Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - Jennifer Linton on the Secret Sales Superpower of Data
Episode Date: February 25, 2021Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyIn the latest episode of the Ryan Hanley Show, host Ryan Hanle...y interviews Jennifer Linton, the Founder, and CEO of Fenris Digital. Jennifer joins the podcast to talk about the often misunderstood superpower of data…MORE SALES. Jennifer also talks about the impact of embedded insurance and how her company is competing with data giants to deliver data resources downstream to retail agencies and start-ups.Episode Highlights:Jennifer shares her background. (11:54)Jennifer mentions what embedded insurance is. (13:57)Jennifer shares why she considers embedded insurance a game-changer. (19:45)Jennifer mentions the huge issue for their agency. (31:20)Jennifer gives a little background about their data and system complexity. (32:27)Jennifer mentions the reason why they have broad data. (34:45)Jennifer shares how most of their API's function. (36:26)Where does Jennifer’s agency data come from? (45:25)Jennifer shares one of the next products they’re going to launch. (55:20)Jennifer shares what they would do for their clients. (56:26)Key Quotes:“I honestly believe that the best solution is to meet the customer where they are. Get that product started, get the best information in there.” - Jennifer Linton“We want to make a good customer experience and a good agent experience. The only way to do that is because you need data, you have to have data, and consumers don't understand why you need so much data. Because they're used to other channels where they can buy something with a click or a couple of questions.” - Jennifer Linton“I think it's important to always try to find the right partners, we just keep an eye on not just the data, but the benefit. So, we've got to make sure there's a good problem we're solving with that data, and when that makes sense, it opens up the entire world.” - Jennifer LintonResources Mentioned:Agency IntelligenceReach out to Ryan HanleyJennifer Linton LinkedInFenris Digital--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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Hello, everyone in the basement of his home.
back to the show. Today we have a tremendous guest, Jennifer Linton, the founder and CEO of
Fenris, an insureTech company delivering data to the tools that we use and ultimately
unlocking our ability to be real value providers to our clients. This is a dynamic discussion.
I was definitely in a mood and so was she in terms of just a lot of energy, a lot of laughing,
a lot of back and forth.
And, you know, I kind of, I've known of Jennifer for a while, but we had never really spoken.
And I saw her commenting on some posts around embedded insurance on LinkedIn.
And I think it's a really interesting topic, taking insurance products and shoving them into other services and at other points of sale.
And I wanted to get her perspective on that idea and a few other things.
And we talked about that.
but then we really dive into the practical case for using data pool services to expand how you do business
and the practicality of it.
And I think you're going to nerd out on this one.
You're really going to enjoy it.
Jennifer's a great follow on LinkedIn.
And Fenris is definitely a company that you need to keep your eye on because they are going to be a big part of our ecosystem moving forward.
So you're going to love this episode.
Before we get there, a couple quick things.
Guys, if you're listening to this show, the best way to stay on top of new episodes is to simply subscribe.
So wherever you listen, iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, whatever your preferred platform is, just hit that subscribe button.
And that's the best way to get new episodes.
So that's cool.
Before we get to Jennifer, I want to give a shout out to Tarmica.
T-A-R-M-I-K-A dot com.
Don't call them Tarmica.
Guys, about this time last year, I called Tarmica.
I was the first person advertising Tarmica.
I was the first person talking about Tarmica.
I was one of the first people to use Tarmica.
I saw what this tool had.
I knew it could make small commercial profitable.
And they have become a standout in our industry.
They are a staple of quoting, binding, issuing small commercial lines for independent agents.
And while there are other players in the market,
and I've seen them all.
I've interacted with all those tools, some of which I've even worked for.
I know that Tarmica is the best.
And the reason I know that the best is because the underlying philosophy of how you connect
to your carriers.
And that doesn't matter to anyone.
But to me, I like to build a book of business with carriers I have a direct appointment
with.
That is a huge deal to me.
And just from this perspective of building up value.
with your underwriters building a value with a book that eventually you'd like to get some
contingencies on just keeping your book of business consolidated with carriers that you have
hands in and Tarmica is the tool to do that. They're fast, they're efficient. You're getting
accurate quotes back. They have a huge number of carriers now and it's all driven through
APIs, which you're going to hear Jennifer talk a little bit about and you can imagine how tools like
this may or may not work together someday. It really,
is dynamic stuff and the only way to get tarmica is to go to tarmica.
T-A-R-M-I-K-A dot com.
Get a demo, know about the tool.
You're not going to be sorry that you did.
All right, let's get on to Jennifer.
Hey, Ryan.
Hey, how are you?
I'm doing great.
How are you?
I am good.
Can you hear me all right?
I hear you great.
How's my audio?
I went with headset today.
You are also good.
I normally have this fancy microphone right here,
but I've officially run out of USB ports.
So if I want to,
I either have to go get a thing that has more USB ports
or I have to, like I've had to like trade off
being able to do soft phone calling versus, you know, the decisions.
The things that we actually, there's like the business.
in memes and stuff and then there's things you actually have to do during the day.
You need one of those things. I think they're called an octopus, right? Where there's, heaven knows,
way more outlets than you ever think you'll need. And then eventually you get to the point where
you need a second one. Oh, yeah. I know. I just, um, I'm, I'm, I'm, so I hired two people
this week. Um, employee number one and number two, I guess, in addition to me. So,
So I don't know.
Congratulations.
You tripled the size of your team is how you should say it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Triple the size of my team.
Yep.
Yep.
Triple size of my team in one week.
There's a, you know, I should write that in like a link post and get tons of like hashtag
entrepreneur life or whatever.
No, I.
Congratulations.
It's hard to.
Hires are so important.
No, so close.
I'm dying.
I can't wait to get, I can't wait to get them both up and running.
So the first one is supposed to start today.
So one of them is a full-time virtual assistant managed by agency VA.
I don't know if you've heard of them.
And she's going to be awesome.
I'm so excited for her.
Sure?
Yeah, Puerto Rico.
I was listening to how you said you were going to do some hiring from Puerto Rico in Singapore,
and I just thought that's a neat idea.
Yeah.
So she is, so Wes Anderson, who owns agency VA is a buddy of mine.
And I called him in December, and I just said, look, man.
it's gas pedal time.
Like, I'm sick of being, one, just in life, I'm sick of working on this business by myself.
And two, I have some things that I aren't my strengths.
You know, I know there's like a huge debate.
I mean, this is a good question, but like, I'd be interested in your take.
But like, I'm so much more of a, I'd rather just do the things that I know are strengths than
learn weaknesses.
And I've heard other people put it, oh, you know, you should.
that's bad advice. You know, you don't want to have these deficiencies. And I just, the idea of
learning certain skills that I don't have sounds terrible. It just goes back to economic theory.
And Adam Smith's strength of nations, right? And each nation should have one export or three exports.
And the rest comes in, supposedly. Yeah. I think, like people, you know, as an entrepreneur,
sadly, you're going to do 12 jobs. Yeah. You might do four of them well.
Yeah.
Do four of them okay and you're going to do four of them like, shit.
I hope you're not recording.
But the truth is at least getting them done is better than not.
Yeah.
I know you'll hire people in to do those jobs where you're just not great.
Like I did hire a director of marketing.
And I'm so delighted because that was one of the tasks on my plate,
but I'm only mediocre at it.
And now I don't have to think about it again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And she listens to Joe Rogan.
So there's a big.
That's a victory.
I know.
Right?
You're so much cooler than I am.
Yeah.
Well, you know, I have found what's funny is I don't never know that I thought I was cool,
but I certainly thought that I was like dialed into stuff for a while.
You thought you were cool.
And today.
You were.
You are.
No, I was not.
I wasn't until I got to insurance.
I got to insurance all of a sudden people are so low.
People were like, oh, this shit you say is cool.
I'm like, what?
I don't even know what I'm doing half the time.
This is what the island of misfit toys kind of comes into play, right?
Yes, yeah.
That's part of why I like it too, because I know everyone's story in insurance is like,
oh, you know, I didn't, I found my way here.
I fell into it.
I mean, everyone's the same thing, and I'm no different than any of them.
But I do think the people that stick have a certain type of misfitness.
And it's wide ranging.
But you can always come back to there's something about them that is a little different.
Or they wouldn't stay here.
You wouldn't stay here.
I mean, there's got to be something.
I don't think it's the same for everybody.
But you wouldn't stay here unless there's something like a little off about you.
Because, you know, it's not easy.
Everyone hates you.
It's not cool.
Like you go to the party and people are like, what do you do?
And you're like, I'm in insurance.
They're like, oh, shit, he's going to try to sell me something.
Yeah, or please don't tell me anymore.
I'm good.
That you've said enough.
Can we talk about something else?
So, yeah, it's really interesting.
To answer your question, we are recording, but you can curse on the show.
I most likely will later at some point.
But, yeah, I feel you.
So I have this thing.
I've talked about it before on the show, and I'm going to give a shout out to Gordon Coyle on this one,
who owns an agency down by the city, New York City.
And every other week we talk on the phone for like 45 minutes because we both prospect similar markets.
And I did an episode about three weeks ago where, or four, it doesn't matter, some amount of weeks ago,
where I was like talking about my call reluctance.
I really bad cold call reluctance.
And when I say really bad, I mean, I've read every frigging book.
I've done the Just Do It thing.
I've played the rock music.
I went to 90s gangster rap, which you can usually get me through just about anything.
And it doesn't matter.
I hate doing it.
And I make every excuse not to do it.
Now, you give me someone who's even giving me the door a micro inch open, whatever micro inch is.
And I'll make that phone.
I think you just mixed up them.
But that complete...
It's just mixed up the metric system.
Yeah.
Do you have kids that watch
like Pixar movies?
Are you in that vein?
Are you Pixar?
Penguins.
Have you ever seen penguins or no...
The movie Penguins?
Oh, yes.
Yes, I have children.
One of my favorite scenes in that movie is the movie penguins.
And I promise we'll start talking about you.
This is what happens in the after when I schedule these.
Warm Up.
This is what happens when we schedule these in the afternoon.
But so in penguins, they're falling out of the airplane.
And Skipper goes to whatever the smart one's name is.
He's going 500 meters, 400 meters.
He goes, damn it, whatever his name is, American.
And he goes, 324 feet, 295.
You know, like because the bar system is so screwy compared to the metric.
system, you know, which is just like 10 on, you know, I don't know why, but every time I do that,
crack up, my kids who are 7 and 5 have absolutely no idea why I'm laughing. I just find that to be
so funny. Yeah. Oh, I was a scientist in college. I studied molecular biology and I did a lot of
chemistry. So I was really excited about this whole, you know, significant figures and scientific
notations. And so, yeah, I was saddened when my children couldn't figure out that a decimeter
was bigger than a decimeter. That was a major disappointment in my life.
That's funny. Clearly, we are a little off in the insurance space, aren't we?
I think, I think, yeah, everyone's got, I'm telling you, you're never going to meet a regular
person in the insurance industry, like, oh, you know, she's just like kind of regular. You're
never going to meet that person. There's always something weird about them. It might not be as obvious.
It's always going to be something weird about them. Um, so, okay, well, let's, let's, let's, uh,
transition to talking about why I, I wanted to have you on the show. Well, so the first thing that
caught my eye, just for everyone listening is, um, I was scrolling through LinkedIn and there was a post,
which I, I think I found the one that really caught my eye about, um, embedded insurance. And,
And I've heard the term.
I think I know what it means.
I think I have opinions on it.
But I also, the more I read and stuff, the less, you know, it's one of those things where, like, some of it may be uninformed.
And I just wanted to get, you know, you had some cool opinions and, and I want to talk about Fenris II and everything.
But I just was like, this seems like somebody cool who I'd love to chat with about,
this topic and others.
So what the heck is embedded insurance and why should we care?
Well, it's going to be a term that it's going to,
I think you're on the very cusp of something big.
There are a lot of people throwing this term around.
I've seen even the venture capital,
capitalists are starting to include that as part of their thesis for investments.
But it was really something that is really easy to understand.
So the OG of embedded insurance is travel insurance.
Okay.
So go back to last time years ago when you bought an airplane ticket.
Yeah.
And what happens on checkout?
You're asked, you're presented by Allianz or another company,
would you like to get travel insurance with this?
Right.
And you say yes, and it doesn't distract you from your purchase.
It's just simply an add-on.
And you go through it and done.
So what they've done is they've taken a typical purchase pathway where you might have to go to a separate location or direct to get this insurance.
And they said, it makes sense to kind of weave it into the purchase pathway.
But they have to do it in a way that does not distract them the primary reason you're there, which is to get your airplane ticket.
So that's, you know, to me the best definition and example of embedded insurance.
And we've all experienced it.
Yeah.
There's now a lot of really new and innovative ways coming about where they're inserting
insurance products into alternate purchase pathways.
Okay.
So I'm not as uninformed as I would have thought.
Does that align with your thinking?
That's close to what I was thinking.
And you know what I never understood about that?
So I am, I don't know if you know this or not, but I am, my background is heavy into
marketing.
So being that marketing is a great.
great way for relatively unintelligent people like myself that seem a lot smarter than we actually are.
I tend to work through a marketer's mindset and I never understood why they didn't quote you the
price with the travel insurance and the button was remove versus ad. And I'm sure that there is a
logistical reason for that. But I always said to myself, I would probably purchase this more often
if I didn't have to check to add it versus check to remove it.
Now, taking that thought and moving it into a question around some of the other lines,
you know, there is actually an epic Twitter debate happening as we're recording this right now
with, here, I'm going to pull it up, with Mateo and Nigel Walsh and Charlotte Hall.
Kit and Billy Vanjura and all these Twitter insurance insuretech geeks that I love about a topic very similar
to this with home insurance and how auto seems to auto has embedded both embedded features
that they're starting to embed more things into auto and auto is starting to be embedded more
um for eyes and wireless is selling insurance products starting to sell insurance products now where um you know
there's just there's a lot of these things happening and the debate was can this be done with home can
can you embed home insurance into different um into different processes and really what it came down to
was hippo aligning with um again and we're another we're not afraid to name drop or just straight call companies out
in this show. I haven't been sued yet, but I also don't have any assets. So don't come after me
if you get pissed about something to say. I have to abide by all my NDAs, but talking generalities.
So I have so many NDAs. I say to people like, I'm not even sure what I'm supposed to say,
at this point. But that'll make everyone question whether they should sign an NDA with me or not.
No, I'm better than that, guys. So the question, you know, what was coming up was,
while Hippo has started in publicly, so this is an NDA stuff, has started to embed their product into mortgage transactions, real estate transactions.
The debate that was going back and forth was ultimately where there hasn't been in the main property lines, the main property and casualty lines, there hasn't been a real standout,
winner from a profitability standpoint in an embedded product or in these these these these
types of relationships. There's been huge numbers in terms of being able to write policies,
but it feels like, and this is what the conversation was about, is,
is it still the standard agent, you know, the standard independent agent still seems to
produce the most profitable business, but they can't produce nearly the volume of business,
that these types of relationships can.
And I feel like I've just put like 17 questions out at one time, which is terrible.
But yeah, so is this funny that we're having this conversation?
This debate is happening right here, and that's what it's about.
Okay.
Question one, why does Alleyance or why doesn't travel insurance make it an opt-out?
That's a regulatory issue.
So all 50 states like consumers to opt into a.
product that's an insurance product to acknowledge that they're getting a benefit.
So to your point, you know, that's so important to think about the regulatory requirements
when you're doing any product. I think question two was a little bit about some of the different
models that might be profitable in this sense. Yeah. And in comparison with independent
agents, we'll have to debate on that one a little bit. But I like to look at embedded insurance as a
real game changer. And there was a really excellent report that Simon put out a little while ago
that said that he literally projects that embedded insurance will grow today from its infancy
in the United States to about 230 billion in premium in 10 years. So that's a seismic change.
Might take another decade or two to get there. But I think the indications are there. So yes,
we're seeing a ton of opportunities to disintermediate to, disintermediate, to
purchase pathways. And it's more not about forcing it, but it's just a matter of where it makes
sense. So you talked about home insurance. Yes, certainly, you're buying a mortgage. You should
be offered home insurance, but also you should be offered life insurance to cover that mortgage
in the amount that's appropriate because that's a perfect opportunity to say, what if something
were to happen to you? You need the safety net and you want to provide for your family.
The same, I think, goes logically as well for some of the other products.
Let's say you're just a renter because everyone goes through a renter phase.
If you're lucky, you can go right to a house.
But when you're signing your lease, why wouldn't you then at the same time get renter's insurance?
Why should those be two separate purchase pathways?
Why should the landlord say, now go find renter's insurance, right?
They're already using softwares to manage their apartments and things like that.
So embedding that as a feature within that purchase pathway would make a ton of sense.
Yep.
Being a ton of in the auto insurance space, a lot of dealers are being offered with the
insure tech partnerships they have the ability to quote someone while they're getting their test
drive so that they can drive off the lot, even though they have, I think, up to 30 days in
most states, right, to retro and get that auto insurance applied.
So I think those are your traditional standards, right?
auto home life, just makes a lot of sense because on a profitability basis, I think there's a
couple of things to think about. There's obviously the expense, the cost of marketing. Now,
I was a marketer too. That's actually how I got my start. I came over from different industry
and was tapped to be the head of marketing for a startup direct-to-consumer auto insurance company.
And we created elephant auto insurance. And it was like just harrowing and eye-opening at the same time,
I would sit eyeball the eyeball with our head of pricing who had just come from a decade at Geico.
He taught me a lot.
But mostly he answered all my inane questions.
Why does it have to be this way?
Why do we have to ask 50 questions?
Yeah.
Why, why, why?
And every time we had a pretty rational argument as to why it had to be that way.
So I learned.
But I never stopped pushing.
I think there's got to be smarter ways, don't you?
I 100% think there are.
So I have a couple thoughts on what you just said.
I agree with some of the.
So here's where I struggle with some of these things.
I wholeheartedly agree.
The best time to purchase a homeowners insurance policy is during the mortgage procurement process.
I think it's even better than when you're actually looking for the homes of the
real estate agent. That is the moment. Okay. So that, so that, and some of the big guys have already
started to do this, right? We're going to find a carrier like a hippo, like a lemony, like somebody,
or, or a technology focused MGA, like an OB or someone like that who just purchased,
oh man, what the heck is the name of Sudica's old company? Doesn't matter. So that makes a lot of
sense. However, I literally just rewrote one of those. The guy had a home auto. He's got four.
four kids in a rental property and his streamlined, wherever he got it, online wrote $100,000
on his underlying home insurance policy. So when I come back to it, and I think this is the
common independent agent pushback is where's the expertise, right? Because if you're a
mortgage broker, you could be the best mortgage broker in the world. It doesn't mean you have the
mental cycles to also be a high quality insurance agent. And as of yet, though I don't necessarily
understand this, it doesn't seem like one singular organization has been able to build out two
competingly expertise driven units, right? A unit of mortgage brokers that have just as
has just as much expertise as the unit of insurance agents feels like one is always lagging. So that
seems like a problem that's very solvable. But I guess that is the,
common pushback is like, yes, that's the moment to purchase home insurance. Absolutely no doubt.
And they should be able to do it with four clicks because all the information's already in
the inspection report and the loan application, right? There's no information in those two things
or there's no information on a home application that isn't in one of those two documents.
So, but how do we make sure they get the right stuff? And that's, I think, the part that I come back to
that I don't feel solvable, but no one has solved it yet.
Yeah, so I am actually a big proponent.
Is it still two-thirds of all insurance is sold through agents?
Personal lines is about 50-50 at this point.
Commercial lines is 85% in the States.
Okay.
So I also think that we've, and even let's even think back to consumer choice and their
preferences.
I mean, the experiment of Google, when Google created that comparison,
and auto insurance quoting site.
Yep.
And Nick was running that.
And, you know, they shut down, I think, after maybe 16 months.
But at the time, more than half of the people that were searching,
they didn't bind without talking to an agent.
So this feels like a very counterintuitive thing right there.
Everyone's trying to get more and more digital.
But I believe that honestly, the best solution is to meet the customer where they are,
get that product started, get the best information in there.
And then if they would like,
I can't see why they wouldn't.
And in fact, sometimes we need to suggest that they talk to an agent because it rises to the level
that it's not simply a streamlined or straight through kind of processing, right?
There's a little more detail there.
And that's exactly what Asians should be doing.
I think I can't imagine not having access to an agent when I have severe concerns or questions
about deep problems that I'm just not trained to know about.
So yes, I want to have an expert on the call.
And I would imagine that's why we're seeing the trends as well,
where many of the direct-to-consumer players, the insure techs,
they're also backing up, aren't they, with their models?
And they're integrating or implementing more of an agent-friendly solution set.
Because I think everyone is realizing that insurance is really, it's not complicated,
but it can be complex.
And it's best handled with someone who has all the information and can be a trusted advisor.
I agree with that on that.
Yeah, it's a...
I think getting it kicked off, though, is really important, right?
So you want to capture, every agent wants to capture the most qualified leads.
And this is a wonderful way to do it.
Yeah.
You're seeing crazy embedded things to happen.
Like there's the episodic movement as well with insurance where you're basically like
ticket insurance.
I buy a vent.
And I want to insure either my race or my concert, right, for all of those things.
So you're seeing these episodes that are essentially insurable as well.
So those also have to be simplified purchase pathways because it's not a complex product.
I agree.
I look at this and I say to myself, like the fact that this hasn't been solved yet to me is insane.
Because really, there's a couple components.
You need the data.
And I shouldn't say insane.
I understand why it hasn't been solved yet.
Like I was actually right on the front lines of the Google thing.
You know, one of the company I was working with at the time worked very closely with them to actually find them agents.
And they're, you know, again, this is a testament to hopefully how far we've come, though, if you're listening to this, you're part of the problem because we weren't picking up the phone.
Independent agents were picking up the phone.
Part of the reason.
So Google, when we met with them, came to us with two main problems.
Cost of acquisition is higher than what we can make for the ads.
And two, your people won't pick up the phone when someone clicks.
I want to talk to an agent.
So I think problem.
Number one, I don't have a ton of thoughts about because KAC is in our industry.
It's just high.
That's why, like you said, everyone's backing up because all these D2C players are looking
at their cost of acquisition going, we've got to find a way to mitigate it.
And I think it was Mateo Carboni that just came out with a report the other day that since
Lemonade has gone to independent agents, which I have opinions about, they've reduced their
cost of acquisition by like 40% or something like that, just by adding the,
I don't even know if they have a thousand appointed agents yet. So I think that's pretty interesting.
But the second part has been traditionally working with a human agent. I'm not even to say just
independence. Working with a human agent has been so terribly difficult that it was a legit tradeoff.
I'm going to take the risk of going it myself or calling into a call center where I know I'm
never going to talk to this person again if they sell me this policy. But geez, I'm going to have to
go sit and fill out a paper form at some dusty office, you know, that, I mean, that was really what the
options were. And I think what's what I find to be one of the most intriguing opportunities,
and it's really the basis for the agency that I'm trying to create here in Rogue Risk, is the mashup
of those two worlds. The technology exists to be on time, to deliver where people are on their terms,
and give them a human that if they call me five times, they can get me or someone who sits near me
over and over and over again. They can develop a relationship and we can understand what they need,
if that's the type of relationship they actually want. And that's why I look at things like,
I mean, I don't know if you know him, but he was on a show,
for those who listen a lot, maybe six weeks ago, Matt Sudica, Skylight Insurance.
He just merged with Obie, and some of the things they're doing from a homeowners
and rental property and habitational property perspective are exactly what we're talking about,
and it's really phenomenal stuff.
They have a, I think, not countrywide, but a century, American century,
their product is embedded into the buying process or the searching process at least
for one of the big real estate companies.
And it's really interesting stuff, how they're mashing the two together.
Yep.
You're going to see so many more of those partnerships taking place.
Insurance has to expand its boundaries.
So much innovation, right?
Even to the point where I liked even talk about your last podcast you had Steve on from Branch and the blending of the products.
So that's a big battle cry for Fenris is we do think that insurance tends to be to product-centric.
And as an agent, your job is to think about everything, right?
And so Fenris as well comes at this as applicant-centric.
So it doesn't matter for us what product you're quoting.
We are going to have the information on the applicant.
We have data on every adult, every household, every property, every vehicle,
and we're able to append that quickly and bring that forward.
that enables that embedded insurance process to take place quickly and in a streamlined way.
So this is the perfect transition.
You were one question early on me and I had my transition over to Fenris.
Oh, no, it's great.
No, it's great.
I would love for you to break down Fenris for everybody because, like, I'm positive that if they've been in this space,
they probably heard the name, but not everyone dives to the data and systems complexity.
I think that you guys are at in terms of, you know, they tend to stay like, hey, is it a CRM or an agency management system?
So, so like, where are you fitting into the space and what are you guys actually delivering?
Yeah, so we are a single source for your data and insights.
It's a real-time API delivery system.
And that means you can inject that into your customer acquisition flows to identify who's going to become your best customer and then ease their way.
and we are also launching a new API suite for post-sell.
So to monitor your existing policyholders for life event changes that we detect,
that would then indicate a moment that matters, helping agents and marketers to leverage those moments to have a deeper relationship,
to reach out and right size, you know, any coverage issues or add new coverages.
And then, you know, we're basically trying to take insurance and move it to work.
where some other industries are in terms of the intelligence and the insights and the action
that they can take.
Yeah.
You know, insurance, it's an interesting one.
It never really started out is, you know, the whole genesis of insurance is, sure,
it's a safety net, but at the same time, it was, let's gather premium so we can reinvest
them and make the money off of them.
And I feel like it's finally coming full circle.
Like everyone is really actually focused now on the products and if they're meeting the needs.
And so what we're trying to do is push.
So let's actually think more about the applicant or the policyholder from that.
Yeah.
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How does that present to, so our, our, our.
carriers your primary? I mean, I'm sure, like, where in the, we're in the chain? Who are you playing
with? Are you, are your products coming all the way down to, to retails? Are you staying with some of the
larger, like, top 100, top 250? Like, what is the market that, that you're playing in?
So with an API, the nice part is, is we have, maybe I'll, I'll explain it this way. We're
the Levi Strauss of the Insure Tech Gold Rush. So we're handing out picks and shovels, right, data and
tools that can be used and leverage. So we have several of the top brokers as clients, large
agencies, small agencies, medium and small carriers. And a couple of the very large ones are doing
pilots. They just take a little bit of time. Yeah. As you can imagine to get them through. And we have a lot
of intermediaries as well, some of even the lead gen or the comparative radar companies. Yeah.
And the reason why we're so broad is the provenance of the data that we use.
And we use our data sets really because we're generating machine learning insights.
So we start earliest in the funnel is we try to push insights and scores so that folks can prioritize what's coming into the funnel, right?
Almost using marketing as underwriting way up front.
I love that.
So you shouldn't have to wait for that moment of truth to come after you've had a 30-minute
conversation to collect all the information.
I'm an enormous advocate of agents being true frontline underwriters.
And I think what you just said is that is really the most advanced version of that,
which is if the marketing person in your agency was actually a true frontline underwriter
from a mentality perspective, then they would drive in the profitable business.
and you wouldn't have to sift through as much of it.
And then what I'm assuming is you layer in your data and now you can pull out the
stuff or redirect it to a department that could handle it profitably and just streamline or
pipeline the stuff that fits what you want, that that's right where you want to be.
Yes, it's a series of API calls could be the journey.
So it could be as simple as they could be.
be on your website and maybe they use our license snap API, which allows someone to take a
picture of the back of the license.
In one click, you answered your first 15 questions.
Most Amazon-like experience.
In that is the name and address.
That's how most of our API's function.
We want the name and address of the applicant.
We then harken back to our reference data sets.
And the next step would be we would generate a score that says this individual is four times
is likely to buy from today.
And those are unique scores created for every customer because every customer attracts
and has different strengths as to who they're going to close.
So those scores will tell you, and it tends to fall out that way, you know, there's a one to
five score and the fives are four times as likely to buy as the ones.
So you can then prioritize that call center or your reactions.
And you sent to see a multiple on your conversion rates because,
you're not getting, you're not having to sift through all of that information, right?
We're helping you prioritize.
Then when you know who's prioritized, the next API call is go ahead and take the pre-fill, right?
Let's go ahead and pre-fill 50 questions to five for auto.
So it's either a more swipe, less type experience if it's online or if the agents doing that,
the agents should have the ability to walk them through as opposed to interrogating.
You should now have all that information and advice at their fingertips to be able to guide the conversation
to make it really productive.
And not just for that product, but it could be auto home or life and it could be the full bundle.
And then, you know, that's how we streamline that process to enable just about any purchase pathway.
You got through the call center, online, or with an agent.
This is the, I mean, for everyone listening at home, what you just described, that is the mission.
I mean, that's, to me, this is the next generation of what our industry should be.
is not a, you know, we're never going back to, thank God, paper forms and nonsense like that.
But I certainly think, and obviously you share my opinion, that the human agent or professional,
whatever you want to call them, whether you call them an agent or not, plays a big role.
But they shouldn't be asking how far is the fire hydrant from your house?
That's what, that's not a question that we're asking.
Because you know what one, people go, I don't know, you know, it's down the street.
And now you're going, well, is it down the street like really far or is it down the street?
Like you can see it.
And then you're typing in 500 or a fat.
Yeah.
It's my favorite too.
It's like, would you say it's less than 500 because you know that's the answer.
Yeah.
Because all that's doing is taking away from your time when you should be going.
What are we trying to get out of this?
Oh, you have three kids.
Okay.
Well, how important is it to you that if something ever happened to you,
or your wife or your, you know, your husband, whatever, that they get to go to college.
How important is that to you?
Oh, geez, that's why I live every day.
Okay.
Well, now we need to set your program up a little differently.
Or-
That's the conversation right there.
You just said it.
That's why you're good at this.
I mean, you want to tap into the human element.
You don't want to be asking them things like, okay, I thought funny store too about, like,
getting details.
So I was buddy jacked in on a call center, and we were doing auto insurance, and the agent was
lovely and ask for that person's bin. Well, VIN is kind of tricky, right? So they said, oh, it's on
my car and they described where it was. So they took the phone with them outside and you could hear
them stepping across the crunches of their gravel driveway. It was quite a long driveway. And they got
to the car, opened the door. You could hear ding, ding, ding, right? And they got their flashlight
out and they found the VIN and read it off to us. And she dutifully typed that in and closed the door and
they went on their way. You can hear him crunch his way back. And then, you know, a couple of questions
later, some joviality, but she got to the next series and she said, are there any of the vehicles
in your household? Yes, there are. Well, can you read me the second bin? Okay. Crunch, crunch,
crunch. So you get that sense that those types of hiccups, we're past that, right? We want to enable.
We want to make it a good customer experience and a good agent experience. The only way to do that,
because you need data. You have to have data. And consumers don't understand why you need so much data because they're used to Amazon and they're used to other channels where they can buy something with a click or a couple of questions. So we're trying to enable two question quoting. That's really part of our mission there. So I just, this is to this point. So you know about Plymouth Rock. You've heard of Plymouth Rock, what they're trying to do. Some of the things they're doing. So I don't think Plymouth Rock is a perfect company, but I think that they are on a very,
good path. I really like the path that they're on and what they're trying to do. So I had a carrier
whose name just about every adult American would know. Call me today and question my production
with them. And I said, yeah, no, I'm a startup agency. So I wasn't going to blow the doors off
to begin with. We had that part of the conversation. And she said, well, we haven't seen,
we've seen a lot of quotes, but not a lot of fines with us. And I said, I'm going to run you,
And this happened maybe 45 minutes before we get on the phone here.
I said, I'm just going to run you through a quick scenario.
Okay.
Person calls me, home auto umbrella.
So Plymouth Rock doesn't write rentals, just for everyone who's listening.
Homewater umbrella, okay?
Put it into the raider.
I don't always use a raider because there are certain things that I want to put with certain carriers,
just because I know they're the best fit for different reasons.
But in this case, so I said I use the raider, okay?
I click through you and Plymouth Rockers are side by side on price.
Let's just say that it's rare.
I did drop in because I was kind of a piss that she was calling me.
But I said, you know, that's rarely the case, just so you know.
I didn't put the, I can be a vindictive.
Yeah, well, here we are nine months into my startup journey during freaking COVID.
And I'm getting a, your production isn't high enough call.
I just wanted to say, this is why everyone hates you.
So I said, okay, so now here's what I have to think about.
Plymouth Rock has five tabs.
They're going to pull every driver in the household in.
They're going to pull every vehicle in.
They're going to pull every accident and ticket in with button clicks.
Click, click, include, don't include.
I can be done.
rated in three minutes, three minutes, completely done, auto rated, ready to bind as long as
there's nothing crazy. Do you know how long it's going to take me to rate in your system?
I have to have them send me pictures of VIN numbers. Pictures of VIN numbers. I'm saying this
into the phone. She's like, well, you know, you don't understand. You know, we have the best high
credit score pricing in the industry. And I'm like, how many people have a high credit score? Seriously.
I mean, when a high credit score is 865 for you, how many people have a high credit score?
And I'm not trying to be a jerk.
But my point is, Plymouth Rock has figured out a way, they may even be a client of yours for all I know with how much data they have.
To zap in this information, I don't have to ask for VIN.
I need their address.
I need the name of household members and birthdays.
If I have those things, you probably should get drivers licensed numbers if I can because sometimes they don't pull.
but they always have vins.
They always have all the vehicles.
I'll find, oh, you didn't tell me about the brand new 16-year-old driver.
Oh, you know.
So, you know, and that experience difference is driving,
is driving the placement of business today.
And there are carriers and agents that get that.
And there are those that don't.
And it's why I was excited to have you on because this topic,
of getting data.
And I do have a question I promise after the story.
Of injecting the data into the process so that we can be value providers, right?
I can go through a Plymouth Rock quote on the phone with someone because I know I'm not going
to have to stop and spend 20 minutes typing stuff into the computer.
With this other carrier, I would never have someone on the phone when I went through it
because I would most likely drop an F bomb on them at some point because it would time
out or I'd have to go back seven screens to copy and paste the piece of data. So here's my question
for you because this is the question I get after this. If you don't answer this, I will get this
question. Where the heck does that does all this data come from? That is the question that I think
a lot of people who have not invested time in it. You have to tell me the exact spots. Just
maybe so people can understand because they're going, this data, where does it come from? It can't be
any good. Where does it, where does all this data come from? I always get that question. So
where the heck does the data come from?
So part of our job was we were creating, we started out creating the machine learning scores, right,
to predict if this lead would be best suited for a particular agent or carrier or, or,
we do a couple of other scores as well, like predicting propensity to churn or propensity to persist.
Will they be paying their bill in four, six months, right?
So to collect all that data for our machine learning, that was why we actually didn't set out to collect all that data for that purpose.
We consider pre-fill more to be our data exhaust products to be candid, right?
But we have it and we can package it.
So, yes, one of the key functions and any organization that undertook this would learn quickly that you have to invest heavily to source alternate data.
You have to secure the province of that data.
you should not scrape anything because you want to make sure that that data is going to be,
has a pipeline to you and that you understand where it's coming from, that you're using it for
the proper use cases. For instance, none of our data is SCRA regulated. So that means we can
inject it into those workflows earlier than before without customer approval because it's marketing
level data. Yeah. And the way those use cases work, that's why we're able to reach further up
earlier in the pipeline. But we have probably 10 to 12 different sources now and we continue to add
more quality data sources all the time so that we can create lift in our models, first and
foremost, but particularly through some of the accelerators that we've done, like with plug-in-play
or mass challenge, Vintech or in New York, we find new problem statements. And so we do have
just a cadre of advisors that have been in the data world for decades. And the new alternate
data sources are public, they're private, they're proprietary.
But it's the labor of love in how you curate, aggregate, you have to cleanse that data,
you have to make it readily usable, and you have to secure that data.
Those are multimillion-dollar projects at companies.
So that's why a lot of companies come to us because they don't want to undertake that role
themselves just for those products.
The next step, of course, for us, is we've most recently secured our life events data,
and we have some exclusivity around those data sources for our uses in the insurance industry.
And that's also something key.
Like so the usual suspect.
So if you're going to predict if somebody is listing their house, you could try to predict
or you could just go to real sources that collect that information.
That's what we need to protect that.
And I'm sure, you know, you know how I just yesterday I got an announcement from my niece.
She's having a baby.
And so they've registered with Amazon services or Amazon marketplace, whatever that is,
so that I can send them a baby shower gift, right?
They're having a virtual shower.
And that's, again, part of our sources,
we'll go to that to indicate,
hey, they're expecting a child in the household.
So we're detecting those kinds of sources.
So I hope that helps.
There's nothing nefarious or wrong.
We're not scraping anything.
We're going to these quality sources,
and we really bet the use cases with our clients
to make sure that everything's on the up and up,
and it's just a situation where we know that customer experience
is going to improve and that the client,
clients going to use the data to improve that experience and hopefully become more profitable
because they'll spend their marketing dollars and their efforts on the best fit for them as well.
Yeah. No, I have one more kind of tactical question for you. And that's, you know,
these data, I wanted to ask that question because I think well-meaning people who haven't spent
time really thinking about data, I think they just don't understand that there are all these
different data pools, pools of data for all different things.
You know what I mean?
For not like, I think everyone immediately goes to, oh, this is some dark web, you know,
your hand in bitcoins for chain links and blockchains and, you know, getting all these credit
card dumps.
And yeah, I think it's been so demonized data, I think has been so demonized by, you know,
that it kind of.
And I just thought it was important to explain that, you know, this is how this is done.
Like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's probably worth even pointing out a lot of people are familiar with the incumbents that do this, like Lexus and Barris.
Yeah.
And they have contributory data sets that they pull from.
And so until maybe the last few years, we couldn't have competed directly head on with those
contributory data sets.
But we can now.
There are alternate sources for that data.
under the right use cases, right?
And it actually opens us up because if you don't contribute, you can't pull.
And sometimes what kind of kills me is a lot of insurance carriers will tell you their own
policy data that's in their own systems has a lot of errors, right?
Leakage.
So premium leakage is a problem.
But when they contribute it to those contributory sources, by contract, they can't change
it when they pull it back out again.
So oftentimes we're told that our system.
actually more relevant, more recent, more accurate, and really fits the bill. So that's how
we're a little bit different in how we're approaching it. But companies are very familiar with that
contributory data set. I just don't think anyone's push the envelope as to how you could use
that very early on in the marketing funnel. Yeah. Yeah. Is this data pool connection and
collection game kind of like the Wild West today? I mean, are you out there, you know, six guns,
a blazon against competitors trying to get at the different pools of information, or is it
a relatively calm thing? And it's more about how you use and connect the data.
Yeah, I think, honestly, there's a lot of shady data brokers out there. So, yeah, we're very
careful about who we even start to engage with, right, making sure that the rights to the data are there
and it's permissible and all of that. Yeah, yeah. I don't know if it's a Wild West yet, but there
are so many companies that think they can scrape data and sell it. And that's just unappealing to us.
Who knows if they'll be allowed to in the future due to terms of service. So I think it's important
to always try to find the right partners. We just keep an eye on not just the data, but the benefit.
So we've got to make sure there's a really good problem we're solving with that data. And when that
makes sense, it opens up the entire world. I mean, suddenly it's like night and day. It's like,
oh, you mean you can help me see this outcome before I get past stage one.
I can predict where it's headed now.
I can be much more proactive about the products I present to them, what the customer journey
is going to look like.
And I'm excited because I wished I'd had something like this when I was heading up
marketing at an auto insurance company because I just felt so depressed when we'd get a 2%
conversion rate.
And that was good.
I know.
That was Readerbell's run of victory lap around the call center.
Good.
I know.
Well, you know, it's funny.
I have this database that I use because workers' comp is the lead for us.
And I have this data pool that I pull from called insurance x-dates.com.
And I found it to be the most consistent and accurate pool for that particular thing.
Now, it doesn't have experience mods.
That would be nice if that was pulled in.
you know, but what I find myself doing, and this is a problem that you solve for certain events,
right, for the events that you have use cases for is I'm teaching my VA.
He's got to go to like four different tabs to get all the info we need to do this.
We have a cold outreach campaign that we do.
And it actually does pretty well.
I was retarding very specific with people, blah, blah, blah.
But the idea is like he's got to pull from this database, then go over here and cross-reference,
then go over here and cross-reference.
And, and like, you're like, oh my gosh, imagine if like there was just a spot where I could say, hey, when this happens for this kind of company, send out this message, then tell my salesperson to pick up the phone and call, you know, call them to follow up on that message to, you know, and here's our points of differentiation, blah, blah, blah.
And I feel like you're providing more value to the people versus I also bought an email list of like 7,000 contractors in New York that I can spam.
anytime I want and just hit them all with a blast email.
I have no idea if they need my product.
I have no idea if they have Gorkers' Comp.
All I know is they're a contractor,
and at some point this may have been an email they used.
And, you know, which one of those methods is more conducive to providing value to the client?
You know, I mean, that's, and I think that's, that is what, what you guys solve.
I mean, that is where you're going, and, but much more scalable than what I'm describing,
But, you know, that, that, it just to me, this, you know, I think like you do, I wish I wasn't
in startup mode.
I wish I had like a basket of cash somewhere because all the things that you can do are amazing.
So, okay, here's what I'm going to get to.
Machine learning score.
How the, one, machine learning is a term that makes blue smoke come out of us neophyte's ears.
So what does that mean?
And how do you turn, what is it learning that it's allowing you to,
produce a score and how the heck do you build that?
Yeah.
By the way, I'm going to come back to your point about you wish this were the case.
Let's talk afterwards.
So here's your little preview.
We haven't made this public yet, but we are going to launch one of our next products is the
small business commercial space.
So we've secured about 35 million small business records.
We're keeping that up.
And we're able to link those micro businesses to the owner name and then pull in some
additional insights. So that's something that I'm really excited about and the e-mods and figuring out
all of that. There's just no end to the opportunity there because that's where the Wild West is,
right? I agree with you. People are running at it. I don't think any insurance company has more
than 5% market share in small business. So that's a big one for us to enable. So how does the
machine learning work? You know, that's it's really, it's less about the mechanism and more
about the result, but yes, machine learning is the latest set of tools that really enable folks.
Some people will even call it artificial intelligence, but we're under that umbrella in machine
learning.
And, you know, in the old days, I think people just did progression.
And you can essentially get very close to the same thing.
Yeah.
But what we would do for clients is, let's say you are, do you guys buy leads?
Yeah.
Okay.
So you're buying the leads and you want to know up front as you buy that lead because it's pretty time sensitive sometimes.
You want to know within a second, is this lead one of the ones that's most likely to close for you?
So a simple way to do that is we're going to do a retro analysis and we're going to pretend like we had provided you the scores last month across your leads.
But what we're going to do is we're going to take the name and address of your leads and the outcome, the target variable.
tell us if they quoted, tell us if they bought.
It's nothing too sensitive.
We just going to let us have that.
And what we do is now that we have the name and address,
we use our reference data on every adult, every household,
every property, and we append that.
So let's say we have a thousand data points or features attached to each one of those records,
and we have your target variable.
They bought or they quoted or both.
And let's say you want to know which ones are more likely to buy from me
and how likely are they to buy from you?
Well, this is where we already have our base models.
We'll run you through the base model.
And we'll come up with a predict.
We'll say our base model predicted that accurately, call it 75% of the time, something like that.
Right?
That's a pretty good start.
But now machine learning, what that enables us to do is to reweight those variables
and even pull in new features from that data set so that we can fit the model, not overfit,
but fit the model to your particular outcomes.
And we're going to do that on 80% of your data.
We're going to train.
Now we've held back 20%.
So once we've trained that model,
and let's say we now have an 85% accuracy,
we're going to take that and put it out there against the 20%
and see if we can reproduce that using data it hasn't seen before.
And if we can, that's voila.
That's what we present back to you,
and it's about a week or two-week pilot.
It's free.
We do that for all of our customers to get them started
and show them the impact.
So we would come back to you and say,
hey, Ryan, we know you were getting X% close rate before.
But if you were to, instead of focusing on the entire lead set, but focus on this one-third or half that is much more likely to close, we think, you know, we talk to you, we think you're going to double or triple.
your question, right? And to you, that's worth big bucks. So that's your ROI calculation where we go in. We
like every client to have an ROI and a set of expectations before the implementation. And then it's a simple
implementation. We simply score your unique algorithm so that when you hit our API with your
credentials, it recognizes that, pulls your algorithm calculations and send it back to you in that
moment. And that's how that works. And that's highly scalable. And it's really working out well,
over time, you would keep sending us outcomes, right?
And we would keep in that model, and we would get better and better all the time for you.
That is amazing.
I mean, you just, it's, this is what people do in their brain, except your brain only has, right?
Like, you just have this little tiny piece of your brain.
Yeah, yeah, you know what I mean?
You go, hey, I seem to do well with auto repair shops.
Well, how big?
Not small, but not big.
Well, what is that?
And you may not have all that data until you talk to them.
But so we can bring that data to all we need is the name and address.
And we're going to basically explode the information on that so we can feed our model and give you a quick insight.
See, and to bring this all the way back to the beginning where I think I went on some crazy tangent, I hired a appointment setter.
23 years old, literally she's like, I love telemarketing appointment setting.
She's got a history.
I talked to her.
she's dynamic, she's fun, she's hungry, it's awesome.
I'm super excited to add her to the team.
And it's like, it's like when, when, the where my brain is as you're talking is going,
oh my gosh, I'm going to feed her.
Like I could take this data and instead of having this pool where she's kind of,
you know, I have a feel for what I think might be good targets, but still, I mean,
you don't know.
So, you know, it's just narrowing her focus where she's making highly relevant,
closable phone calls every single time she dials.
And when you think about that from perspective of she continues to get better,
the data gets better.
Now you're,
now you're,
and then now you build an army of those.
Now,
you know,
she teaches the next person how to do what she does.
And now you have two and then you have four and now you have 10.
And they're,
they're focused in on target markets.
And any insurance company that is listening to this that wants to,
wants to ride this train,
you know I'm willing to play.
So, because as you said, it's crazy to me that this isn't happening on a commercial lines basis yet.
I think about companies like, I mean, I think the big boys, the, you know, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, they just, I think they probably see it.
It's just, they're so big already.
And, uh, I had a traveler's executive say to me one time, Ryan, I know every account that exists in the country, don't need your help.
And I said,
Well, they're changing.
I know.
And I like Travers.
If you're listening to
you're from Travers,
I'm not giving you a hard time.
It's one of my favorite comments I've ever had.
He was also talking about larger middle market business.
And, you know,
we're not talking about small market.
It was just funny.
You know, he was like,
I do not need your thing, Ryan.
Don't sell me something else.
I know.
But that's,
I look at that and I think this is really where
what you're talking.
Because I think sometimes,
I don't want.
want to, I don't want to make any agency sound unsophisticated, but if you haven't dived into this world,
and I've, and I've only been, my time of trusted choice in agency nation gave me some
opportunity to at least understand partially what you're talking about. But this
partnering, partnering with this type of data set, it allows you to be more focused,
more determined, more, more of the expert that you are, because it's basically saying,
you're telling us what you're good at and we're just giving it to you like you know instead of
you guessing your best customer yeah and i like i just i'm so happy to think about the fact that it is a better
it's a it's a it's a better employee experience yeah one of the call center frustrations is the churn
because people are so frustrated you mentioned how you are such a fan of cold calling
yeah huge to be sarcastic right yeah um
And nobody likes that.
They want to be successful.
So this tool is making them more successful.
Yeah.
And I like that, too, because at the heart of it, you know, I just think there's a lot of
inefficiencies that don't have to be there.
You know what the other side of that is, too?
I don't mean for this to be a justification for my lack of desire to cold call.
And I called you out.
No, no, it's okay.
And no one wants to hear me belabor this point anymore who listens to the show either.
But I do think, and I was thinking about this other day, and it was part of my decision
to hire the woman who's going to be appointment setting for us is that she loves it.
She wakes up in the morning and it's something she enjoys doing.
That's awesome.
Right?
Now, part of it may be she lives in Puerto Rico.
She'd give two flying craps what someone in Albany, New York thinks of her, where I always go,
geez, I might bump into this guy or this woman at the coffee shop.
You know what I mean?
Like so maybe that's part of it.
I think it's more just her disposition and she seems to enjoy it.
someone who enjoys something provides a better experience, has more energy towards it.
So if I can say to her, okay, you like calling people, but still kind of probably being
hung up on or the bad experience of a cold call prior, aren't your favorite, I'm going to
reduce those even more.
Now you can be even more excited.
Now your bonus can go up even more because you're setting more appointments and you're,
instead of doing two or three appointments a week, you're setting six appointments a week.
You're selling so many appointments a week.
to hire another producer, right? Like, that's what we're talking about is gains in efficiency,
gains in productivity. And man, I am, I think this is such an important topic. And I'm really glad
that I'm really glad that you're taking this on because it's this, this is the, to me, the people
who grab on this and this, I want to be respectful of your time and I know we're a minute over,
so I apologize. I feel like the companies,
all the way down to three-person independent agencies to the marshes and the Gallagher's
and up to the travelers and the Harfors and all.
Whoever grabs onto this first and can actually implement it will be so much farther
ahead than the competition.
Like I feel like we have a window, right?
You have a window.
There's a few years here where you can get such an early mover advantage.
And some people already have, but I feel like there's still a window where you can grab
on to this and go way out ahead. Or you can kind of sit back and wait and I don't, I don't see that
working out very well. That's kind of where I'll finish this. Yeah, yeah. We definitely see a ton of demand
for this. We grew 400% last year. Boom. So it's exciting. We're hiring as well, as you mentioned,
you know, it's important to find the good people. So I would love to make sure I got a plug in for
that as well. This is exciting to folks out there and they think, you know, I want to.
be part of this change. I want to make marketing a more efficient process. I want to almost
make marketing an underwriting tool, right? To extract and screen and draw through profitable
business. And I want to think about insurance from an applicant perspective and not a product
perspective. If that's exciting to you and you'll happen to like APIs, come and talk to us.
We're practically doubling our team this quarter alone. I'll be honest. Yeah. All those words you just said
There are so many nerds listening to this podcast right now that are like losing their minds.
I'm just telling you, I know the agents that listen to.
First of all, you got to be a certain kind of person to spend enough time with this show.
But, you know, the people that are listening, you just said a whole bunch of words that turn them on.
So that's fantastic too.
Yeah.
All right.
So I'm listening to this.
I love what you're saying.
Connect on LinkedIn.
What's the website?
Like how do people either learn more about the product if they're interested in the product or just
want to be around the company, follow you guys, or if they're potentially interested in a
position. Yeah. So we went from spending zero marketing dollars last year. We're going to spend a
little more this year. Yeah. Well, you grow 400% you can do that. Yeah, you can. You're supposed to.
I think the best way is come to our website at fenrisD.com. And just click to get a demo or a free trial
and you'll be hooked up. We often set people up next day for free demos.
get free API access or we can run that free trial for you
with a proof of concept and impact statement.
Follow us on LinkedIn.
That seems to be our best channel.
Yeah.
Because insurance is still a very serious business, right?
So I hope we tend to put out most of our news
and updates on the LinkedIn channel.
But we're exploring other ways to do that
and we're going to launch a bit of a podcast series ourselves.
Nice.
I would love to invite you to be on our podcast sometime.
Tell me when. I'll be there.
I will be there for that one.
For sure.
And I'd love to have you on as well.
the Fenris
TikTok channel
dropping.
That's a little
too hip for me
to answer.
Me too.
I don't even have it
on my phone.
Someone said the other day
TikTok me.
Someone actually said that to me
and I'm like,
it's not on here.
I don't have it.
That's past me
and I'm okay with that.
I'm Twitter and LinkedIn.
Little Facebook.
That's about it.
After this,
I got to check it
on that Twitter war
that you were mentioned.
Oh, it's so good.
I'm telling you,
they've been going back and forth.
I'm not kidding you for like three hours.
I think they're doing a clubhouse tonight.
They're still going.
I'm not even cool enough to have a clubhouse invite yet.
This is, oh, I'll invite you to clubhouse.
I don't even, I haven't gotten on it.
I'm not into it.
I get it.
I just don't, I'll be on, like I get it.
Like, Elon Musk shows up.
It's cool to listen to him.
Like, I think that's cool.
But, um.
Coming from the guy, you're the guy who was on YouTube a decade ago.
I know.
I know.
I get it.
But,
But everyone's got to age out at some point.
The truth is, the truth is, I still, to me, I think it's amazing,
but I've seen thought leadership platforms emerge before,
and I have no desire to be a thought leader in that regard.
That's what I think it is.
If you're trying to be a thought leader on a topic,
fintech, insure tech, insurance in general, whatever,
I think it's probably a tremendous platform for that
and would highly recommend people being involved because of the depth of content that you can get
and the access.
But that's not the world.
I'm trying to grow an insurance agency so that in 10 years I can sell it to someone for a shit ton of money
and I can play more golf and watch my kids develop into the next level of their life in college.
That's what I'm trying to do.
I've already played that game.
It was awesome.
Now I just want to build a rock star business, sell it for a ridiculous amount of money.
I want to be able to Scrooge McDuck into my money.
And then I want to not have to talk to people ever again.
Hashtag life goals.
Right.
All right.
Thank you so much.
This has been tremendous and a lot of fun.
And we'll talk soon.
That's good.
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