Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - Raymond Lynch on Why Small Business Insurance Is So Hot Right Now

Episode Date: September 16, 2021

Spartan 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 Raymond Lynch, Vice President of Growth at Coterie Insurance. Raymond talks about his transition from Liberty Mutual to Coterie Insurance, and why small business insurance is the place to be.Episode Highlights:Raymond discusses his decision to transition from Liberty Mutual to Coterie. (11:45)Raymond adds that he's back to doing what he loves, which is leading people and helping them achieve their goals. (17:05)Raymond believes that we need to improve our change management skills across the whole value chain. (22:41)Raymond shares what he’s noticed with all the API technology that everyone’s talking about. (28:21)Raymond explains why transparency has to come to insurance. (33:09)Raymond explains where data comes from, how it's used, and how it's helping to improve the process. (41:06)Raymond shares the most important thing they’ve learned through their journey. (49:18)Raymond discusses the aspects of coding that he enjoys the most. (50:49)Raymond explains why one of his favorite things to do is work with new agents. (53:39)Key Quotes:“Why waste hours of your time trying to figure out how to answer these questions when we can make an API call to 5,6,7 different vendors, and pull in a lot of information.” - Raymond Lynch“I think it's easy for experienced industry people to throw shade and be like, ‘Oh, they don't know what they're doing.’ It's true, we might not know what we're doing all the time. But we're pouring a lot of effort with a lot of smart people to improve and try to get better, and to try to do things just a little bit differently.” - Raymond Lynch“Behind the scenes, it may not be the traditional underwriting relationship that you're used to, but know that we have some really strong underwriting minds that are kind of keeping the guardrails in place and making sure that we're writing the right business.” - Raymond LynchResources Mentioned:Raymond Lynch LinkedInCoterie InsuranceReach out to Ryan Hanley--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

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Starting point is 00:00:38 It really helps the show grow. From all of us at Believe, have a Merry Christmas, everyone, and a happy holiday. Good laboratory in the basement of his home. Hello, everyone, and welcome back to the show. Today we have an absolute tremendous episode for you. We're talking to Ray Lynch, Raymond Lynch, from Cotery, the VP of Growers. at Cotery Insurance, a company that I've talked about a lot here on the show, a company that I think is absolutely pushing the envelope and what is possible from both the ease of doing business as well
Starting point is 00:01:26 as widespread underwriting, growth, connection to agents, providing resources and tools for agents to do business in a more modern way. You know, I just, I see Codery as part of the future. And I really like the team there. I'm also going to be interviewing one of their co-founders who I've known. for a long time. They're not going to tell you who or his name because I want you to be some into some suspense because we're going to nerd out heavy on coterie itself. And this conversation with Ray really dig into why he made the move from Liberty to a company like codery, what he saw
Starting point is 00:02:02 in the future, what he's, what problems and I don't want problems. What were the aspects of coterie that he saw that really presented such a dynamic opportunity that he would move from a place where he was well established, well respected like Liberty. you know, and kind of move from that more established player to a brand new player in the marketplace, what that decision was like and where codery is going, and what are some of the major concepts in small business insurance concepts isn't the right word, the trends in small business insurance that he sees coming down the pipe that we really need to be aware of. So this is an awesome conversation.
Starting point is 00:02:37 You're going to love this one. But before we get there, today's episode is sponsored by propeller bonds. Guys, been talking about propeller bonds for a while on some of the socials, not so much on the podcast here. I did have Aaron Steffi, one of their co-founders on the show, talking about Propeller, go back and listen to that episode. It's absolutely tremendous episode. But I just couldn't be happier to have Propeller as a sponsor of the show because we use them every day. Like literally every day. I have messages going out in our automations to our customers.
Starting point is 00:03:13 introducing them to the fact that we have this on-demand bonding service and just kind of keeping them and then later on in automations, we're letting them know, hey, just a reminder, you're going to have bonding needs at some point, big or small, all you need to do is use this resource. You can get your bond today. And then we get all kinds of inbound activity as well, people looking for bonds. And most of the time, unless it's something complex, we're just sending them to propeller bonds and saying here use this link buy the bond you need you know find the bond buy it you're going to get your certificate in a matter of minutes it's a it's just an absolutely tremendous resource and it's
Starting point is 00:03:54 one of the game changing tools that I see in the marketplace and just couldn't be happier to have repeller as a sponsor and be sharing with you I think they're an absolute no-brainer product and just kind of this is you know just like tarmica and Donna and so many of these other companies that have been part of the show you know yes they're sponsoring Yes, they help pay to make this show happen. But, guys, I take these companies on as sponsors because we use them. I think they're part of the future. So I hope you guys can appreciate that.
Starting point is 00:04:25 And check out propeller bonds. Go to propellerbonds.com. Propellerbonds.com. Just Google propeller bonds. And, you know, if you're looking to do something crazy, let me know. Reach out to me. I'll connect you with Aaron and see what you can do from, like, you know, taking it to the next level kind of thing. But absolutely check out propeller bonds.
Starting point is 00:04:43 telling you we use this tool every single day. All right. With that, let's get on to Raymond Lynch, VP of Growth at Cotery. Dude. What's up, man? What's up?
Starting point is 00:05:00 Just another busy day here at Roegisk, you know? It's all right. I exchanged some emails back and forth with your producer yesterday. Oh, yeah, yeah. We used the wrong link for the thing. Yeah. I mean, if you want to drive traffic directly to codery and not get any credit for, sure. Like that's fun.
Starting point is 00:05:20 Well, you know, what he did was I created a Bitley link, which is Rogue SMB. So like Bit. Dot LY slash Rogue SMB so that, you know, when when someone comes in who we think is the right account as a disposition, we'll just send that to them and say, hey, you can go right through here and at least get a quote if not bind yourself if you like what you see. That's the whole process. Well, what he did was he put that. in and then he copied because basically it it goes to the rogue specific one and then it drops you know it kind of re-recks it drops that tag off yeah and he took the link without the tag and then sent that instead of the bitly link and i was you know whatever all good the first time this
Starting point is 00:06:04 has happened we'll get a fix it's no worries so all good um and i have another one too that i'm working on just another uh ida it's it's funny you know this is one of the things that is exciting to me about what you guys are doing and um i actually said this in a promo for one of the episodes that i did for you guys um that'll come out sometime before this one um i said uh you know someone someone someone tweeted at me or texted at me one of the two things um who are the five most tech focused carriers right now. And you know, and you guys were one of them. And, and a perfect example of that, it was, and again, I coupled your promo with Tarmacos I think they fit so nicely. I was like, you know, I had someone, I was sitting here doing something
Starting point is 00:06:57 on a Saturday, right? I was just working down, down here. The kids were off doing something. So I was having a beer and finishing up some work. And so Elite came in. And it was like, they just needed G.L. It was a pretty standard thing. They needed G.L. for whatever they were doing to get into their office. And I just like right there, you know, banged out the quote, put it through, did my little video proposal. Off it went. And that took me probably seven minutes total. Right? So like, I'm still working with my other hand on the computer over here and got that done. And I'm like, you know, I think a lot of agencies, they would just delete that. Like that account wouldn't even, they would just see that lead come in and they'd be like,
Starting point is 00:07:44 nah, no, no, no thanks. And, you know, I just look at it and I'm like, okay, that took seven minutes. Whatever, all good. That's, you know, maybe it's $500 GL account. But that could be somewhat, that could be, that could be the kid of the business, of one of the largest business owners in his town or his best friend could have a startup that that's huge. or it could be nothing.
Starting point is 00:08:09 But you don't know unless you write the account. And that $500 account in two, three years could be a $10,000 account based on their own growth, right? I mean, we all start like all these businesses and all these middle market accounts started out as that $500 geo. Yeah. And that's one of the things that I think just, man, I just feel like so many agencies are missing. And it's why, you know, it's why I've enjoyed, you know, as much as we're just starting to get rolling with you guys. and a lot of that is just our internal process. I kind of picked up right away when you and I first talked.
Starting point is 00:08:43 I picked up on what you guys were doing. And I was like, this is absolutely like, like, I look at like you guys. I look at like propeller bonds. I look at like pro writers. And I'm like, here are companies and tools that are providing agents with both customer facing front ends and agent facing backends that allow you to be incredibly versatile, that allow you to work on your clients. own time. And I think that's the key today, man, is like being both that being digitally
Starting point is 00:09:12 friendly while still being an agent. And I think a lot of agents are still missing the point. Yeah. Yeah, they'll bitch for an hour like about travelers. Yes. And they're, you know, I think they're they're missing in the ROI calculations on some of the stuff as well, right? Yeah. Because there is some flusiness to it. But it's a matter of the ROI is probably come to three years from now, but like you can't wait. No. Well, also when a lot of agencies look at ROI, if they even take the time to do so, they do not take their own time into account.
Starting point is 00:09:50 And I remember, man, I'm going to forget the exact conversation. It may have been Chris Burran. I don't know if you know him from Burran, associates, one of the smartest guys. I don't always agree with every one of his takes, but there is no denying that he is one of the smartest guys in our space and what he does for sure. he brought this up. He's like, you know, we're not, we're not, we're not taking our own time. We're not putting a time value against, you know, is the agency owner's time worth
Starting point is 00:10:22 $500 an hour, right? Maybe probably, probably no less than that. And, but in that agency owner, we'll spend three hours on quoting, you know, or doing, doing nonsensical things and not realizing that they're just, burning money. And, uh, but then they'll go, whoa, you know, codery's new. Let's see where they're at in five years. I'm like, fuck where they are in five. I think like if you read, if you read the policy forms, it's not like there's anything missing there. Like, what are we talking about? So I don't know. That's just my, my, I just think it's funny. I hear that all this
Starting point is 00:10:57 crap and not just about you guys, but everybody. Because I write a lot of workers comp with pie. And, um, and I like what they're doing. And actually, I was super excited. They just bought Western insurance services or assurance or something, which means they're going to be moving to their own paper, which is super cool. And they're like, yeah, they're so new. And I'm like, dude, what did you think? Like, they just never read another policy form ever and just started handwriting shit down from scratch. Like, where do you think they came from? I mean, like, we have to go through the state filing process the same way. Every other fucking carrier, low long, you know, that has, right? It's the same process. It's the same regular.
Starting point is 00:11:36 It's the same, it's the same goddamn form. Yeah. Right. I mean, the innovation isn't in the forms. I agree. Because the regulators don't allow it. Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:11:47 The innovation is in all the other stuff. Yeah, 100%. So one of the questions that I wanted to ask you, and you can talk about this as much or as little as you want, but coming from a company like Liberty, right, and moving to codery, I'm just interested in, and I'm not looking for you to knock Liberty in any regard or anything like that. That's not the point of the question. Just that's a big move, right? I mean, that's 55,000 employees to a startup. It's, you know, Liberty has a personal arm, a direct arm, an agent arm. You know, used to kind of have a captive
Starting point is 00:12:20 on, you know, this very broad, huge organization to a very focused, small business kind of, like, talk to me about the decision to make that transition. What caught your eye? What really got you charged up to do it. And, you know, I'd like to just start there. No, I mean, so Liberty was a fantastic foundation to come into the insurance industry, right? I came in through like what they call their corporate development program out of an MBA. I don't have any insurance background. And they really put you through like a two-year rotational thing where you get to expose yourself to a ton of different parts of the company. You get to basically act as a consultant on these like projects on a six-month basis. And it kind of helped me understand where an insurance
Starting point is 00:13:03 I wanted to kind of get invested in. And, you know, commercial insurance resonated with me right away. And, you know, coming from the background I have, you know, within the military and stuff, I've always been looking for that kind of leadership role. And I kind of knew pretty quick that the large kind of corporate type positions being in the tower in Boston wasn't necessarily going to kind of get me jazzed up to go to work every day and that I wanted to be, you know, more close to what, where the work's getting done. And that's why, you know, I took that underwriting role in New York City and built out a small
Starting point is 00:13:38 commercial underwriting team. The reason, you know, I've gotten into this kind of tech focus thing is because I was, I had the opportunity to meet Anaki and Rashmi and the team at Cover Wallet when they were five people, right? We were lucky enough to be one of the national carriers it gave him a shot when a lot of others wouldn't. And so I got to watch and see the progress and the hiccups and the different ways that they want about it and kind of their journey, you know, until the acquisition by Aeon. And so that seeing them kind of built and, you know,
Starting point is 00:14:14 knowing the challenges and the frustrations and like, it's not easy, but that really like resonated with me and kind of put that idea in the back of my head was like, I want to actually build something, right? Yeah. I mean, it is great to come into an organization that has, you know, all kinds of systems and things in place. It is very hard to impact and actually feel like you're changing things. You can do it around the edges, but you're not necessarily going to get that true, you know, roll up your sleeves kind of getting dirty level of building something from scratch.
Starting point is 00:14:49 And I've been patient, you know, I've been very fortunate to be well connected within kind of. of the startup community just by the nature of the job that I had before I left Liberty. And, you know, just kind of networked around and new small commercials still had a long way to go. And there was going to be a lot of opportunities to do some really neat things there. And I just kind of, you know, I've heard about coterie, like I heard about a lot of other startups, you know, the guys at Coverageer, you know, posted something about them raising their seat round or getting some of their funding. and I saw that they had posted a job that they were kind of looking to get into the agency space.
Starting point is 00:15:28 I networked and kind of connected with David and three weeks later, I joined the company. Yeah. In October, in the middle of COVID and everything else. And it was because it was the position that I wanted and the opportunity to actually build something. And I felt that I could add a lot of value to their team. And so I came in. I was purely focused on digital at the start. and I mean, I haven't even been there a year yet.
Starting point is 00:15:54 And I've already had like basically three different roles. I got involved in so many different things and kind of trying to build. You know, there's there's a lot of stuff in insurance that I don't think I even appreciated like compliance. I had no idea. There was a whole other group at Liberty that like you would just send producer stuff off to and it would get done. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:13 We didn't have that. We had to build that from scratch. And I was like, hey, we need to build this. And well, when you come up with an idea and a small company of 30 people, people, well then you have to actually go build it. And so like I was, you know, one of the people helping our ops team come up with a process just to onboard agencies and producers. I wouldn't have gotten that experience at Liberty. I have a team of, you know, seven people now when I didn't have anybody reporting to me with more than doubled in size since I've joined here.
Starting point is 00:16:43 And it's not all sunshine and roses. It's hard. I have so much more respect now. and I think it's easy for experienced industry people to throw shade and be like, oh, they don't know what they're doing. It's true. We might not know what we're doing all the time, but we're pouring a lot of effort with a lot of smart people to improve and try to get better and to try to do things just a little bit differently. And sometimes we swing too far and doing things differently and we get pulled back in just by kind of the inertia of the industry. but we're always moving forward on the edges.
Starting point is 00:17:20 And I think if we can continue to stay focused and really making sure that the value we're adding is resonating, that's where we'll see the success. The challenge is you have to do it on VC timelines, which is a little bit different. And so, like, you know, how do you impact and show some of the growth that the investors want to see when you're, you know, you're working in a channel that moves a little bit slower. And it's a lot harder to do. So, I mean, it's been a ton. I mean, I've learned more in these nine months, to be honest,
Starting point is 00:17:57 and I did probably my last five years just because I got to wear so many different hats and pack so many different things. And I'm back doing what I love most, which is leading people and getting them to succeed. Yeah, there's a lot in there. I would, you know, coming into Rogue, one of the biggest mistakes. that I made was having a bit of hubris, feeling like, man, I'd been in this industry for 14 years at that time. I, you know, had been all over the place, had been an agent, and spent a lot of time with a lot of people in a lot of different places. And you just, as much as you can have some
Starting point is 00:18:37 understanding, until you've lived it, had to make the decisions and have to deal with the ramifications of decisions. There's just, you know, it's very, it's very, you know, it's very, you know, it's very, cliche, but there is literally nothing that that can be experienced. And I've also, one of the things that's really opened my eye, or one of the things, this experience and kind of sharing the startup experience with you is now I have even more respect. I'd like to believe that I had some, or, you know, I had respect for them, but I've even more respect for the people who, who share ideas that have been through it. Now I like listen with a little keener ear, try to pick up on some of the things because I'm like, yeah, they actually went through it.
Starting point is 00:19:20 So what they're saying, I should probably take a, I should probably take a little, little deeper listen to what they're saying because it's just until you. No, it's true. Sorry, I lost you there for a second. I can't. You got me now? Yeah. Sorry about that.
Starting point is 00:20:04 That was weird. No, it's okay. Even the small stuff, even the day-to-day decisions that don't work. You learn all those lessons. Yeah. And you learn them a hell of a lot fast. You learn of a heck of a lot faster. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:17 You know, the speed is a whole different thing. And, you know, there's just a huge opportunity for growth. And I, you know, honestly, like, I have a different respect for agents now than I think I did, you know, living in Cario Land. It was very easy to kind of discount, you know, agents and be like, oh, they're not adopting whatever we think is the next best thing because, like, they just don't understand. And that's not, it could be further from the truth. it's just like I don't think I had a fully respect of like what they are actually trying to do and what it takes to actually run a business. And those that are really successful at it and have been doing it for a long time, like have found a way to to stay focused and get through that. And so it gave me a whole new appreciation just even for the independent agent channel than then I had as an underwriting manager complaining about, you know, the agent that kept calling me because he he didn't like his renewal and things like that.
Starting point is 00:21:09 And I was just like, you know, so I guess. get it a lot differently now. I'm, you know, I was talking to, I did this podcast with a, with a kid. He's 22, 23 years old. He's doing his work in the risk management program. It's super good kid. His name was Darren. And he was interviewing me and, you know, and he said, you know, what question was
Starting point is 00:21:33 something around like, what would be, what would your recommendation be for how someone starts? And I just said, do all the. of things. Like go work for a carrier for a couple years, go work for an agent for a couple years, try to find a tech company for a couple years. No matter what you choose after you have a couple different experiences, you're going to be so much further out ahead of everyone else. Because the problem is you get into the carrier system and you think agents and technologies are the worst. You get into the agent system, carriers and technology systems and vendors are the
Starting point is 00:22:07 worst. And like you talk to technologists. These stupid agents, carriers are so slow. And you just, you don't have this respect for really how hard all the pieces of this industry are for a whole myriad of reasons. It's just not, nothing we do in this industry is straightforward. You know what I mean? We're not selling T-shirts or widgets. This is a complex thing that has real ramifications on people's life. And, you know, that's why I think really the only people in this industry that I've ever had a real problem with are the ones like, the guy from Lemonade who just, you know, basically acted like, like, these are users and we're all idiots.
Starting point is 00:22:49 And, you know, and again, well, his stock price is tanking, although I'm sure he got paid. I don't take any pleasure in that outside of the pleasure that I do take. And, you know, I just think to myself, like, as long, if you can just have a healthy respect for what's happening here, man, there's so much that can be done. And really, that's, again, that's why I get so excited about about you guys. because I see, you know, I would be lying if when I found out that you were part of coterie, it didn't give me some peace of mind. I was like, ah, they got somebody who spent some time on the other side in there. They're going to have that perspective. Like, that perspective is going to be in the building, which is a really positive thing. Yeah, no.
Starting point is 00:23:31 The one challenge is, though, like, we have to adopt faster. Like, we're going to have to get better at change management on all parts of the value chain over these next couple of years or consumers are going to push away. And I think that's that's the hardest part at a tech company or at a startup, you know, really trying to kind of push the envelope is how do you find that balance between the way we've always done it and really being like, but is is that the best way to do it? And I think we have to have a much more open mind. And I don't have all the answers.
Starting point is 00:24:14 And I certainly know that I don't have all the answers. And I learned that quick here. As like, you pull levers and you're like, oh, well, that used to work. Well, yeah, it used to work because you had like this massive machine behind you. Like it doesn't work when you're still trying to build on the fly. But if we can adapt and kind of move some of these processes forward, I mean, just like, you know, when we were starting, like the thinking about, you know, the microspace, right?
Starting point is 00:24:40 You know, I've listened to some calls and of some partners that we have and I've seen, you know, people that have taken a different approach to the microspace, right? A lot of it has been like, it's just transactional, it's purely transactional.
Starting point is 00:24:52 It's like, I don't want to think about it. I'm going to offload it to somebody else, whether that's some sales center or something like that. But when you actually take the time to, and it's not a lot of time, right? If you have the right tools, it can actually be pretty quick.
Starting point is 00:25:07 You just take the time to listen. to them and treat them with an ounce of respect because they've been bounced around three or four times, your conversion is going to skyrocket. Amen. And then we're seeing that. I mean, I have a story of a partner that we're working with. It's one producer. You know, she's a new commercial producer.
Starting point is 00:25:26 You know, they're doing a good job. It's a high volume type opportunity. And for two months in a row, she's closed 100 accounts. Now everyone will poo poo. It's like, oh, but it's like, you know, $400, $500, $600, $600. accounts. I don't care. Like, show me anybody being that productive and having that type of close rate. And just think about it if you, you know, if you put better workflows, you put efficiency in place and you give them the freedom to treat every account the same. I don't know. I think
Starting point is 00:25:59 there's some magic there. There absolutely is magic. I mean, you just literally defined what we're trying to do at Rogue. And what's been very interesting to me is, you know, we're we are reevaluating relationships that we have with with gold I'm doing air quotes no one can see gold standard carriers because of how absolutely terrible dealing with them is and and that is not me bitching from on high that is day to day boots on the ground trying to get things done just it can't be this hard I'm emailing the underwriting overlord to get whoever our person is to and respond within a week and then the person's yelling at us because a week should be, you know,
Starting point is 00:26:42 I'm busy. Don't you understand? I'm busy. And I'm like, you're our F and underwriter and we can't move without you making this, telling us this is okay. Like, it's like simple things like that.
Starting point is 00:26:52 You get to the point where you're like, you're not, you know, I don't care what, what the name of on your business card is. Like you're starting to not help us close business. And, you know,
Starting point is 00:27:04 I, um, but I, that aside, I don't want it to be the bitch. I think the point that you made about taking care of every customer, you know, one of the things that we're doing is, you know, or one of our value, you know, you write down your values.
Starting point is 00:27:20 The number one thing that I wrote down that we live by every day is no customer left behind. And that means if it's right down Broadway, Main Street, office business, that's great. We can write that. That's awesome. If it's a crypto miner, we can help that crypto miner. If it's someone with a seven car fleet, we can help that car fleet. If it's a $200 GL policy for a mom who's starting a side business and needs to get into a building to do whatever she's got to do, we're right that frigging policy too because that's the right thing to do.
Starting point is 00:27:53 Now, granted, do you have to have automations? Do you have to have efficiencies? Do you have the right partners to make that, to be able to make some money doing that? Absolutely you do. But I just, you know, there is going to come a day. if the agency force, if we don't kind of get our head wrapped around this, where the business is not even going to hit the independent agent. It's not even going to get down to that layer.
Starting point is 00:28:18 It's going to hit starting their bank account, gone. It's going to hit signing up for a Shopify account, gone. They're not going to walk into your agency. They're not going to ask their friend for referral because there's 10 of the things they do before they look for insurance. and one of those 10 things is going to provide them with the insurance and the business is going to be out. They're already going to have done business with somebody. And then if that company can take care of them in the human way that you just described,
Starting point is 00:28:47 they're never going to leave. So what you just said to me, I agree with it. The timetable is obviously we just can't handicap that because it's very tough. But the day of business just not even making it to the Main Street agents level, Like it just never comes down that far. That's absolutely coming. What's up, guys? Sorry to take you away from the episode,
Starting point is 00:29:13 but as you know, we do not run ads on this show. In an exchange for that, I need your help. If you're loving this episode, if you enjoy this podcast, whether you're watching on YouTube or you're listening on your favorite podcast platform, I would love for you to subscribe, share, comment if you're on YouTube,
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Starting point is 00:30:12 because I read all the comments or if you're on Apple or Spotify, leave a rating review of this show. I love you for listening to this show. And I hope you enjoy it listening as much as I do, creating the show for you. All right, I'm out of here. Peace. Let's get back to the episode. Yeah. But it doesn't mean that if you're well-networked and actually, you know, within your community, you can't insert yourself into a similar touch point on a local level. 100%. And that's what we're trying to do is bring tools that allow you to provide that digital shopping experience or embed that experience into a lower level affinity player,
Starting point is 00:30:52 whatever buzzword you want to use, you know, whatever platform. That's the biggest thing I've noticed with, you know, all this API technology that everyone's you know, talking about and like it's going to be the savior of all of our efficiency. And it's like, yeah, but that's just getting data back and forth. I mean, that doesn't take into account. Like you actually have to have an application that makes freaking sense. Yeah. Like you get the best APIs in the world, but if you're asking 70 different questions, like,
Starting point is 00:31:21 no thanks. Yeah. And if you're not responding quick enough or you're not giving them, you know, if everything is call, everything is call, everything is call, like, just being able to put a price and knowing that they can buy that, I think it's valuable, even if they don't buy it, just because you have a qualified customer that is informed and educated and your discussion is less about this is what it's going to cost and more about this is what you get. That's what API technology can do, right?
Starting point is 00:31:53 I think that gets lost sometimes. I think it's just like, yo, it's like an efficiency play. It's an efficiency play. No. Yeah, of course it's an efficiency play, but what it is is it's just basically changing the way the funnel works. You know, to truly leverage it, you got to get used to phones that look a lot different. And I remember that was always the challenge I had in large, you know, Gold Star is like they want their funnel to not change. You know, it's like I know I got a 30% hit ratio and I know, you know, everything kind of stays consistent.
Starting point is 00:32:27 And as long as we're meeting those marks, we're going to hit our financial plan and stuff like that. And then you introduce this frictionless data transfer. And all of a sudden, your submission shoot to the moon, your hit ratio is tank. Because it's no longer a hit ratio. It's a yield. And then everything in between changes.
Starting point is 00:32:46 And you have to have a different perspective of your financial plans, of what success looks like, how to make iterations. because when your funnel is that primed at the top, one or two percent change in a close rate or whatever ratio you wanna look at is much more meaningful than when you're just kind of you can buy and you're just staying flat. And that's something I learned over the last couple of years
Starting point is 00:33:16 is like it's going to be about like prices price. Like transparency has to come to insurance in commercial insurance. in general, right? Like, it can't be this mystery of like, I'm an electrician, like, what the hell am I going to pay for insurance? What it has to do is that, well, you're an electrician, you've got a lot of needs, right? And service is the biggest need, especially if you're working for different GCs and trying to get different contracts, you know better than I do, like servicing and like cert requirements and endorsements and all these different things that
Starting point is 00:33:52 we like to kind of forget about and be like, oh, like, let's make a sexy new business. business flow. That's where agents, I think, win is because you can provide that service and that education and that basically you're advocating for them with whatever carrier or whatever they're working with. That's the value. That's why I would use an agent on my own business is because I need somebody that can do that stuff for me and advocate and go to bat for me, whether it's a claim
Starting point is 00:34:25 situation, whether it's a servicing thing, it's less about like, you know, give me a quote. Because I can go to 10 different websites now, get a quote. Yeah. I would love for you to, I think you made one point you made in there that I think is important for us to go back on is yield versus hit ratio. This is one of the concepts that I know from firsthand knowledge, there are carriers that get and there are carriers that carry partners and I don't think any agent I don't and this is not a knock on agents this is kind of a high level more marketing related sophisticated idea so I don't want to
Starting point is 00:35:04 knock anyone who doesn't understand but I think um this concept the people that get this this is this in my opinion it's a defining concept in the actions that people are taking so can you just break down the difference between hit ratio and and maybe its legacy versus this new idea of yield and why you may want to kind of pivot your mentality. So to go back to the kind of the standard funnel that we've always thought about, right? So like the way in I'll give a carrier lens, that's what I know best is like I knew, you know, you have your portal, right? And so you know how many agents have started a submission.
Starting point is 00:35:42 So there's your submission count. You know how many have gotten through and gotten to the point where like, you know, yes, it's an approved quote that that's your quote. And then you know how many policies you sold. Traditionally, a hit ratio is that approved quote or that finished quote to how many policies you, you know, policies divided by quotes. Yields is when you talk policies versus submissions. And it's still pretty standard, you know, because you know your quote ratios are going to be, you know, in the 80% or whatever it may be. But when you get into true marketing efforts and you are getting into true volume plays, that submission number,
Starting point is 00:36:23 is very important and like the approved quote becomes less important. That's a matter of like how well are you able to get people through the funnel. And it's really so yield is when you look at truly policy sold at the end of the day based off of that activity that you draw. You know, it's a big in kind of like any type of marketing effort, right? If you're going to cast a broad net or even if you're going to cast a narrow net, right? And you're going to run different campaigns and you're going to try to, bring attention to your agency, bring customers to you. Yield is much more important than how often you quote them.
Starting point is 00:37:02 And like once you quote them, yeah, you should be closing at that same level, right? Like, you know, that doesn't necessarily change. But like understanding that I have a thousand submissions and I'm only writing 10. Well, if I go from, you know, I'm going to do mental math, and that's probably a mistake. right now. But anyway, so you go 1% hit ratio, yield ratio, right? If you go to two, the math is just different, right? Because you still have that 1,000 submissions, but you're closing to two. Well, now you know, it's, you grow the bottom line much faster. And it can be more impactful from like a premium standpoint or from a revenue standpoint. And so it's just like,
Starting point is 00:37:44 I'm much more concerned. It's like, because I want to get a swing at every single account that's out there. That's why Cotery is integrating in just about every platform you can find. One, I want be where the agents are transacting, not making them come to us to transact with us. And so I want to swing it every single time. So that means I want as many submissions as I can possibly get. And then I'm going to see how money we actually can close based off of that. And then I'm going to work at how do I close more based off this huge volume of submissions that we're getting because making those small tweaks, whether it's making ourselves more
Starting point is 00:38:18 prominent on tarmaca or making something easier in the way they get from Tarmaca to us to, you know, sold policy, things like that. You know, that's where we can impact much differently than just doing the, like, well, we get to drive this many quotes to our platform. You know, our portal, our dashboard, whatever you want to call it. And I saw, you know, my hit ratios when I was working with, you know, the big and share tax of the last couple years. One, because my quote ratio was like 100%.
Starting point is 00:38:52 because it's getting filtered out. You know, I'm quoting 90 plus percent because every time I'm getting a bat, I'm only closing 10%. Then you have to get comfortable with that. And you have to be like, okay, this is a lot more data, a lot more power in understanding what's going on from that first API hit to a sold policy. And making changes on that can yield a heck of a lot more lift than just saying,
Starting point is 00:39:23 like, well, I want to move my hit ratio from 34% to 35%. Yeah. I think that's a really important concept. And, you know, the volume plays are where everyone is going to, too. The one-off stuff is nice. And I think that, and I get, you know, everyone's still going to need to do that occasionally. But, you know, I think more and more to get attention from the carrier space,
Starting point is 00:39:52 from agents, you know, obviously agents being a primary listener to this, you have to be able to push weight. You just have to be able to do it. And I know that I think everyone's kind of always known that. I don't, you know, the, what FinTech and the platform, the B2B platform, the B to C platform as well, you know, from the personal perspective too, I just, you know, whatever. These platforms present so many opportunities. And you can also get this from your local attorney firm who does LLCs. You can get this from your accounting from. So I don't just want to talk about technology.
Starting point is 00:40:30 There's tons of opportunities to, you know, in our space, everyone gets hung up on home mortgage broker referrals, right? It's everyone talks about this. There's every conference ever has the, you know, whoever's doing the most home broker referral, they got some new stick. And I'm not, I'm not knocking that, but, um, and that, but the next. but the next play is the small business. And obviously that's where we're going. And but these partners are everywhere. You just need to open our eyes.
Starting point is 00:41:00 The accounting firm. Real estate managers. Yeah. They just, they're all there. And, and the ability to be that partner and set up flows. Like you said,
Starting point is 00:41:10 it drastically increases the number of the bats you get. Now, you have to deal with, like you said, a potentially lower hit ratio or a more spread out book. I think that's, that's a key to it. of the things that we've found is, you know, you need to have a couple different players.
Starting point is 00:41:26 There's no carrier regardless that's going to have the appetite that solves the singular problem. But, you know, you pick a few that are able to, that are willing to mentally play this game with you and you can do damage. I mean, you can do real damage. I mean, that's, you get, you get the few that get you the 80% and you get hyper efficient on the 20%. Yep. And then that's, you know, because just think about the, from the point of view of the referral partner, right? Like in the traditional model, it's like, hey, call this guy or, you know, go to see this guy's office or stuff. I think it's a better experience when like it's right there, they get a couple quotes right away. Yeah. And I think your referral partners, like it will make them look good
Starting point is 00:42:07 because they're providing a value service to their customers too. And then, you know, anytime it's a mutually beneficial partnership, that's how these things work. Yeah. That's how I frame it with all these platforms out there. Like, I want these platforms to succeed because I know if they succeed and I'm part of that, you know, we're both going to rise up together. So let's, I want to change the topic a little bit to data and the disposition. I don't want you give away any secret sauce. But the, I think a lot of people, a lot of agents haven't necessarily wrapped their head around how carriers, like a codery, are using. third party data and pulling it into the system to reduce like I know tarmica does this I know you guys
Starting point is 00:42:54 do this it's happening more and more I love for you to just maybe just help everyone better understand one I think one of the questions I get all the time is like where where is this data coming from and then can we trust it is another question I get a lot and then how are you actually using it how is it improving the process um that's there's a lot to unpack there so um where the data is, right? It's just like anything else. There is no one source of data. But anybody that knows and has kind of seen like your online persona is very mindable.
Starting point is 00:43:33 Let's just put it that way, right? I don't even know all the stuff that they do to get it and to fill in the gaps. But I mean, there's a couple of different things. The easiest, I think the one that's easiest for people to kind of wrap their heads around maybe is property, right? Because it's just tangible. It's like it's physical. There are a lot of records. There's a lot of sources out there that, you know, whether it's imagery, all kinds of different things that can say, you know, this building, you know, you can go to different towns.
Starting point is 00:44:00 And it's just like there's data out there. These are really aggregators is what they are. They're aggregators of data. And so, you know, Hazard Hub is a great one on the property side. And so they've built different models that built different ways of collecting information. And so with one call to their API, I can pull back a whole ton of information on that property. Information that as an agent, you would have had to either fill in yourself or go back to your client to be like, hey, can you like look outside and see what your roof's made out of? This is my number one thing.
Starting point is 00:44:33 And even educating, right? I mean, like, why are we still asking roof types? Why are we still asking, you know, construction types, BG codes and all this other stuff? Like it's it's all there in one sense or another. All right. This is my number one thing. I can do it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:50 When was your roof updated? Who has ever gone? It was 37 years ago. What agent is? Know what every agent does? 2015. Yeah. It's the,
Starting point is 00:45:02 I mean, I just, I look at that question and I'm like, who, who every, everyone who answers to this question knows that if you put it more than even 10 years in some cases, they're going to penalize you. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:13 No one actually. actually knows when the friggin roof was done except for the property records. So seven years ago, five years. I mean, it's just, it is ridiculous. Well, and put your underwriting hat on. Like, I don't care if the roof, if the roof was updated five years ago, but the guy did a crap job, is that any better than it was done 20 years ago and it was done right? And so it doesn't leak.
Starting point is 00:45:33 Right. I mean, because that's all we care about is like, is there going to be a water leak? And is there issues there that we're going to, you know, have a loss over? So why ask, right? Again, like if we're all, if everyone knows we're kind of pencil whipping it, what's the point of asking? Yeah. Like is it truly that relational to your loss ratio or to what makes a risk good or not? And that's what we're trying to eliminate or at least get a better, a different source of information for.
Starting point is 00:46:02 It's not a trust thing. I don't want people to think that all, yeah, like they don't trust the agents to give them the right answer. It's not that at all. It's just like, why waste hours of your time? Yeah. trying to figure out how to answer these questions, when we can make an API I call to five, six, seven different vendors and pulling a lot of information about that, right?
Starting point is 00:46:24 I think what'll be interesting to see is like classification. Can we build some models around, you know, understanding what somebody does that gets us close enough, to be honest, to a proper classification so that we know we're getting an appropriate rate for that risk and things like that. without making it a painful experience for an agent to try to figure out how the heck to classify them because everyone can classify a bakery yeah everyone can like a brand new person into the industry
Starting point is 00:46:54 be like yep that's a bakery except for maybe some of those people that like to have like baking without actually doing baking on premise or something like that but you know that's that's another story um but you know there are there's a lot of information out there on all these businesses whether it's in their social media feeds whether it's um you know in their services in their menus, you know, whatever it might be. There's a ton of information you can glean based off of an address, based off of a named insured, things like that. And we're just using different sources and we're constantly changing them and looking for better ones. And then we have some really smart data people in the background that are trying to build some scoring and some models around
Starting point is 00:47:34 because it's not perfect. It's not going to be accurate 100% of the time, but we don't need it it to be accurate 100% of the time, to be honest with you. And I think what we're looking at is, like, how do we present it in a way that an agent can verify it, right? And give that agent still that say to be like, yeah, no, no, I know that your sources are saying this, but like, it's really that. And so, you know, it's not a, we're only going to use data. We're going to use data and let you verify it at times when we think it needs to be verified. Yeah. I, this is, I look at what Branch is doing. I don't know how familiar are with Branch on the personaline side where first name,
Starting point is 00:48:14 last name, an email address sometimes and you can get full home auto and umbrella quotes. I mean, and what's been interesting to me, and I think this is the idea that hopefully we can break down a little bit here just in this podcast for agents is that it doesn't mean because we're using third party data. And this is just like, I think one of those common misconceptions that over time we'll just get past.
Starting point is 00:48:39 is that I think there's this feeling that because we're using third party data, somehow we're doing less underwriting. And that's not the case, right? We still have to have models. The companies still have to make money. They're still based on actuarial tables. And maybe some of the thought processes are a little more progressive in the underwriting methodology. But there's still there's still underwriting happening.
Starting point is 00:49:04 It's just where the data comes from. It's really that simple. It's just instead of you telling me, house was built in 1955, Hazard Hub is telling me it was built in 195. Instead of you checking a box that says, is this in a flood zone, Hazard Hub is telling me, this is not in a flood zone. You're good.
Starting point is 00:49:22 And the amount of what that does to put it in perspective for agencies, instead of having to ask those questions, you now can be more of a problem solver on the phone. And that, to me, is where we need to get to as agents, is get back to our roots of solving problems for people instead of being data collectors. And that's, again, one of the reasons why I'm so bullish on you guys is, I think, I think, one, I think you have the right mix of people. And two, I think that how you're infusing this information, the experience and the fact that you are still heavily relying on agents, to me, it's a winning, it's a winning strategy.
Starting point is 00:50:02 I mean, I know you probably have a long way to go and it doesn't always feel that way. But certainly from the outside, it looks like you have all the pieces in place. We have some of the pieces in place. I think what we have to do is prove that our ideas and our processes work, right? You know, Black Box underwriting is sexy until it blows up and you lose your paper and then codery doesn't exist. So, yes. And it's more about, and to be honest, like, we're in the microspace. So it's more about like, how do we put better guardrails in using data to keep that hyper-efficient experience that everyone kind of
Starting point is 00:50:38 of needs to in a sense like, you know, save time, which saving time saves money. And again, it transitions your conversation to much different. You can actually give that smaller account, you know, a good five minute explanation on what their policy actually covers as opposed to just, you know, not wanting to deal with them. Yeah. So, yeah, I mean, I think it's evolving. It's changed probably just in the last three, four years and it'll be even more in the next, you know, four or five years. And I don't, I'd love to say that we're the only ones doing this,
Starting point is 00:51:11 but I'm sure we're not. And we're not that arrogant to think that we are. I think what we're trying to do is, is, you know, iterate towards that goal. And find a way to be transparent in how we're doing it, right? Because the biggest lesson we've learned, or at least, you know, I think a coder is, like, you have to be very transparent to give agents that confidence. One, we know, we know, we know, what we're doing to they know what they're selling. And any time that we've had a gap in kind of that transparency or that understanding is where like we've been a lot of pushback, which is healthy. And that's the thing is like work with us because guess what?
Starting point is 00:51:54 Like we listen. Yeah. Not that other people don't, but like we are hyper focused on that feedback. Yeah. You know, my favorite story of our, you know, that I was involved with and things and things like that goes back to something very simple. Cool proposal, right? So we're like, hey, we're a tech company, man.
Starting point is 00:52:14 We're going to do some tech stuff. Like, we're going to create this cool micro site that you can email to your client. It'll look awesome on a cell phone. It'll look awesome on the computer, whatever. Like, it'll give them the basic information that they need to move forward. And no one used it. And they're like, where's my PDF? We're like, but we've got this awesome website, man.
Starting point is 00:52:37 like this is like so much cooler like your customers are going to think you're amazing because you can provide them this and like no i don't want that i want a pdf and now we're like you know pulling our head or over ass and getting a PDF out in the market which i've used it's great so yeah it's it's just part of the fun and uh that's why i love being at codery is like you know one i get the chance to learn these lessons um and have the freedom to fail um right because i think a lot of times people get wrapped up in fear of failure. And, you know, at the end of the day, you know, we're all trying to make a difference in some small way.
Starting point is 00:53:18 And I just feel a lot more comfortable screwing up right now, you know, as long as I don't bring the whole company down. But you know what I mean? Like, it's just a different culture. And I think that's another thing that kind of freed me, you know, from some of the previous things that I've done. Yeah, it's awesome, man. I, you know, I'm big, big, big, big, big fan of what you guys are doing.
Starting point is 00:53:41 I, I, I've been on it since, you know, I, I remember, I talked to David like three years ago and he was telling me, oh, I got this thing. Or did you pitch me the idea? And then, you know, just from afar watching, you know, it kind of takes shape. And then obviously when I started rogue, I reached out to you guys. And, you know, now we're starting to integrate more and work together closer. And, you know, I'm excited because I think that. for some reason my microphone keeps getting wonky on me. But when a company like codery comes into the market
Starting point is 00:54:28 and starts doing the things you're doing at the pace that you're doing them, you know, it pushes the rest of the market to get better. You know, I like to hammer on lemonade because I really didn't appreciate the way that they approached our market space. But you can't knock. Lemonade changed a lot of the way that a lot of people do business and the mentality and the mindset, they have had a major impact on the culture of our, of our industry in a positive way.
Starting point is 00:54:58 And so I think, I think it's good for the space. I think the innovation is good for the space. I think the way that you guys treat an onboard agents, especially new agents, is good for the business because, you know, you, it doesn't feel good when you're trying to be, when you're an entrepreneur and you're trying to start a business and you have some carrier come in and speak to you like you're a peon because you're only going to give them $100,000 in premium in the first year. And, you know, they can care less, you know, about, about, you know,
Starting point is 00:55:26 that's the way a lot of the carriers make you feel. And whether you get the payment or not, it doesn't feel good. It's nice to talk to somebody, have a 20 minute conversation and have them say, hey, let's go. And then the paperwork is about five minutes. And you can, now you can write business. And you feel like there's a sense of empowerment there. And I think that's a small but important piece of the puzzle as well.
Starting point is 00:55:47 So we want to grow together, right? I mean, I love working with new agents. Yeah. They're fired up. They're trying to bring new ideas. They're experimental in themselves of just trying to get a footing. And I'd be happy to work with anyone that's just trying to figure it out. And like we're bringing tools, like we're not only delivering things for our top tier agents or things like that.
Starting point is 00:56:11 We're bringing these tools to everyone. And we're going to continue to do that. That's awesome. And you guys just partnered with my favorite network in the world, Indium. That announcement came out today as a recording. So I always love to see it's like watching friends get married. You know, you see. Well, it's fun because it's a small, you know just as well as I do.
Starting point is 00:56:34 It's a small little network and we've all kind of met each other at different conferences. We've all kind of talked to each other. And yeah, it's a blast to like get to work together. Yeah. And kind of. And Chad Eddie's the man. he is I mean other than a clumsden fan i don't know i mean that's the only negative i think i can think of but uh yeah you know but but that's it man now he's solid and that's a great network and
Starting point is 00:56:57 and we couldn't be more excited to to be partnering with them awesome so if uh agents listen into this and they're like her to coterie i'm convinced i want to reach out and see if they're a good fit for me um what's what's the best way to do that easiest way codery insurance dot com from there you can go at our producer resources, all of our forms are out there, different endorsements. It's very transparent. We have a digital appetite guide powered by our buddies buds at AskCodiak. So you can kind of get a sense of where we're writing. You know, we're admitted. We're in 48 states. We're filed in New York. I know people want us there. We want to be there more than ever. We're working through, you know, the 60 plus things we have to respond to in the filing to get, you know,
Starting point is 00:57:44 a standard ISO Bob filed and ready to go in New York. But yeah, there you can even sign up to be a producer. You put a couple pieces of information in and we'll get in touch with you in the matter of hours. You know, you'll have somebody on our team getting you your contract, giving you a quick overview, let you know you can join one of our demos. Feel free to hit me up. I'm on LinkedIn, Raymond Lynch, you know, Raymond at coter insurance.com. You know, I'm diving deep into the agent space.
Starting point is 00:58:16 Not having been, you know, it was heavily in the digital for a while. And it's fun and kind of interesting to kind of circle back and see all the changes. Even in, you know, those three, four years from when I was an underwriting manager to now. And how far agents are pushing the needle, those that are engaged and really wanting to. Yeah. Well, hey, man, I appreciate you spending the time. Obviously, enjoy our partnership. looking forward to more and just as an observer of the industry looking forward to seeing
Starting point is 00:58:44 what kind of trouble you guys get into as you as you continue to push into the space. I think it's trouble obviously in a good sense. Give them comfort. We do have some insurance people. Yeah, no, they do. We're not just a bunch of tech. We got great underwriting team that's behind the scenes. It may not be the traditional underwriting relationship that you're used to.
Starting point is 00:59:04 But know that we have some really strong underwriting minds that are kind of keeping the guardrails in place and making sure that we're, we're writing the right business and that, you know, we're, we are underwriting. Yeah. So definitely don't give that. And I'll say this too. Like, you know, I told everyone this when we had Dax Craig on from Pi. Like I think of, in my mind, I put you guys in the same exact bucket.
Starting point is 00:59:26 You are new carriers doing things a different way from a data and ease of business perspective. But I think both of you guys have the insurance expertise and experience on the back end. that any agent can lay their hat on what's happening. So, yeah, no, I 100% agree with you. I mean, there are other insured deck players in the space that I don't use for that same reason. But I just think you guys are doing a lot of good stuff. So I appreciate it, man. As always, I enjoy your talks.
Starting point is 00:59:58 And we'll get out of here. All right, man. Let's go right some business together. Close twice as many deals by this time next week. Sound impossible. It's not. With the one call closed system, you'll stop cheating. leans and start closing deals in one call.
Starting point is 01:00:25 This is the exact method we use to close 1,200 clients under three years during the pandemic. No fluff, no endless follow-ups, just results fast. Based in behavioral psychology and battle tested, the one-call closed system eliminates excuses and gets the prospect saying yes, more than you ever thought possible. If you're ready to stop losing opportunities and start winning, visit masterof-the-close.com. That's masterof-the-close.com. it today. Happy holidays. Want to give your host a gift? Consider subscribing, rating, and reviewing the show this holiday season. It really helps the show grow. From all of us at Believe,
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