanted to get in,
because you're so in this world.
And a lot of the people who listen to this show in particular tend to be independent agency side.
That's the vast, vast majority of the audience.
But then even inside of that, focused on retail agency side.
So we do have wholesalers.
We do have MGA's carriers.
I got some carrier execs to listen.
And I love all those people.
but the broad, you know, the largest individual demographic, I'd say would be agency owners,
producers, et cetera.
Okay.
And in that space, I think just because of the nature of their work and the nature of who they
are as people, et cetera, and what they do, I know they often feel like they catch trends
late.
They catch, you know, things that are coming down the pipe, technological innovations,
conversations that are happening that I think in your world are probably on point relevant this
moment, you know, you're seeing down the future. And for them, you know, they're a few years
behind oftentimes, not necessarily because they're incapable of it. They just, it's just not the
nature of their work. So I would love to just start our conversation with, and you could take this
any way you want, but like in general, when you're looking at the companies you interact with,
the founders, the conversations you're having, like, what, what do you feel, it's,
This doesn't have to relate to independent agents, just in general for our space.
Like, what do you feel, what excites you the most?
What one kind of concept, technology, thought process that like when you hear somebody
talk about it, you start, you know, you start veering towards that conversation.
We're just for you personally.
Yeah.
So small preference that I have a little bit of an unfair bias in the sense that my
functional skill is product management and product development.
So that being said, the air.
that excites me the most is MGAs, and specifically MGAs that are making products available
to markets that don't really have good solutions. So I'll give you a handful of examples,
and we can definitely follow that rabbit hole down as deep as you want. So one that I think
is a big pain for independent agents is you probably in the last six to 12 months have
had a carrier that decided they wanted to drop one of your customers. And most likely it's because
of inflation or social inflation or natural disaster risk. And it's probably a home or auto thing,
especially if you have business in Florida, Washington State, California, or Colorado. And there's a
number of insured techs that have come on the scene and they said, look, you know, we're not
deathly afraid of doing business, inflation.
Florida or writing homes that might have exposure to wildfire risk. We believe that we can have a
proprietary process to write the best homes, to reward the homeowners that actually focus on making
their homes defensible against these natural disasters, and we're going to go and do it. So that's
something that, you know, it's immediately available to independent agents. I mean, obviously, you've got to
find them and be admitted to sell their policies, but it's something today you can act on.
Beyond that, there's a lot of really cool products that we get to see. And that's one of the
reasons why we built the MGA Lab, because we felt that there was a gap between, hey, I'm really
good at this type of business. Maybe you write a lot of churches. Maybe you do a lot of industrial
warehouses. And there's just this need that's out there, but you just don't know how to build a product
from start to end with the carriers and launch it. So the MGA Lab was our opportunity to
help with that. And just to give, you know, a random sampling of some of the cool concepts we've
had in the lab. So one of them is called five by five. So for individuals that are pilots and they want
to fly their own plane and not have to hire a pilot, oftentimes it's much more expensive to purchase
the insurance, given that it's not your job full time. Five by five is a telematics based solution
in order to help pilots get the right coverage for their hobbies.
On the completely flip side of things, on the life and health side, we had a company called Flora.
They're based in Canada, and they're trying to solve the fertility benefits problem,
which is a lot of women are deciding they want to focus on career first and family second.
And that could be very expensive down the road if you have to have treatments or medical support
in order to have the children that you want.
So instead of, you know, investing a ton of money today to freeze your eggs, you can buy an
insurance policy.
So if you have to have any treatments, it's covered.
And, you know, you're paying the appropriate amount of cost for your age and, you know,
the day that you decide that you want to have a family, but you don't want to necessarily have it today.
So, I mean, these are just a few examples.
I mean, we've also had companies that are.
in the crypto space to protect NFTs. We had a company that does battery warranty, one that covers,
you know, I know, Ron, you went through an acquisition of your company, but covers the financial
risk of the buyer for the acquisition. So there's just so much possible opportunities out there.
And I think for me, the entrepreneurs that are trying to build products that find a niche,
help someone with a coverage area that, you know, just frankly is not available enough or doesn't
even exist. That's what excites me the most. Yeah, I love that. So I want to go, I'm going to take
this back a couple steps and talk a little more granularly about InsureTechMGA specifically
for the listeners at home or wherever they are because I think we hear this term. And, you know,
one of the things that I know for sure, especially in the independent space, and I do think this
is changing rapidly and it makes me very happy. And it's, it's why I'm excited to be coming to your
events and, you know, I'll go to ITC this year and I might go to InsureTech Hartford and, you know,
and I'm really excited about this next season of my career getting involved in some of the technology
companies because I was very much their opponent in the 2015, 2016. I was one of the most
outspoken opponents to the InsureTech revolution when all these like, you know, we'll call
them coastal dicks who had done regression analysis and their MBA classes came in. And
and started telling insurance agents that they were dopes and didn't know what they were doing.
And I was like, well, wait a minute.
Technologically, you might be right.
But you have no, you know, these people had no idea how the psychology of how insurance was purchased.
Okay.
And I think that wave, many of that wave of insured techs crashed up against the rocks and either evolved or fell apart.
But this next wave is what is so exciting to me because it feels so.
And there's obviously some D to C plays and I think that's great.
But so many more of them are either have built.
built an entire section to work with agents, and maybe they have a D to C2, or they're just
fully broker-enabled, broker-partner, and are not trying to tell everybody why we've done
everything wrong for 442 years, although consistently made profit through that entire time period
and more people have jobs and we have one of the highest, the best employment retention ratios
of any industry in the world.
So, okay, that big diatribe, because that's the show, and I have no other way to ask questions other than really long.
When did is to come all the way back and say, just at a very base level for the listeners at home, is there a difference?
And if there is what would be some of the intrinsic qualities of it between an insuretech MGA and say a traditional MGA that maybe some of these guys have used for 20 years?
Sure.
So, you know, I'll take one of these property examples, right? So, you know, in property space, there are a lot of traditional MGAs that have found a very tight niche, like I gave the example of churches or maybe, you know, commercial real estate segments like industrial properties or vacant buildings. And there are traditional MGs out there. And many of them are great and they're, you know, friendly to work with. And they're out there to help you. And, you know, to help you. And,
and be good supporters. So the main difference behind InsureTech MGA and traditional MGA is really just
the perspective that they look at the world. So an insuretek MGA looks at the world from a very
digital and granular perspective. So they have, from their perspective, the highest amount of the
risk that they want to have a deep understanding of because most of their understanding is coming
from data opposed to experience. So traditional MGAs, many of those that were started in 80s, 90s, or early
2000s, the reason why they were created is because it was a broker that got really good at a business.
They were better than the underwriters of the carrier. So they told the carrier, let's do the
underwriting for you. InsureTechs don't have 10, 20, 30 years of legacy. So the only way that they
can be as good or better underwriters than the carriers is by either selecting,
a niche of business that no one else really focuses on, like we talk about pilots that want to
fly their own planes, or they have some type of data advantage. So like in the example of
batterize, the battery warranty company in our MGA lab, the founder is a battery scientist.
You know, so their team is based in Oakland, California, where a lot of this green technology
is being created so they know better than anyone else what's going to cause a battery to fail
or live longer than it's expected. So that data advantage of having 30 years of, you know,
selling insurance to companies that make batteries is not as much of advantage as the insure
tech that understands battery chemistry, knows how to collect data and can digitize that data for
better underwriting. So I would say both are good to work with generally speaking, but you're
trading in either data or digital underwriting experience or just pure raw expertise.
Yeah, I love that.
And I think I think that's a wonderful way to separate it because you explain perfectly
how a lot of traditional MGAs do evolve, right?
They're just retail brokers who like you said, I think you said it perfectly, get good
at something almost better than the underwriting team and then they get the pen and then it evolves
from there.
So let me, let me just again, just framing some of these thoughts in my head.
So when it, let's say I have a great idea for a potential MGA and, you know, a market I want to go after, a problem I think I can solve both from a marketing perspective and from a transfer of risk perspective that will, you know, potentially yield profitable results.
Maybe I have some history in that industry or I've worked with them, et cetera.
Okay.
All that's true.
So if I'm going to base my underwriting and my, you know, in my product on.
data, am I essentially doing like what, like what mutual fund or hedge fund managers do or trading
desks where I take a data set and I go back and say, hey, let's run this algorithm over the last
10 years and see if it would have produced profitable results if we had underwritten it this way.
Is that kind of how they're approaching it?
Or how do they figure out if you don't know what's going to happen in the future necessarily,
right?
Well, we don't.
I think maybe probabilistically you can come close.
but how do you get that data?
How do you get to understand, okay, if we approach this warranty business, you know,
you're talking about, and we do it this way and we price it in this manner and we go
after this certain segment, we can actually have, like, how do you figure that out?
I mean, at a high level.
I don't, we don't need to get into the ones and zeros.
Yeah.
So, you know, I'll just give you an example, one of our portfolio companies.
The company is called certis.
and they focus on multifamily properties that's managed professionally.
So think, you know, the 50 unit garden style apartment, you know, down the street from you
in any smaller metro area or, you know, the six floor high rise that has 100 units in it.
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Let's get back to the episode.
So essentially, you know, that data exists for traditional business.
That data exists based off of claims history for a lot of the larger carriers.
But the difference is with certis is they're saying, you know, all of our operators need to use our software called Leonardo.
And Leonardo is the checklist for the property manager.
So they make sure, you know, the pools are properly maintained.
The roof gets inspected at its regular intervals.
People are able to report information about the property.
So it gets fixed.
And ultimately, you can cut some of that potential liability out of the equation.
So in that case, right, you don't necessarily know the impact of Leonardo. I mean, for them, it's a little bit unfair.
Leonardo's been out there for 10 years, so they could look at properties that have used Leonardo just as the software and see the performance.
I think what you can do is you can say, you know, what's the normal loss ratio for traditional multifamily property, let's call it 50 to 500 units, right?
What does the top decile look like? What does the top quartile look like? And then you can say, what are,
are some of the characteristics of the top decile and the top quartile of loss performance for
these building owners or property managers? And what are those characteristics that determine that,
right? Obviously, there's normal underwriting factors, you know, age of the building, crime rate
of the area, or just impact of natural disasters, like how much convective storms are. But then
there's these softer issues like, you know, do the property managers actually follow the checklist,
how often is the sidewalks inspected for major problems or divvets and how happy are the individuals
that are renting from this specific building. And that softer part, there isn't a magic
formula where you can go back and look at Munich Rees loss runs across all of their customers
for those things. But you basically have to take a leap of faith and say, you know, we know what the
pricing needs to be to be competitive today. If we're able to perform in the top median or the top
desile, right, then we will make money for our carrier or reinsurer. And that's what most of the
MGAs have to do is they have to find industry data to get the reinsurers excited or maybe
match up with what the reinsurers already have. And then say, we are going to beat that industry
data because we have these three other data points that we can kind of lost control for.
or manage against that we think is going to give us an advantage.
And sometimes they're right and sometimes they're wrong.
And if they're wrong, it could mean they go out of business.
But it could also just mean next year they figure out better data points that they can use.
Yeah.
So if they're looking at essentially the same or you'd have to assume a lot of these companies
essentially have access to similar datasets or if they wanted them,
the traditional carriers could get access to these data sets.
Why do you think that you're more traditional or legacy carriers,
why do they even allow these MGAs to exist?
Like, why not just create these products themselves, box them out of the market?
Why even open the door for these types of companies?
And it does very much feel like we're heading towards what could be a golden age for MJAs.
I mean, there's so many of them popping up.
They're addressing very unique needs.
There's tons of new, it feels like there's tons of new MGs popping up all the time
that are finding different little niches to address and provide value in.
So like, why do you think the traditional carriers allow these entities to take space?
Yeah, so I'll give you two reasons and one of them I'll give an example.
So the first reason is really just a scale problem.
So if you're Chubb, Travelers, Nationwide, or even Arch for that matter, you want your internal teams focusing on how they can take their books of business from 150 million to 200 million or 450 million to 600 million.
Because if they only have a limited number of really strong leaders and really effective producers or underwriters, they have to push on the scales where incremental,
makes a big impact. But to go from zero to 150 million is very difficult. And most of the time,
the underwriters that are sitting in the chairs are operators that have not done that or don't know what to do.
So if an MGA comes to them and says, look, I can bring you a book of business. And you know,
year one, it might be 10 million, year two, maybe 30 million. And year 10 might be 150 million to match one of your other lines of business.
would you be interested? And a lot of the times the answer is maybe or the answer is yes,
because ultimately they don't have enough internal talent to incubate and produce all of theirs.
There are some carriers that actually have a strategy like Everspan is one of them where
they acquire and build teams to be able to do this and I think more power to them.
But most carriers do not have that ability. So it's much easier to say, you know,
look, we're going to take a risk on a new emerging team. And maybe if we take a risk on 10 of them,
three or four pan out and it will kind of pay for the couple that we wasted a little bit of
startup capital for because now we have a great book of business that we're writing for. So that's
one, which is the scale. The other point, which maybe to challenge your assumption, so your
original assumption was the carriers have all the data and they can use it all. So my belief,
leaf on that is the carriers do have all the data, but it may or may not be accessible, right? So oftentimes
it might be locked up in some core system that is not easy to access, run queries on, or they just might
not have enough data scientists or IT people to be able to manipulate the data in a way that is useful or
effective for them. So because of that access problem, it's much easier for a startup that has no
legacy to just go ahead and say, you know, we'll create the data, we'll make it accessible in the
easiest way, and, you know, we're off to the races. So for a carrier looking at that, even, you know,
allowing the startup to access some of their own claims data is probably worthwhile because they don't
need to pay for the cost. And startups are scrappy. So oftentimes they can do the same thing
with like one-tenth the amount of cost, whether it's like data science or IT resources.
So both of those things make a tremendous amount of sense to me.
I really like this idea.
And I just had never framed this in my head this way.
Essentially, what carriers are doing with MGAs, in a sense, is outsourcing scale for themselves.
It gives them, it's almost like a VC placing bets.
They might like the AI space, but they have no idea.
idea who's going to be the winners. So they take 10 bets and they say here, we're going to help
you support these programs and hope one or two of them hit. And that makes up for the rest. It's
essentially what you described and kind of a similar idea. I mean, maybe not exactly so calculated
is that. But it allows them to maybe push into new markets or get insights into things they don't
see without having to spin up teams or build expertise, et cetera. That's what I kind of hear you saying.
Yeah, definitely. But the other thing is like to have one program manager.
that can manage five programs.
And let's say after 10 years,
some of the programs only get to 10 or 20 million in premium,
you still only have one person managing five of them
versus if you had to hire five underwriters.
So you're actually better off financially to do that as well,
even if you don't have one that hits
because just the efficiency of managing programs versus running programs.
Why do you think it is that,
that you had said this before that a lot of these insureTech MGAs are not definitely afraid of risks like Florida property or California or insert, whatever other, you know, kind of traditionally risky.
I almost said risky risk.
You could tell it's the afternoon.
Whatever high exposure risk you could add in there.
Why is it that they're not deathly afraid?
Like what is it,
is it just the nature of an entrepreneur
trying to attack a problem?
Is it that with access to,
with accessible information
and a better understanding of data science,
they can actually maybe see things
or see around corners that we haven't in the past?
Like, like what gives them,
what is it about these organizations
and or the types of individuals
that makes them not deathly afraid of, say, Florida property?
Yeah.
So I'll give you,
The optimistic view and the festimistic view.
Okay, yeah, yeah, I love that.
So the optimistic view is essentially the entrepreneurs can take advantage of hyper-targeting.
So let's just say your kettle, Green Shield Risk, or DeLos, all doing wildfire in California,
they are not state farm where they need to be available everywhere in the state.
They can say, you know, of the thousand submissions, we're okay with taking like 25 or 50 a month,
because we're only interested in this area of Sonoma County,
or we only want to write on one side of the 101
because we feel like the coastal side is better than the inland side.
And when you're able to be that granular, one, if you're new,
you're not necessarily going to upset all the independent agents
because they can understand you're just really picky.
Or maybe you tell them, like, we're only looking for homes that have no grass or shrubs
that will actually burn.
And they can look at their customers and say, okay, this is the rule. Like if you want to get the
coverage and don't want to be in the state fund, then you just got to follow these rules. So if I was
State Farm and I said, you know, everyone has to remove their shrubs, it's going to make the media.
So I think because they can do hyper-targeting, they can be more effective in their risk selection.
I mean, DeLos, in their first year of writing, had zero claims. And they're writing in wildfire
exposed area and there were fires that year. So I think, you know, Kevin did a really great job
of targeting, but he also didn't have to own everywhere in the whole state. So that's one
optimistic view. They can be more selective and picky. The pessimistic view is it's not their
balance sheet, right? So if you're a founder of an MGA, typically the stack looks like, you know,
fronting carrier is taking maybe five to 25 percent of the risk and then you're reinsuring.
for all the rest of it, and then you're getting your MGA commission.
So when you don't have as much skin in the game, I mean, they usually have sliding scale
profit share, so they are getting upside from the underwriting profit, but they're not getting
downside.
Like the carriers are usually going to say the MGA commissions 25%, but they're not going to say
you had 110 year and we're going to like take money back from you.
So sometimes the founders just found a loophole in the system where they're ultimately
getting access to somebody else's balance sheet. And yes, like ultimately they're taking risk in a sense
that if it doesn't work out, they could lose their reinsurance and they're done. But, you know,
how many years did Lemonade lose reinsurers a lot of money? And they're still alive today. So some
founders just look at this and like, you know, maybe they're not, you know, Daniel or shy, but
they do have some of this kind of West Coast or East Coast arrogance there. Yeah.
Well, if you look at lemonade stock price, you're not sure they're still alive, but I guess they are.
The website still loads.
I still have not recovered from the shots that they took at the independent agency space when they took them.
There's just a small amount of bitterness I retain from 2016 for that.
But so I think it's incredibly interesting to me that is the barrier, how high,
is the barrier to spin up an MGA?
You talk to some people, you know, I have, you know, I have friends all over the space that
play in all different regions and it's so interesting to talk to them.
And like, you know, some of them will be like, oh, you just go get some reinsurance paper
and, you know, talk to these guys and they got this whole shelf of fronting stuff that you
just pluck it off and put it together and you got to put a brand on it and off you go.
And I'm like, I mean, I understand you're being very cavalier with your words right now,
but it can't be that easy, right?
I mean, but then when you describe really the relationship,
you know, obviously you have to have the relationship
to have a business plan,
they're not just going to throw reinsurance
over the top of something for no reason.
But, you know, what really is the barrier,
you know, say someone's listening,
and they dominate, I don't know,
farms that have large pig populations.
And, you know, they figured out some thing
that gives them some advantage in farm insurance
and they want to go find a reinsurer and some fronting paper that will put together a program
that will allow them to write pig farm insurance.
I'm just making that up.
Like, what really is the problem?
I mean, obviously there's 10 million steps, but just at a high level, like, is it as simple
as having these contacts, having a good risk, et cetera, or, you know, is it, is it much more
in depth?
Do you really have to be part of this world?
Like, you know, like being in the VCPE world.
Like you're either in that world or you're not.
There are not a lot of people that just jump in, you know, at any given time.
So like, how do you get into there?
How do you make these contexts?
You got to fly all the way to Lloyds.
Like, like, where do this, where does these things evolve from?
Yeah.
So I'll answer both parts of that in order.
First, is it hard?
And then second, what are the overall steps in the process?
So is it hard?
I mean, I don't want to shatter people's dreams, but it's extremely difficult.
And if anyone says starting in.
MGA is hard, just tell them, why don't you go do it first and come back to me? So there are a lot of
founders that we've seen spend two to three years and either not make it or just barely
get over the edge, like hanging on the cliff and figure it out. And one of the reasons why it's
hard is because just like you said, Ryan, like you got to be in the world and in the network.
And I'll just give you a maybe unfair example, and I'm not going to name the company specifically,
but there was a company that pitched to our fund.
They're based in the UK.
They focused on essentially helping people solve the sandwich in the middle, caregiving gap,
where you're taking care of your kids and your parents at the same time and offering solutions
to help, you know, mainly on the parent side of the equation as an employee benefit.
And generally speaking, you know, this is a new line of business in the UK.
There are a couple startups doing something similar in the U.S.
And it's arguably nice to have, not need to have.
If you're a benefits broker selling to, you know, mid to large size companies,
they're not like, oh, I'm really worried about my employees.
I have to take care of their parents and that's causing so much absenteeism.
This is my number one priority above, like having a slightly better dental plan.
It's just not true.
So this founder pitched to us and he said, you know, we got capacity.
And the carrier was, you know, a very good carrier based in New York, which we've talked to
and asked to participate in the MGA lab.
And they were always super reticent about doing anything with startups.
And I just like, also the founder was in his younger 20s and never had started an MGA before.
So I just, after the first call, kept racking my brain, like, how did this happen? Like, how did he do this? Is this guy
magic, right? So second call we get on for a diligence call. He also brings his dad on the call, who happens to be
the chairman of the UK division of the carrier that is in New York. And it all clicks for me.
You know, if you have that in, of course you can get the board to approve it, because ultimately,
you might not have as much skin in the game, but you're, you know, in this case, dad has a lot of
skin in the game that if he's betting on his son, it's going to pretty much wreck his career if it
doesn't turn out well. So having a good connection on the inside makes a big difference in the
viability of you being able to pull this off. The other thing, which I would say is this number one
success factor that all the independent agents have an advantage over the founders is if
if you have a book of business in the space, like you have $5, $10 million in premium in the space,
the carriers will instantly give you credibility because they know you can get that book over
to the program versus a startup that's completely starting from zero. So I wouldn't get discouraged
if you're an independent agent because, you know, just grow your book in the way that you know how
and then start the process. You don't have to start from zero like every startup. And like you really
should leverage those connections, right? Like if you know a really great underwriter and nationwide,
like it's going to be much easier to get the programs person than, you know, just cold call them. So
that's the hard piece of it. So I mean, that's one of the reasons why we created the MBA lab is because
we know how hard it is. We saw how much founders struggled. So we wanted to try and create all the
ingredients and be the ones that could be your kind of inside reference, so to speak, to get you over that
So that's easy or hard.
Second component is what are the major steps?
There's three primary steps, and we can dig into more, Ryan, if you want to.
But the first step is ultimately the financial model.
So there's two components of this.
One is how to get to scale, and the other is profitable underwriting.
So how to get to scale, ultimately, very few carriers are going to care unless you can prove within
two to three years you can get to 10 million in premium. And I understand like if you're starting at
one or two, it can be really hard. But if it's a good enough idea, good enough product, a lot of people
are going to want it and it won't be necessarily as difficult as you think because you're not going
to be the only one that's selling it. So that's one part. The other part, the underwriting side of it.
So this can be broken up into three major components. First is the actuarial model,
the pricing. How can you price it in a way that is interesting enough that people will buy it and will
still make money? Then is the underwriting guidelines. What's in the box? What's out of the box? What will
you make special exceptions for? And how do you make sure that your underwriter follows those rules?
If you can't write it down in an extremely explicit way and hopefully find a similar filing,
then the carrier or the reinsurer is going to look at you and say, like, come back to me when you figured out what you're going to accept and not accept.
Because that's how you protect their balance sheet.
If you don't have strong underwriting, they will lose money and they're going to assume that from the gate.
And then the third component is ultimately figuring out your regulatory strategy.
Is it an admitted product? Is it, you know, an ENS product?
Are you starting in one state and expanding?
Do you quickly want to do a 50 state strategy?
Is it going to be something that's offered in like an affinity way?
Or is it going to be offered, you know,
directly through the traditional agent channel?
So you got to figure all those things out, you know, theoretically and then start to
execute on them, which could be, you know, expensive from the legal perspective.
So you have to be efficient at that.
I mean, we've seen 10 to 20 X order of magnitude of startups in terms of how much it costs them
to get, you know, licensed to sell their product and estate.
It all comes down to how well did you think about it ahead of time.
So that's first step in the process, the financial model.
Second step in the process is ultimately building your risk stack.
So, you know, if it's admitted and for some of UNS products,
you're ultimately going to need to find a front and carrier or hybrid carrier
that's willing to let you use their paper and licenses, right?
because my guess is you're not trying to start and become a carrier because you just need so much
capital. So you're going to find someone that wants to put their name on the front of the policy.
Second component of that of that stack is the reinsurance component. Most common for MGA's is to
set up some type of quota share. So you want to find equal or unequal reinsurance partners that are
going to take anywhere from 10 to, you know, 90% of the risk. And maybe you guys,
want to have some skin in the game where you set up a captive or an offshore reinsurer that allows
you to participate in that. It makes it more interesting to the reinsurers if you have money to lose.
But that's not a necessary. That's more of a nice to have. And then the last part is probably the part
that you might be the best at, which is how you're going to distribute it. Who, you know, what process
and what timeline. Yeah. When you, do you, do you, do you, do,
graphically speaking when you're talking to and again i know every project is different and there's
nuances but as a rule of thumb do you see it better to start regionally and expand do you i've seen
like um um i had and i'm gonna oh my gosh i'm blank on his name from branch insurance
Steve yeah yeah yeah great guy loved having him on um when he was on you know they were talking about
their expansion strategy.
And this was about a year and a half ago,
maybe even longer.
They've come quite a long way since he was on.
I may even be,
she's maybe longer than that.
But if you go back in the files,
guys,
you can see it.
But he was,
you know,
they were in like six states at the time.
And he's talking about how,
you know,
and then we're going to jump here.
And if you,
like, looked at a map,
it would look very frenetic.
You know what I mean?
And it was like all over the place.
But,
but obviously he had a very,
you know,
they had done their research and he had a very detailed plan
and how they were expanding.
So like,
you know, I think to a neophyte, you might say, oh, we'll start in Pennsylvania and then we'll add these five, you know, and then we'll just grow and grow and grow, where I haven't seen that.
It seems like everyone kind of jumps around. Maybe that's because the regulatory environments are easier to deal with or they're less expensive or whatever.
You know, how do you, how do they, how do they think about geographic experience?
Because I know that can be frustrating for agencies sometimes where like they see this great product that they love to write, but maybe it's,
not in their state yet, or it's only in one of the states they write in and not in two of the other
states and that becomes hard to manage.
Like, what is the general philosophy behind geographical expansion for MGA's?
Yeah.
So there's three layers to it and just to give you them up front.
It's market, regulatory, and then ultimately network, right?
So first is market.
Where are your customers, right?
So let's just say you come up.
with an oil and gas product, you know, you definitely want to be in, you know, Texas, Louisiana,
probably, you know, if it's fracking related, Pennsylvania, North Dakota, the places where your
customers are. But does it make sense to be in Vermont where they won't even let, you know,
pipelines go through their state? Probably not. So, you know, from a market perspective, you might be
able to eliminate a bunch of states because either they're too small, like if it's personal,
or might not be enough humans in that state.
If it's a certain type of risk that doesn't exist in certain states,
then you don't have to write it.
Or you might want to just figure out, like,
who are your top three areas geographically and focus there first?
So that's the first piece.
Second piece is regulatory strategy.
So if it's excess and surplus lines, right,
it's a lot easier to get set up in those states
because you don't have to file.
So it might be much faster to expand, you know,
everywhere. If it is a admitted, then what you want to think about, right, is what the cost is to go to the
states that you ideally want to go to, right? So, you know, New York and California are usually
very difficult states, more expensive, more time consuming. Maybe you want to prioritize doing those
first because you have to go through that or maybe you want to do them last because they're such a pain in
the ass. And the other thing is thinking about what type of state are they, right? Are they a file and
use state? Are they a traditional, you know, file and an approved state? And based off of that,
that might change your sequence because you know that you can get approved a lot faster in,
let's say, you know, Arizona versus California. Even though California might be a bigger market,
you know, I might as well be wanting to start selling right away. So I'll start an
Arizona. So that's, you know, how I would look at the two major factors. And then the third factor is
important, but not as significant, which is where is your network, right? Like, where do you know
distributors? So you might think ideally, like one, I'll give you an example, right? There's a startup
that was one of the finalists in our competition called SIGO. They sell auto insurance to primarily
Spanish-speaking audience. So English is a second language. So naturally, there's certain states,
are going to be great, you know, Texas, Florida, Illinois, New York, New Jersey, right? And for them,
you know, one of the challenges they had regulatoryly is that some of the states did not actually
allow policies to be in Spanish. They had to be in English. So if they have to do some lobbying to
change the laws, you should probably start in the states where it's legal to sell Spanish language
policies and then do your lobbying and bring on the other states. Obviously, like, there's ways that
they can sell without like fully adapting their strategy, but that's one way that you would
definitely think about your network. It's really interesting. I like, you know, I think that
this, this segment of our industry plays such a crucial role in how we operate.
program business, captive business, MGAs, etc.
These niche focus products, people that are trying to attack risk from different angles.
While, you know, I do give legacy carriers a hard time because it's fun.
Obviously, they're a tremendously important, you know, crucial.
I mean, they are the suppliers of all suppliers are our traditional carriers.
However, there are so many instances like you mentioned around Florida property,
California wildfires.
I have a buddy that runs a program focused on flood insurance, particularly in California
because of the kind of odd and unique nature of flood insurance from California
versus what I would have to deal with here in New York versus him is so much different.
And, you know, there's, it's so important that these organizations exist.
And I think that what oftentimes happens is, and this is one of the
reasons why I stuck with this topic through our entire conversation. I know we could have gone
so many different directions and it gives me a reason to have you back on. But I feel like this
segment of our market is often overlooked and often undervalued. We see a, we see a MGA and we go,
well, you know, I can't, I can't put any contingency in come on. And, you know, it's all
fronted or reinsured papers. So how good is it? You know, there's all these like kind of
colloquial dismissive things that are thrown at at these types of organizations.
And it has not been my case.
I mean, there's always going to be bad apples.
There's always going to be people that make bad decisions and come and go.
But it does not seem to me like our industry is going to become right now.
It feels like we're in a contraction phase from our large legacy carriers.
I mean, that's obviously been the case, but it feels like this seems like it's going to probably last a little longer.
The Fed just came out and said they may actually increase interest rates instead of dropped them in 2024, at least in their first meeting.
And if that happens, being able to place risk with these types of MGAs is going to be more and more necessary to properly serving your customers.
So I'm just, I'm glad we got to spend so much time on it.
I know there are a million topics we could have gone down, and I'm sure maybe you would have,
but it'll give me, like I said, I'll give me a reason to have you back on.
And I really wanted to press this button because I do think it's important.
If people want to learn more about you, about what's going on in Sure Tech, New York, about the lab,
about some of the companies in your portfolio, where do they go?
Where should people who are listening to this that are intrigued?
How do they get on your email list, et cetera?
Like, give them the pitch for how to get deeper into your world.
Yeah, so the best place to go is insureTech ny.com. And you can find more about the MGA lab, our spring conference coming up and, you know, all over our events throughout the year. And, you know, if you're listening and, you know, are curious about this MGA topic, feel free to, you know, reach out and connect with me on LinkedIn. As, you know, Ryan puts out, like I do definitely want to talk to more aspiring MGA founders and, you know, happy to see if there's, you know,
a way that we can help you, whether it's advice or, you know, formally through the program.
Yeah.
I love it, dude.
So glad we've been connecting here and look forward to that continuing and glad we had a
chance to have you on the show.
Thanks, Brian.
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