Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - How Michael Lebor & InsuranceGiG are Creating Better Data Outcomes
Episode Date: June 16, 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 interview...s Michael Lebor, founder and CEO of InsuranceGiG. Michael joins the podcast for a deep dive into how we use data to create better outcomes for our business. Michael is solving big problems with InsuranceGiG, and we’re honored to have him share his insights and expertise. Don’t miss this episode. Episode Highlights:Michael explains what InsuranceGiG is and how it is beneficial to the industry. (8:14)Michael shares that if you are in insurance technology, data is either a weapon or a liability. (11:53)Michael explains that they get their foot in the door with their pricing model and organic platform. (18:02)Michael shares that they recently went live with HawkSoft AMS and explains why it is a game changer. (21:26) Ryan explains that he sees the tool as very useful in saving time, as the system can do all the work on the same platform. (30:44) Michael explains that their main drive is not to replace the core policy system but to make things as easy as possible as well as cheap and fast. (34:18)Michael shares that InsuranceGiG has categories like data, operational workflows, and submissions. (40:17)Michael talks about their company and system being able to demonstrate visibility into the flow of data across the entire supply chain. (52:15)Michael explains that InsuranceGig has the beauty of having incredible vendors, like Record Linker. (58:13) Key Quotes:"If you look at yourself as a company, or somebody in the insurance technology, business data is either one of two things to you, it's either a weapon, or it's a liability." - Michael Lebor"We're not replacing the core policy system. But we really think that we're going to be this really valuable, a creative, secondary layer on top of them." - Michael Lebor" I'm just going out to the best vendors that are out there and saying just connect to me, become part of our data fabric." - Michael LeborResources Mentioned:Michael Lebor LinkedInInsuranceGiGReach 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, I'm here during the lunch rush with Janice, who owns her own food truck.
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Happy holidays.
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From all of us at Believe, have a Merry Christmas, everyone, and a happy holiday.
Prude Laboratory in the basement of his home.
Hello, everyone, welcome back to the show.
Today we have a tremendous episode, tremendous conversation with Michael Leibor, the founder and CEO of Insurance Games.
Now, I first met Michael went back in my trusted choice.com days.
We were doing some things with Amtrust, and Michael was the head of digital distribution,
wore a bunch of different hats, innovation, was pretty much a power player in the Amtrust ecosystem,
and just got to know him.
Love the way he thought about the business.
Love the way he approached problems.
Love that even though he was working inside a carrier at that time,
he didn't accept the traditional way of business as the absolute solution.
and was looking for new methods of growing both agencies and ultimately the Amtros product.
And now as the founder and CEO of Insurance Gig, he's making major moves.
I mean, I want you to listen to the episode to understand what insurance gig is,
but at a high level, and this is kind of a broad sweeping stroke,
insurance gig is the Zapier of insurance applications.
So if you understand what Zapier is, one tool to,
connect many, then you understand what Michael is trying to do in insurance gig is provide
insuretech, carriers, lead distribution, data sources with a single API connection that anyone
can connect into insurance gig and get the resources from all those products.
It's a big idea, but it's also an important idea.
And I think Michael's the guy to get it done.
Before we get there, I want to give a big shout out to our sponsor, tarmica, t-a-com.
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With that, let's get on to Michael LeBore.
Good morning.
What's going on?
Oh, you.
I'm good, man.
Just got back from the gym, getting my protein shake on, you know?
I just started doing that.
Actually doing a meal replacement, a couple of meal replacements.
I need to lose like 20 pounds.
Yeah.
I, in 2017, when I put on Elevate 2017, I weighed 212 pounds.
Wow.
How small are you?
Six foot three, four, somewhere around there.
Holy shit, huge.
So I did the conference.
And at the end of the conference, I was physically.
toasted. Like, I literally couldn't even stand. Like, I was just, just absolutely whooped. And I just said to
myself, like, I can't have this happen again. Like, I need to be able to rock out a conference
and not get to the end of it and just be physically exhausted. So I completely changed my diet,
went on an anti-inflammatory diet. I wrote a lot about it, talked about it on like different
podcasts and stuff back then when I was like super into it. And,
And dropped down to 190, got all the way down to 190.
And the difference was, and this is, I say this all the time,
your physical fitness is a competitive advantage of business.
Like I can go all day long from start to finish of a conference,
get to 10 p.m.
Everyone else is like barely standing.
And I'm still feeling good.
You know what I mean?
Because like my physical fitness was in a place where I could have a thousand conversations.
You know, mentally you get a little wiped, but physically, you know,
was still there.
And so ever since then, I've taken fitness and diet fairly seriously.
You know, that's super interesting.
So like I go to these, I live for these like trade shows and events.
And I don't eat a blessed thing the entire day.
Like not one calorie.
I'll have a couple of cups of coffee.
A, because a kosher food, B, I just like, I never have time to sit and eat.
And I can go the whole day.
but you know I definitely I crash a night but this time I brought a couple of protein shakes
what a couple of cops they're awesome it tastes like Nestle quick and you know having them
as a meal replacement I got it I hit like over 190 and I'm 5 foot 7 dude you've got a foot on me
and I should weigh 150 I just got down to 170 this morning nice so I but I can't lose like
I stopped drinking for the month so we'll see
I can keep that going. Yeah, the alcohol is a big part of it, but it's more, do you track your macros?
Do you count your... I don't even know. No, I don't.
So, in my opinion, the only way that I've ever been able to consistently lose weight and keep my weight off
is if I am regularly, meaning six days a week, tracking my macronutrient intake. It's the only way.
because what happens is you don't realize you think you're having a serving of rice, let's say.
But really, you know, in American portions, you're having three servings of rice or whatever.
And, you know, you look at the box and you're like, oh, this is great.
You know, brown rice, 17 grams of carbs or whatever.
No big deal.
And you don't realize three, four servings is what you actually intake.
And now they're at 60, 70 grams.
and that's half of what you should be eating for your day.
And you just had it in one meal.
And that's where we get, as Americans, our portion size is so big, like, you know,
traditionally that that's where you get crushed is in portion size.
So just.
Yeah, I got to figure something out.
I did, a porter got me to do like one of those water fasts,
where I drank going to water for five days,
which was the hardest physical thing I've ever had to do.
Yeah. It's kind of cool.
I've never done more than a 16 hour fast.
I've never done a full 24 hours or anything longer than that.
I want to, but at the same time, I work out basically seven days a week,
doing something physical, not always lifting or whatever.
And like to work out when you're fasted like that, I don't know.
No, you can't do it.
Yeah.
So.
Okay.
Let's chat, let's check some insurance.
Yeah, yeah.
So, so thanks for accommodating the time. Oh yeah. No problem, man. Look, we're both busy. I get it. I've been doing podcasting for a long time and having a couple of misconnections is far from offensive to me in any regard. Since we were both, I think I was guilty twice. You were guilty. Who the hell knows? So, yeah. So dude, insurance gig. Everybody listening has probably started to hear the name starting to bounce around the industry a little bit.
What's the 4-1-1? Give us the 10,000 foot. We'll start there. And then we'll start to dig into
you and go from where we go. But just let's kick it off with what the heck is insurance gig?
What problem you're trying to solve? You know, what's the pitch? What's the elevator pitch?
So at the highest level, insurance gig is an app store. I think having given a thousand-plus
demos, what I find the message that seems to resonate the most is think of it. Think of
about you using your iPhone.
You've got scores of apps on your phone.
You've got Waze.
You've got Uber.
You've got Lyft.
You've got Robin Hood.
I can go through the list.
So to use Uber as an example, you as a consumer did not go on to a limo platform.
You did not integrate with the limo company.
You did not reach out to dispatch to work out your data dictionary and how to integrate.
Apple created this platform for you.
They created it through their apps.
store using their phone as this kind of piece of hardware or platform.
And you as a buyer of technology are accessing a whole library of open source apps that
the creative community has presented to Apple, right?
That's how it works.
We've just done the same thing for insured tech.
What we've done is we've created this platform.
It's completely open.
And it takes the form of an app market, we call it, where I've got a library of different
insured techs that are there.
across the entire gamut.
People very often get hung up on,
is it only submission to, you know,
with comp readers or is it data?
It's all of the above, just like Apple has this array
of different types of apps from Candy Crush to,
you know, to ride sharing.
We are completely open across the entire spectrum
and vendors could come list their service on our app market
and we make it very available to buyers of InsureTech.
And there are a couple of nuances that make it really quite unique, which I can get into.
But at the high level, insurance gig is an insuretech app store.
So one of the things that I know a lot of people struggle with is, is, is, and this is going to sound weird, but like the concept of data, right?
So you, when you first described insurance gig to me, however many months ago it was or
whenever it was a year ago, whatever it was, you know, I, I kind of said, so is it like
Zapier for insurance? And you said, yes, but probably more, right? More. And which makes,
which makes sense to me now, kind of seeing how you're evolving. And it's much more, it's data
connection, but also app store, which makes it more. Where data,
it in general seems to confuse people with its actual value, right, in terms of we understand
that data exists, we understand that people have data, and we understand that being able to get
data from app to app is important. At what level does prioritizing the push of data
across apps, across different piece of technology that we use? Like, I see some people getting
lost in it. They're spending all their time in data, and they're not actually doing their
job as an agency owner. Like they're chasing data. Like what is the sweet spot between solid
usage of data and just data for data sake? Like if you, you know, I know that's kind of a,
a theoretical question, but this is what I always get. Like, okay, it does data. Great. So does my
agency management system. What does that mean? Well, you know, this, you know, where does data start to
add value? Like what should a, what should we starting to think about with data that adds value to, to, to, to, to
users. So, you know, you're definitely like leading up to or you're feeding me a softball question. I know
it wasn't intended to be a softball, but that's like so on point with kind of the the thesis of what
insurance gig is. I'll say it like this because there's so many ways to go with that, right?
If you look at yourself as a company or somebody in the insurance technology business,
data is either one of two things to you. It's either a weapon or it's a liability.
I don't see, or I have yet to see really anyone in the middle where it's kind of like they're making a little bit of use of it and it's helping.
It's either people don't have a handle on their data and it's a liability or there are people that are so far ahead of everyone else and they're using it for better outcomes, better expenses, better underwriting.
So that's how I would look at it.
The challenge is we live in this Babel-esque type vertical where no systems talk to each other.
So like Ryan, can I share a screen?
Is that something I could do in this format?
You can share a screen.
No one will be able to see it but me, but you can share a screen.
Okay.
So it's something if you want, I'd love to be the first guinea pig.
I don't know if you're able to like weave in, you know, screen.
sharing, but I want to show you something cool.
When, here, I'm going to share my screen, check this out.
When somebody comes to insurance gig, okay, and I love using Relativity Six as an example,
it's just it's, they're, they have a superpower, they're incredibly good at what they do,
and it's not this like Uber complex workflow where they are really good at providing NACS data and NCCI data.
And it's something that, whether you're an MGA or you're a carrier,
or this small commercial, whether it's GL or WorkComp.
So Relativity Six comes to the App Store.
The first thing they do is they list their API with us.
Now, we don't want to be just a Craigslist of API listings.
That's not valuable.
But what the first thing that we do when a partner comes to us
is we actually map their data header to ours.
So think of what we're building, just
one partner at a time is this kind of like data alliance where this is relativity six posts.
They're saying, send me address city, state, zip unit, and company name, and this is what they'll spit back,
these four pieces of data. But what happens if he calls it company name, but my column header, when I
set up my database was company underscore name, and you use an AMS who calls it company dash name. We're all
working with the same data, but our data headers are different and we don't communicate and we
don't talk to each other. So what we've done is, and this is just like a mock-up of one of our
internal screens, but just to show you, when the first time a partner comes to us, we do this
one-to-one data mapping. Now, when people hear about, oh, a new partnership in doing the data
mapping, they start freaking out and saying, well, we're a carrier, we're an MGA, we have 82,000
data fields across 38 lines of business and we have 17 carrier internal writing entities or companies
that we work with. My data dictionary is vast. And we kind of like try to say like, let's take a step
back. Let's just do this one microservice at a time. Okay. I just showed you that one service to get
Nakes from one of our vendors. I mapped his six data fields and the four that he sends back. That was a mapping that one time
10 fields.
And now any time I need to work with that partner, I have his data mapped.
So I know I'm monologuing a bit.
No, you're great.
I want to give you an example that people really seem to like.
Think about the United Nations, right?
You've got 80 people sitting in the same room.
No two people speak the same language, but they communicate and collaborate in real time.
So the thing that makes that happen is the fact that everything is translated from its origin
language to English and then to the destination language. They do not do 80 to the 79 factorial of
language combos. That would be untenable. But that untenable nature is kind of the way that we do it within
in short tech where every two parties that work together have to build their own connection to each other.
And it's incredibly inefficient. So what we've done is we've said kind of like just put us in the
middle. We don't want any money for it. We're building it out. So it's really programmatic and
scalable, where you could just come upload your API. We will auto-identify the data headers.
We use AI to do a mapping that we think agency name compares to your agency dot name.
We have a human come check it. But now I speak your language. I have this like Google
translate service between me and you for these data headers. So that's like the first fundamental
thing that we're doing. So now if you think across the insurance supply chain, AMS is to
wholesalers, to MGA systems, to carrier portals, to core systems, to TPA systems, the claims.
These are all siloed systems and none of them talk to each other.
And each integration is a one-to-one.
We're trying to break that down.
So I'll shut up.
But that's like the first core element of what we do.
So essentially insurance gig is the, it's the data, it's the universal data currency of the insurance industry.
Like essentially this is the language that everything is translated into to then be translated into whatever, wherever it needs to go.
Like this is the English. In your example, basically what you're saying is what insurance gigs mapping is the English of how the United Nations translates between all the different languages.
Yeah. So what I would say is I want to be very careful with my words. I would say it can be. I would say we hope for it to be. It doesn't have to be.
we're not trying to build this platform where I have to have 72.9% market coverage in order for it's to be relevant to everyone.
That's where like this market effect comes in.
We're just working organically one partner at a time.
Because when I get to the second fundamental point, you'll see what the driver is.
The data is this massive problem and we have a solution for it, but that's kind of not how we're getting our foot in the door.
We're getting our foot in the door when it comes to the pricing model, which we think we've come up with a whole new way to price insure tech.
And people are, I know this is self-serving for me to say, but they're going crazy for how we've broken it out.
So when they come into us for the pricing and we have this kind of organic mapping where I could say, hey, anybody that I'm connected to, like, remember that game like Kevin Bacon, six degrees with Kevin Bacon?
Yeah, yeah.
It's like one degree of insurance gig.
If you're integrated with insurance gig, anybody else that's integrated with insurance gig, you can now speak to each other.
I love it. So one thing I'll say is you can be as self-aggrandizing as you want on this show because we're not unbiased.
We allow you to be biased on this show. So you can see whatever you want about yourself. So go crazy.
Two, I absolutely love this because this is the thing with, again, when we originally talked and I had mentioned Zapier, because that that has.
as a similar concept, the problem always being, most it's not prioritized by anyone in our space
because, you know, the idea of marketing and data connection and stuff is so foreign.
So and every, and so what you end up getting is all these hacked connections that break
every, every five days. And it's never really what you want. And it's a pain in the butt.
So what you're saying is say my, say my raider integrates with insurance gifts.
and my AMS integrates with insurance gig, just talking tools that a lot of agents will understand,
but they don't talk to each other, which has always been something that grinds your gears, right?
Now, because they both connect to insurance gig, I can say, hey, I don't care if they ever actually integrate.
It'd be great if they did, but if they don't, it doesn't matter because now I can use insurance gig to bridge the data from my raider to my AMS and vice versa,
because there's this universal language that they use to connect the two.
So the answer is, yeah. Let me show you. And I know that the audience isn't seeing this. And,
Brian, if you're inclined, I'm happy to work with you offline. I'll have maybe my editing team
take the footage and insert some video to give that visual effect. If you're, again, but this is your show.
Yeah. Yeah. So this is something that I'll show you very quickly. We just went live.
this is the Hawksoft AMS.
And when the agent is in the AMS, there's an insurance gig button.
And when they click that button, we pull all the data out of the AMS, and we actually
send it to the comp raters.
So we have the ability to send it to, right now we're announcing it, I believe, this
week, we're connected to Talij and Semsey. So two of the premier comp raters. So we can now give
the agent a full comprating experience without leaving the AMS. Because we do the behind the scenes
work. We take the submission data. We then Taligent SEMC go to their carrier panels, get the
quotes, and then we could take it and put it back into the AMS. So we actually went live
with Hawksoff. I think it was last week was the first live production. So it's kind of game
changing on a couple of levels. One is quoting in the AMS, which is really quite powerful.
That's where the agents want to do it. But it's the concept of just this data in and out that we
could take it. Can I show you one other cool thing that we do?
You can show me anything you want. Check this out. Now I'm jumping around a bit and this might get
confusing, especially since I haven't even gone into like two or three of the core,
you know, value props of what insurance gig is. Yeah, we'll get that. But check this out.
You're an agent using AMS 360.
Here's the Boynton Beach construction, right?
You see the name of the risk.
Insurance gig built a Chrome extension,
which is basically meant to be this gateway in and out of all of our backend APIs.
So now the agent is in the record, and they see they're missing certain data.
Like I want to submit this.
I don't have the Nakes yet.
And I know that the carrier, if they don't have the Nakes,
they're going to have to get it and it's going to add three days to the quote.
If the agent hits our Chrome extension, we pull the data via API out of the AMS.
So you see here, I just pulled Boynton Beach construction right here.
When the agent clicks, fill the Nakes button, I API to multiple vendors, Relativity 6 and Neurometrics.
I pull the data, and I populated back into the AMS.
The agent never left the AMS.
And we were able to go hit third-party APIs.
They didn't have to go do a separate login.
They didn't have to go to three different systems.
We're consolidating all these third party services
that agents want or need,
and we're serving them where they want to be.
So, but I love that.
I think that's a killer, and it's anything.
It doesn't have to be Nakes.
It could be any type of data.
It could be quoting.
It could be scanning.
We do some killer work with Sensible.
They're amazing at basically what an insurance
gig is trying to do is find the best partners
and expose their superpowers as a microservice.
There are tons of these amazing companies out there, these huge core policy systems without mentioning any names.
They're meant as like big boy tech.
And I say that where like, you know, only people with massive budgets can afford it.
But also it's kind of like this all or nothing type thing where you have to buy this whole suite.
People just want microservices.
I want that and only that.
And that was kind of like the origin story to insurance gig where I wanted certain tech.
But I only wanted that tech.
I didn't want the whole suite.
I didn't want the whole SaaS platform.
I just wanted to get the Nakes code.
How do I do that?
So here, let me show you one other thing that is like really, that's the core of what we do.
It's really, if I had to break it down to one tweet, which I'm self-admittedly not really good at, being concise.
So the main driving point that I found that was the biggest friction to buying technology, it just came down to money.
It came down to the buyers of insure tech, whether they're at carriers or at MGAs or wholesalers or even the mom and pop retail.
People do not want to spend big dollars and make big investments before they're 100% certain it's going to work.
So even if you go to POCs, unless I know I'm going to get a 10x ROI in premium or a 10x cost savings in CAPX,
I'm very reluctant to drop $50, $100,000 in a proof of concept, even though that's really what the proof of concept is supposed to be.
because nobody wants to go to the budget meeting
at the end of the quarter and get screamed at,
why did you spend 100 grand on this tech?
I don't see the results yet.
So what we've done, and the question that I love to ask
is, Ryan, you have an Uber account, I assume, right?
Yes, it do.
When you signed up to Uber, if Uber would have said to you,
prepay $15,000 and leave it on account,
and you'll have a balance,
and every $13 ride that you take,
we will take off of your balance.
Would you have signed up to Uber?
No.
No.
But that's the only paradigm in which to buy insured tech.
You have to make big bets.
You have to put up big dollars, and you have to kind of hope it works.
Now, there's amazing tech out there.
Amazing.
And we're just trying to give these vendors a different medium platform and a whole different
audience, to be quite frank, to sell their tech.
So what we do, like the one rule of insurance gig, is transactional pricing.
Every creator comes to us.
and in minutes they could list their service.
In minutes, we could ingest their API.
And then they give us their own pricing model,
but it must be per transaction.
It's per event in the runtime.
So if right here, Relativity Six,
I'm just making up a number here.
They want 50 cents per data call.
If you as an agent want that data,
if you sign up to me, I have your credit card on file.
And if you use their service one,
I'm going to charge you 50 cents.
I collect that 50 cents and I give 85% of it to the creator.
That's our model.
We're just like the app store.
You want to buy $100 worth of candy crush credits.
Apple's going to bill that money and they're going to pay the gaming company $0.05.
I know there's lawsuits around how much it is.
Please don't take me too literally.
But that's the structure of what we do and how we make money.
So just to recap, you've got that translation layer, which allows us to all talk together, which is really new.
You've got this innovative, especially for enterprise payment structure, which now, here's the value prop.
Here's the sales pitch.
Go to any buyer.
Hey, try something out before you make this huge commitment.
I have certain carriers that have said to me, do you mean to tell me I could put $500 on my corporate card, try out a vendor, see if it works, and then go back to my.
my boss and show him, hey, I have results and I only spend $500.
And the answer is yes, absolutely.
And let me just show you one more thing and it'll all come together.
Are you familiar on your phone?
Apple has this thing called Shortcuts.
You ever use it?
So I'd say a third of the people that I come across because I bring it up
often know what shortcuts is.
So for those who don't, I'll just, I'll repeat it quickly.
Shortcuts is this amazing tool that's an app that's created by Apple.
you have to download it.
And basically what it allows you to do,
it allows you to string together
the different apps in your phone.
So what you could say is,
hey, in the morning,
I want you to check the weather app.
If it's raining, call an Uber for me early.
When I hit the Brooklyn Bridge,
hit the Starbucks app and order my coffee,
and when Uber sends me my ride-ended notification,
send an SMS to my next meeting,
let them know I'm on my way.
You can do that.
And you don't have to have this huge engineering team.
It's kind of like Zapier or if this than that, but specifically for the Apple App Store.
We've built that for insured tech.
So what this allows you to do is you could say, hey, I need to scan a document.
And let's say you want to scan in a court form.
We scan it, but it has seven pieces of data on it.
And in order to send it to Talidger to Semse, you need eight pieces of data.
So I scan it, a missing data.
I then send it to Relativity Six, who enriches it with the missing eighth piece of data.
it comes back to insurance gig.
Then I send it to the comp rating platforms who then get quotes.
Those come back to me.
And then I could send it back to the submitting broker.
So what I could do is I could bundle and cluster different microservices and superpowers
from different vendors with no end.
There's an infinite, and I'm being super clear, an infinite amount of possibilities of
different recipes or bundles that we could create with the inventory of vendors and tech.
that we already have.
There's no end to what you could imagine.
And everybody's got something unique.
And the fact that we could do that in minutes,
like literally minutes, where the current paradigm is it's impossible to do.
Could you imagine Ryan getting on a tech kickoff call
with three parties and saying, OK, what's the cadence?
How are we going to have a weekly call?
What are you going to do?
With getting three partners to work together
is virtually impossible.
The company, the buyer, has to do their own orchestration
internally.
We've completely flipped that script.
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back to the episode. So for you guys listening at home, you know, you can't see the screen and
everything that's going on. One of the things that I, you know, just just from a pure
usability standpoint. And we track this a lot at rogue risk because we're fully remote. So,
you know, we're not punching time cards or when does Sally or Johnny walk in the office
or whatever. I look at the time that people spend on things, on tasks. Not necessarily. I'm not
tracking call times and stuff like that because obviously I've talked a little bit about my
philosophy on call times. But when you're not, you know, when you're not tracking call times and stuff. And,
But when someone has to do a task, one of the things we're tracking is how many tabs do they have to open?
How many services do they have to log into?
Right.
Like I think what I've always been intrigued by with insurance gig is that the logins, especially now that multifactor authentication, MFA is a thing and everyone's all MFA, MFA.
It's like, well, you're the fact that I have to log into your system as a separate tab from systems we use most often and then double authenticate factor in because it's 15 days from my last login or now I just don't.
That time, we just stopped using that service.
And what I found is that people in my office have built their own workarounds because they don't want to log into these separate systems.
So they're actually creating, you know, we had someone create their.
own fillable Adobe. We don't even have an Adobe subscription what we do now, but we didn't at the time.
Adobe fillable PDF because they didn't want to, you know, they were like, it was a workaround
to get out of having to log into different systems. So when I'm looking at you in AMS 360,
you know, click a button here, push this information there. Now all of a sudden, I haven't,
you didn't leave the tab. You stayed right on the AMS 360 tab and boom, all of a sudden,
that information is in the system.
And now I can push that right out to get a quote or whatever.
That time savings, that workflow savings is not just important from a pure time perspective,
but something that I think is a vastly under-talked-about cultural aspect of all our businesses,
which is like tool fatigue, right?
Our teammates get fatigue from logging in and out of different systems from, you know,
I'm in this for my AMS, that I'm in this for rating,
that I'm in this for accords, then I'm in this for, you know, NACS codes.
Then I'm in this to get email addresses.
And all of a sudden people's brains like start to come out their ears.
And what I'm seeing here is I can hit one service.
And what insurance gig does then is actually do all that work for me.
Instead of me having to go to relatively six, log in and find the NACE codes,
it's being pulled in.
Instead of me having to go out to Tallidge and get a rate and pull it back,
although we do use Tarmica.
You know, it does that.
And now I'm not getting as a user or as a teammate of a company,
I'm not getting this tool fatigue because this system is actually doing that work for us
and pulling the data in.
And now what I'm thinking about is how am I going to position the results in order to help
solve this person's problem, which is what our people should be thinking about.
Not, well, I used my dog's middle name last time for this login.
And now I got to switch it to my second child's.
you know, middle name in order to get my login into this system, which just breaks people's
brains.
Yeah, so you just put down so many different things.
I'm not sure which one to pick up first.
The way that we like to frame it is, you know, we're not replacing the AMS.
We're not replacing the core policy system, but we really think that we're going to be
this really valuable, accretive, secondary layer on top of them where, you know,
You mentioned logins and passwords.
We spent a lot of time and energy on being able to use O-O-O-Oth or SSO to take the credentials from whatever system you use most and use that to log into insurance gig, just like you could use, you know, Facebook or Google.
So we are building that because at the end of the day, like our main drive is just to make this as easy as possible as cheap and fast and de-risk.
So you think about that fatigue.
Think about how much worse that fatigue is when you're actually paying a lot of money for these systems that are paying to use or you might not use at all.
That's where it becomes painful beyond fatigue.
So we really do think that this, that insurance gig presents a solution to be able to think of us as the last integration, not the last platform, but the last integration you're ever going to need.
You know, we have carriers that are saying to us, and this was not our model when we set out.
Do you mean to tell me I could use you as my compliance hub?
Let me, let insurance gig go through your compliance rubric or crucible.
And then if other vendors come to them, let me kind of do that.
And I'm not 100% saying that's something that we want to do time and time out because there's like a huge liability there.
But we're that central point of integration.
And also think about this, Ryan.
When I showed you before the submission, let's assume that this is a one-one work comp.
Okay, so the quote comes from Hawksoft to me to a comparator.
I get the quotes.
It comes back to me and I put it back in the AMS.
And I've got Tony's pizza shop sitting there on January 1st.
On March 1st, I want to be super clear about this with the agent's permission because it's the agent's data, right?
So with the agent's permission, I could say, hey, Tony, it's March 1st.
now, can I go to a premium audit company that's pre-integrated with us and see if I can get you
audit results? Can I go to a loss control company? Can I go to a data science as a service vendor?
I already have the data. I am integrated with those companies. There is zero additional work that you
need to do. Look at what I have for you and the creators are super excited to give it like a
freemium or a freebie to say, hey, the last hundred submissions you did, here's a better
underwriting insight or here's an upsell, cross-sell opportunity with zero. And I mean zero
additional work on the buyer side because I'm this very efficient integration layer. I have
all those connections. I've done those integration. I like it. I like it. So are you seeing,
so obviously you've talked a little bit about carriers starting to become interested.
what are some of the I mean obviously some of the straight insure tech kind of value added service
providers like a tallage like a relatively six those seem like a lot of early wins early adopters of
this have the carriers started to to see this as a potential to give agents access directly into
their systems like could you have they started to open up that far are they sniffing around
or is it still going to have to be through comparative raters?
Is that kind of step one, is comparative raters?
Or do you think eventually I'd be able to go to say a Hanover or a Chubb or someone
and say, hey, like if you guys are on insurance gig,
then we could push quotes directly into your system right from ours
using this, you know, without having to do the, you know, what is it,
$150, $250,000 plus build to,
to get that kind of integration.
Yeah.
So the way that I would answer it is if you look at all the different comprator or carrier integration
solutions that are out there and, you know, we're working very closely with a bunch of them,
but, you know, I'll mention this three, you know, Talich, Shempsey, and I bind, right?
They're amazing of what they do.
And, Ryan, you know that my job when I was back at the carrier, excuse me, was I oversaw the
API integrations. So one thing I'll mention, and when you talk about being efficient,
when I left, I think we had 130 different integrations. Some were with comparators,
some were with wholesalers and MGAs directly. But I'd say 100 of them, we had to do the exact
same thing. It was like an identical, redundant piece of work. And that was kind of part of what
prompted me to think about insurance gig is, how do I not build the same thing 130 times?
Same thing here. If tech exists out there, I don't want to have to build it. So I am not in that last
mile business. I am not looking to go integrate directly with carriers. Talid, Shemsey, and I bind
are awesome at that. Let them do that. So think of me like kind of like this digital Switzerland
in between them, where Talich, let's say, has 30 carriers, Semsey has 30 carriers. And I'm making
this up. They've got 15 in common, but they each have 15 unique.
How do those guys work and trade with each other?
And we're starting to see some of that come to be.
But again, Ryan, if you think about Amazon has categories,
and this is back to your original question,
where they have clothing, electronics, and books,
insurance gig has categories.
We have data, just pure data.
I can get cope, I can get Nakes, I can get crime score,
I can get flood data.
And we could enrich it.
We have operational workflows.
like scanning and RPA and data normalization and things like that.
But we also have a category which is submissions where we could work from the distribution side.
Data could come to us and then we could help, like think of us almost like air traffic
control where, you know, does the agent want it to go to Tallis?
Does they want to go to SMC?
Do they want it to go to Amtrust?
Or maybe do we, are they trusting us to help them find the markets?
and the access.
Now, back to your question with carriers.
Yeah, carriers are definitely thinking on the submission line,
but what about a carrier as a buyer?
What if a carrier needs to get,
I know when I was at the carrier,
they had underwriters going to websites
and looking for pictures of ladders.
That's something that a piece of AI could do
very easily and inexpensively today.
It couldn't three, four years ago,
but how do I get that little service
from this vendor that I know?
into the carrier stack without them having to go through an 18-month onboarding process
just for that one piece of tech.
How do I help them A-B test the two vendors that do that to see which one is better for
their use case, which one's cheaper, which one's more accurate?
How do I help them build workflows to say, well, now that I saw there's a picture of ladder,
let me trigger a secondary, whether it might be a form or questionnaire, or let me refer
it to somebody else who would do something with ladders?
So, again, there's no end to the workflows.
And in terms of the value that we bring, it's not just submission-oriented.
It's we're completely open-source between buyers of insure tech and sellers of insure tech.
Across all lines of business, we're right now being very focused on PNC,
because that's, you know, where I learned and I developed my relationships.
But we have people calling us saying, have you launched yet for employee benefits?
Have you launched yet for A&H?
And Ryan, you know me.
It kills me to say no.
Yeah.
And for those who know me, you know, trying to be focused as a struggle.
But we're trying to be very focused.
And Ryan, we launched a month ago.
We've made a lot of noise and people are talking about us.
But we went live a month ago.
So we're trying to balance the demand.
And like you talk about, like we're seeing amazing demand because it's a no
brainer.
Try it.
No long term commitment.
No long term contracts.
Pay as you use it.
And if you don't like it, stop.
Yeah.
I've tried to take all the friction and risk out of the tech process of insurance.
Yeah.
Another concept that I love that you brought up is the idea of being able to test some of these services.
You know, that is the part.
Like there's a couple tools that we've kind of had that are in our roadmap that we haven't implemented because, you know,
the upfront cost to will it work or not, we just haven't been, you know, we haven't been willing to do that.
And I look at things like, like ZyWave where one of the, so we subscribe to three ZyWave services.
One of those services I use almost daily.
The other two, I don't know that I've used in the three year contract that we have.
ZyWave won't let us out of the contract because they're, you know, not particularly.
That's the business that they're in.
The business model is, you know, lock you up and, you know, never use their product.
again and tell everyone how much you hate them for their draconian practices. But, you know, the idea of,
I wish I could have tested all three tools and said, oh, you know what? Now that I'm testing them,
these two I don't really want. This one I love. I'd like to just use this one. I would have saved
myself thousands of dollars or saved the business thousands of dollars. And that type of,
that I think that ability to, I will say, tiptoe into a service or test a service, I think will help
a lot of people who would love to add features to their agency, to their carrier, to whatever
they're trying to do. But like you said, don't want to, you know, they're worried about
kind of sunk cost and all that kind of stuff. It opens up a world to really be,
to really try things out and see what kind of things you need. I couldn't agree more. I don't
think that the only reason why I should be paying a software solution provider,
is because I contractually entered into it,
even though it's not useful for me,
and I'm still writing out checks.
And I have that right now with the company
that we work with, that they're amazing at what they do.
I mean, I highly recommend them as a company,
but they weren't for me.
I made a bad decision very early on that I thought I would need it.
And ends up I didn't.
I'm still paying that contract, even though I don't need it.
And that drives me nuts.
And so here, I'm showing you a screen.
And for those who can imagine, I had a top 100 broker
came to us and said, we want to buy data from a particular partner.
I'm not going to mention the name, but they wanted to buy data.
And they were talking to two or three very well-known entities that are amazing of what they do.
We work with them and we partner with them.
But this company said, I am not prepared to pay $100,000 for a contractor for a POC, especially.
These companies are amazing.
But it's an only an 80% solution of what we need.
So I'm going to have to now go fill in that gap of 20% with a different partner.
So now I need two.
So they came to us and said, and I'm showing you a couple of things here.
One is insurance gig, can you go get us this transactional pricing from these vendors,
which we did.
The vendors were very open to it, and we're finding that most are.
But look what happened.
I went to that top 100 broker and I said, okay, I got you the pricing you wanted.
Here are the results that you want.
Here's my API.
Consume it.
And they looked at me like I'm from Mars.
So Ryan, when I started this, we were calling ourselves an API app market.
And in the beginning, when you asked me what I did is I didn't say we're an API
at market because we're not just an API at market because I realized that once you go to
the top broker list and you get past the top 100, nobody's got API resources.
Nobody's got the infrastructure, the engineers to post or to consume APIs.
And I said, and actually one of the guys in my team, it was kind of his brainchild, is
we don't have a solution that will cater to that, what I would call the lowest common denominator
of your tech ability, right? So here's what we built. I'm looking at a screen right now where any
CSR or any producer could type in the name of a restaurant. Okay, so remember when I, in the beginning,
I showed you those six fields. Here I have the name of the restaurant, city, state, zip, and I hit the
submit button, insurance gig one behind the scenes, hit two API.
and I delivered the results to you in this ready to go format.
So you don't need an API.
And with that same login that you're coming to us,
every one of my services will be available in a user experience.
So it's not just this behind-the-scenes engineering workbench.
It's kind of now think of Shopify on top of your system, right?
So you could, you know, if you wanted to charge sales tax in New Zealand
on your e-commerce store, Shopify could power that.
I'm powering all these little services,
and I'm giving it to the agents in the easiest format.
So if you have APIs, I'll meet you.
If you have a data feed, I'll meet you.
Or if you don't, and you just want to screen
where you can type things in
and get the results back, we'll do that too.
And Ryan, this is like the main point.
If you go to InsureTech Connect or InsureTech Insights
or any of these shows, who's there, right?
You've got the enterprise sellers, the guys that are selling big tech, and you have the huge entities that are the buyers.
The guy who's doing 20 million in premium has never had access to like the enterprise tech before because it wasn't worth the sellers to sell these guys and these guys don't have the budget.
I've now made all this tech available to everybody in the supply chain.
I don't care how big or small you are.
I do. I mean, it's the democratization of insured tech. I mean, it's really what it is.
It is the democratization of insured tech. And that to me is an incredibly exciting concept.
And it's, I mean, you know, just the user experience. And guys, if you're, you know, I know,
I know some of this that Michael's been talking through, he's been doing visually for me. And we're,
we're going to try to get a video out. We've never done video off the podcast before.
So we'll try to get that out and maybe put it on YouTube or whatever.
But the concept here is that the UX is clean.
It's simple.
You know, I think that I think the idea is as we as the pace of business starts to pick up.
And is at a very basic level.
And I'm talking to a lot of the agencies, the main street agencies, the regional agencies that are listening to this in particular.
because some of these concepts will make immediate sense to some of the larger entities that listen
that maybe are already having some of these conversations.
But if you're sitting here and you're thinking about features, tools, value-added resources
that you'd like to deliver either in helping your team do their job or in providing to your
customers.
But like Michael's described, you just, you know, it's time, it's energy.
it's it's all these logins it's all these different entities that you have to go in and out of it's
it's just it's just a lot it can be overwhelming um what i'm seeing here and and obviously have understood
for a while just in and going through this with michael a couple times and knowing him for a while
this is this is this makes it much more accessible it puts these services at your fingertips and
gives you the ability to actually do some of the things that you want to do that maybe
fell outside your reach for a long time. And that's incredibly exciting to me. Me too.
I really, you know, it's hard to like, you know, say something like this and, you know, try to sound
humble, even though I'm not a particularly humble person. You know, if I'm good at something,
I'll tell you I'm good at it. If I suck, you know, I'll tell you I suck. I'm pretty self-aware at this
point in my life. But I do genuinely believe this is how it's going to be done. In five years,
years from now, I hope insurance gig is at the forefront of it.
We're kind of well situated from a timing perspective and a relationship perspective, but there's
no going back.
After watching TV in 4K, you're not going back to black and white.
And it really is a better way.
It wasn't always available.
API's made it available.
The fact, you know, you have cloud-based solutions make it available.
We've just taken a lot of like pre-existing types of technology and put them together for this use case to make procuring in ShoreTech easier.
I say that, you know, very clearly, we chose our words very carefully, easier, faster, and we've de-risked it.
And it's working.
We're in our early days.
And I have more demand on the buy side and the sell side that we can handle.
Like we have a waiting list at this point.
We're trying to figure out how to grow this where it becomes incredibly scalable,
which is, we'll leave that for chapter two of the Ryan Hanley podcast, which is really cool.
But one thing I want to mention, I mentioned Shopify before.
This is a platform we built for BTIS, who is a huge MGA.
They've got, I think, 25,000 independent agents that submit to them throughout the course of the year as a wholesaler and as an MGA.
They basically white-labeled insurance gigs tech app store to give their 25,000 agents solution.
So it's not just I have to go to them directly.
We have large influencer organizations that are saying, this tool could help my agents be better at what they do.
So this service, lead gents gives great leads to agents.
Loeb helps them mail marketing postcards.
They could fill out NAC's NCCI through Relativity 6.
We've got Broker Buda that they could pop in, like you mentioned before,
like doing the whole form in a PDF.
We've got Broker Buddha and their whole library of forms consumable on a one-off basis.
Adapt API, these guys pull data off of carrier portals.
So keep in mind, Ryan, these are all different systems.
So for the first time, I believe we're going to be able to demonstrate a visibility into the flow of
data across the entire supply chain.
From the time the risk has it to the AMS,
to the carrier, to the core system, to the portal,
to a quoting entity, back to us,
we're going to have full visibility.
So you talk about data as like you first opened up.
I was on a panel at the Vertifor show.
And some panels, you know, I sit on and I know what I'm talking about
when we talk about digital insurance here.
I happen to have been on the panel talking about a cord
with the former CEO, the chairman of accord and the board member of a court,
and I was way out of my element. But they're talking about data and agencies,
do you have good data or bad data? What the hell does that mean? You know, it's so subjective,
it's so relative. And there is no industry standard, not that that's what we're trying to do
of rating data. Like you were just part of an M&A acquisition, right? This firm came in,
they evaluated your data. Did they give you a score? Like, how good was your data? How
your CSRs, do they verify the data before they put something in? There's no standard.
And the fact that it exists in so many different places, it's been so hard to like,
to kind of stack rank the validation of the data across different parties. So there's so much
room in the world of insurance for opportunity for improvement. And we think we're bringing
our expertise of streamlining it to play the feedback that we're getting and the
early results we're seeing from our beta customers is really indescribable. We're geometrically
faster. Like I said, they love the fact that they could try things out without the risk.
And we're just on to something really magical. I really do believe that. And everyone who sees it,
you know, I started recording my demos because I couldn't recreate the reactions that we were
getting from people that look on their face when it clicks, you know, the, the response.
I know, you could fill in the blanks, but like I've heard, you know, a hundred times in the
past month, this is bloody genius, but they didn't say bloody. So yeah. I, well, you know, I just
think about we struggle. So we use HubSpot for basically agency operation, sales, marketing,
all that stuff, and then we currently use NowSerts basically as a system of record for policy
sold premium commissions, that kind of stuff. Just keeping, I'm not even talking about data accuracy,
just consistency of data across just those two systems, just the making sure the information
in HubSpot matches the information in NowSerts. And even we probably aren't even
tracking across those two platforms more than seven to 10.
10 pieces of data. I mean, it's not even like we have 40 pieces of information that need to be
consistent between the two. We really just need, you know, effective dates, policy number,
carrier, line of business, premium. You know, like, it's maybe 7 to 10 pieces of data.
And just keeping the data consistent, consistent. We're not even using the word accuracy.
Just consistent between the two is a freaking nightmare. And you think about that.
Now insert any other systems that you're using, any other places, and just, again, not even
using the word accurate, just consistent is almost impossible.
You're always going to have errors.
And if you had a connection tool, a set of, I don't want to say pipes, because I know it's
much more than that, that could make sure the data was passed consistently.
between the systems. Once you have consistency, then you can start to think about accuracy.
And that's what excites me. It's like consistency first, then accuracy. Because if you don't have,
if you don't have consistency of data, then your accuracy is impossible. There's a zero,
there's a zero percent chance you can be accurate. So that to me is, is another piece that makes
this so exciting. Dude, I'm, I mean, you're the right guy at the right time. I think the look,
the feel very important only because it adds to usability.
I think it seems like you've got that pretty dialed in.
If someone's listening to this and they're like,
I need to go test it out.
I want to get signed up.
I want to get either myself or my people starting to see what's possible,
what we can do today.
Obviously, there's so much more coming.
But where do they go?
How do they get signed up?
What's the call to action for everyone listening at home?
So please go to insurance gig.
click into the app market and there's a place to fill out your company info you could sign up,
you could list your service. It's free, but we currently on May 31st right now, we do have a waiting
list, but just get yourself on there and just kind of grab your place in line.
Ryan, going back, just one topic to your last point, just to kind of drive home what I think is
the beauty of insurance gig.
things. One is we have a vendor. It's called Record Linker. It's created by a guy by name of Roman
Stepanenko, who in my mind is one of the most brilliant insurance data structure minds out there.
He's one of the founders of Risk Match that sold to Vertifor. And he has this amazing canonical
data structure matching platform where when data's coming in and you write Travindemco and you
you, but you need to have it, say, Travelers Endemnity Company, he could find those discrepancies
and actually, you know, kind of cut and replace the data. And the reason why I mention that is
I have the luxury being able to say, yeah, we could do that to a thousand different services,
because I'm not building each of these services. I'm just going out to the best vendors that are
out there and saying, just connect to me, become part of our data fabric. And I can now make it
available to Ryan Handley and his nice agency,
and you could have access to this enterprise solution
that you never would have had before.
And number two, is theoretically, Ryan,
if you built that connector between NowSerts and HubSpot,
and we're as an organization, our CRM, we're moving at the HubSpot,
so I'd love to talk about that offline.
But if you built this service and you could expose it as an API as a microservice,
because you're not the only person using HubSpot
who's on NowSerts. NowSerts has, I think, 1,300 agencies that are on now certserts.
I promise you 300 of them are using HubSpot.
Now, if you built, you spent the time building a connector between NowSerts and HubSpot,
expose that on an insurance gig, and you can now have 300 agents.
You can make money off of that thing that you spent money building,
and you now have a trading relationships with 300 brokers.
You've brought value to now certs.
So, you know, I have one of my investors after he heard my whole pitch, which I realize
there's a lot going on here.
But his main response was there are a lot of ways to win here.
And we really do think that.
There are a lot of ways to win.
So in that one example, you told me, I had two takeaways there.
One is, I have an amazing vendor for you that you could use tomorrow.
And I recommend that you or anyone else wants to.
have consistent data. Check out record blinker. You know, they have a listing on insurance gig.
And to your point, sign up for it right there and we'll get noticed. We'll get notified and we'll
contact you immediately. But Ryan, you also could expose the superpower that you created that you spent
money on and you can now have that to turn that into a revenue stream as well. So yeah,
I, dude, I love it. I think that the possible this, this is that this is the, you know,
know, for the individuals who are willing to step out of their business and start to work on it
instead of in it, this is the step, this is where their mind should be. And it's, you know,
as I've started to, you know, the big move, part of the move to SIA for me was exactly that,
is I'm not adding value writing insurance policies. I'm adding value working on this kind of stuff
and high level marketing and that kind of stuff. And this is where you go. I mean, you will could get,
I mean, how many companies, and this is the last thing I'll say to be respectful of your time in our audiences, is how many companies have been severely tied down and or dashed across the rocks because they tried to do all this shit themselves directly, right?
The money, the time, the thought, the trying to create all these things themselves to be proprietary.
I'm doing air quotes.
no one can see me, when it's all right here,
when you could instead have spent all those brain cycles thinking about what you actually
wanted to do and had it in market in days or weeks versus months or years
and not have the sunk cost of building it all yourself and all the crap that comes along
with that.
And you could get to the business that you actually do.
And that to me, I think the ego of we need to build it ourselves.
I see that not as something that someone should carry as a badge of honor, but rather I see it as
a big glaring sign of, you know, of weakness, in my opinion. Now, some people need to build some
things themselves that I get. But this is a path to sidestep so much of that nonsense,
especially for the services that you shouldn't be building yourself. So A, I agree with you. B is,
I think as an industry, we're starting to see that change.
C is, I think, if you took the staunchest build versus buy person at a carrier, right,
which is where I think you see build versus buy more than anyone,
they would come to our platform and they saw 100 services.
They themselves would say, yeah, I would build 20% of those, but 80% it doesn't pay for me to build.
And we've got that inventory and we've got that library.
And people are starting to come around.
And, you know, two things happen.
When you do something once and you fail, you know, do you go try it again?
I find that, oh, like we got burned once, like on a buying a piece of data, we're never going to do it again.
And that to me is kind of ludicrous, where it's, I come from a marketing background, as do you, right?
Where failing fast is kind of sign of success.
You know, in e-commerce, if you have a 2% conversion rate, you're an absolute rock star.
So insurance has always been don't fail.
If you're trying 10 things, like you better knock all 10 out of the park.
And I wanted to be where you could try 10 things and three are going to be killer,
but cycle through the other seven bad ones very quickly without a huge capital expense
and without a long-term commitment.
And we provide that platform and mechanism.
And it'll take some time for people to really get it and see it.
but anyone who's listening, I love nothing more than talking about this and giving demos and
reach out.
And I'm sure there's one value service that we could bring to you to make your current day
better for you or your agents or your producers.
And just keep paying attention, please, to what we're doing and be in touch.
And because we really do think in our own little kind of spectrum in the industry,
we're making a difference.
We're seeing it.
Michael, you're the man.
We're out of here.
Dan, thank you.
I appreciate your time.
I appreciate your sharing access to your audience.
I look forward to doing this and collaborating.
Let's figure out how this could be valuable to you and helpful to you.
For sure.
My mind is spinning, as always.
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I'm here on the job site with Dale, who's a framing contractor.
Hey, good morning.
Dale traded up to Geico Commercial Auto Insurance for all his business vehicles.
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Oh, I shouldn't have looked down.
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Take a deep breath.
Oh, I'm good.
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