Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - The Fascinating Impact of a Hard Market on Insurance Carriers w/ Curtis Goldsborough

Episode Date: February 15, 2024

Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyOur latest episode takes a whimsical turn with the LinkedIn me...me master, Curtis Goldsborough, who's cracking the serious facade of the insurance industry. ✅ Join the Insurance Growth Masterclass: https://masterclass.insure✅ For daily insights and ideas on peak performance: https://www.instagram.com/ryan_hanley/✅ Hire me to speak at your next event: https://ryanhanley.com/speaking👉 Curtis Goldsborough's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/curtis-goldsborough/** More about this episode **He's turned InsureTech raps into the talk of the town and made LinkedIn posts the bread and butter of engagement. Together, we explore the alchemy of humor in content creation, discuss the delicate dance of being funny without crossing lines, and reveal how a well-placed emoji can transform your personal brand into a digital dynamo.As we pivot to the grittier side of the industry, my personal tale of a carrier's strategic move underscores the adaptability needed in today's InsureTech landscape.We dissect the conundrum of technical debt, the courage needed to overhaul outdated systems, and the intricate tango between short-term gains and future-proofing a business. CEOs' decisions, client relationships, and the drive for innovation are the backdrop to this candid conversation about the industry's internal tug-of-war.Wrapping up with a look at today's pressing insurance woes, our dialogue turns to the stark reality facing homeowners: soaring insurance costs and the looming threat of natural disasters.The episode traverses the potential of innovative risk mitigation and discusses the rising tide of litigation and inflation that's reshaping the industry.From the fragility of markets in high-risk areas to the critical need for public education on insurance, we cover it all. Tune in for an episode that melds levity with the depth of insurance industry insights.--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

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Happy holidays. Want to give your host a gift? Consider subscribing, rating, and reviewing the show this holiday season. It really helps the show grow. From all of us at Believe, have a Merry Christmas, everyone, and a happy holiday. You just got to put stuff out there and see what happens. And actually, and that's a big part of, I think, where people, whether they're using it to bring awareness to a personal brand or to a business or they're selling something, whatever the reason. is they'll put stuff out and then they won't go back and look and see what actually happened.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Did people actually comment? Did they like it? How much reach did it get? And then think for themselves, okay, why did that happen? Good laboratory in the basement of his home. Hello, everyone, and welcome back to the show. Today we have a tremendous conversation for you with Curtis Goldsboro, innovative loss control expert, InsureTech Enfijianado creator. The guy that does the InsureTech Raps at ITC, he's also the president of
Starting point is 00:01:25 National Insurance Protection Services and an all-time meme creator on LinkedIn about the insurance industry. And guys, if you're not following Curtis on LinkedIn, I highly recommend you do. His takes and his kind of sarcastic memes that he creates about the insurance industry, I find to be thoughtful and hilarious and just all around good guy. And I really wanted to have Curtis on just for his perspective. We have so many people on this show who in some way, shape, or form are directly creating or working in the retail side of the independent insurance agency space. And I just wanted to get an outside perspective from someone who is, you know, interesting and thoughtful. Obviously, Curtis fits the bill that doesn't directly sell to.
Starting point is 00:02:15 and or sell retail insurance. And while Curtis has had retail sales experience in the insurance industry before, as an agency owner for Farm Bureau, for the last 10 plus years, he's worked for National Insurance Inspection Services and has a unique perspective on the way various dynamics, particularly the hard market that we're currently operating
Starting point is 00:02:38 in have impacted the insurance industry and insurance carriers. And we talk a little bit about what that means, what he's seeing, across the board, particularly as it relates to homeowners, insurance and property loss, et cetera, and why the hard market and various cat losses that we've had in the last, say, half dozen years or so,
Starting point is 00:03:00 have created a fragility in our industry that most are not aware of. So it's an awesome conversation. And as I said, I highly recommend you connect with Curtis on LinkedIn, follow along with what he's doing. We'll have his LinkedIn profile in the show notes, whether you're watching on YouTube or listening on the podcast. And you can also just go to LinkedIn
Starting point is 00:03:20 and search for Curtis Goldsboro and you'll find him. Before we get there, guys, just want to go cook. Shout out to you for listening to this show. If you love what we're doing here, if you're not subscribed, subscribe. If you are subscribed and you love what we're doing, love for you to share the show. Just share it out in your socials,
Starting point is 00:03:35 text it to a friend, email it to a friend. That's how more people find what we're doing, find these conversations, find this content. and hopefully through the various episodes, through the guests that we have, through the conversations, thoughts, ideas, something resonates that helps you grow, helps you become a better leader,
Starting point is 00:03:53 helps you become a better sales professional, or whatever it is that you're doing, helps you better understand this industry and how you can be successful within it. And if you want to go down that rabbit hole even further, I recommend you visit masterclass. That's masterclass. insure. This is the insurance growth masterclass website where you can join a community of people
Starting point is 00:04:17 that are growing their business like no others. This is dynamic. It is interesting. It is pushing the boundaries of what it means to grow your agency to build scalability, predictability, and sustainability through inbound marketing. Guys, this is the culmination of 18 years of my work in this space. And it is just such a pleasure to be providing this to you guys. So go masterclass dot insure today and with that guys let's get on to Curtis Goldsboro well dude I'm excited to have you on the show you are like the uh insurance LinkedIn meme master and maybe even just like you may have ascended even past just insurance in terms of your meme skills but um dude it's like funny it I love your takes it's so engaging and uh I probably have interacted with too many of them
Starting point is 00:05:11 because now, like, it seems like everything you post just, like, comes to the top of my LinkedIn feed. A mission accomplished. Yes. It's, dude, I give you so much props. It's great. I mean, it's, uh, this is not the easiest space to, like, find ways to make it humorous. And that didn't, you know, that doesn't then just, like, completely offend somebody.
Starting point is 00:05:32 So, uh, I found it to be, uh, I found it to be awesome. I mean, like, why, why do you use like that type of content? Like, where did that come from? You know what I mean? Like you have a very distinct style, obviously. So where does all that come from? Yeah, I mean, you know, I wish that I had a profound answer for that. But, you know, it's one of those things where I've always been a creative person.
Starting point is 00:05:56 And I always, you know, felt like I had an interesting take on things, but didn't really know what the right outlet was, you know, for that or how to how to convey that. You know, and so, I mean, a couple years ago, I guess, well, gosh, four years. to go for InsureTech Connect in Vegas. I had, you know, written this insuretech wrap and kind of collaborated with the insurance nerds group on that. And yeah, those always kind of got a little, you know, got a little bit of traction and made some waves. But then I had no, you know, no intentional plan to like capitalize on that, you know, attention
Starting point is 00:06:30 or build upon it. But I did one every year for the last four years. And then this year really put a lot of energy and time and effort into it to, you know, try to make it really up the production value and all of that. And it made a pretty big splash. And this year I was like, you know what? I need to because like literally for the past four years, like I would post this insuretech wrap video at ITC time and then do nothing on LinkedIn after it. You know.
Starting point is 00:06:54 And so this year I was like, you know what? I'm going to grease the wheels a little bit leading up to it and get the algorithm at least recognizing who I am. You know, and then that really helped engagement on on that insuretech rap video this year, which was, you know, called hard market and that just really resonated with a ton of people and and I had a ton of fun with it and yeah and so then beyond that just I've kind of followed up with quite frankly I don't even know where the first kind of meme idea came from but like you know I made one and it resonated and got tons of engagement and really hit and I was like holy cow this this really seems to work you know it resonates with people and um you know and obviously
Starting point is 00:07:40 I had, you know, had heard Gary V at ITC this year saying attention is everything, you know, attention is your most valuable asset. And I was like, hey, I'm going to, I'm going to try this. You know, I've attracted some attention, but let me see if I can keep the ball rolling. And it's just been kind of off to the races from there. And I'm still learning as I go, but I'm having a lot of fun with it. Yeah. And I think that's the really most important part of that, too, is that you're doing it.
Starting point is 00:08:07 And some of them are going to work. Some of them aren't. You know what I mean? It's just, you never know. I mean, that's the biggest thing when people come to me about like the, you know, inbound insurance stuff that I've done and whatever. I'm like, you know, I can give you a whole bunch of like things that you can do. And there are some best practices and obstacles you can cite some,
Starting point is 00:08:24 et cetera, but like, really, you just got to put stuff out there and see what happens. Like, and actually, and that's a big part of, I think, where people, whether they're, whether they're using it to bring awareness to a personal brand or to a business or they're selling something, whatever the reason, is they'll put stuff out and then they won't go back and look and see what actually happened. Did people actually comment? Did they like it? How much reach did it get?
Starting point is 00:08:51 And then think for themselves, okay, why did that happen? Was it, you know, I've seen, and this is going to sound crazy, but I was testing emojis in the first line of my LinkedIn posts. and I found that if you use like the green box with the check or if you use more positive related emojis, you tend to get more reach. Where if you use like a red X or you use, I was using like the alert siren thing, you get less. And I was like, because I posted this one and I was like, I just thought I thought I had hit on all the things. I thought it was a good kind of contrarian title, but what I did was I framed it between two red X emojis. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:43 Like it didn't go anywhere. And I was like, what stuff? I was so pissed. You know what I mean? I was like, you know, so then I started testing and I found that like, okay, that's not for whatever reason. You know, it's like those are the kind of things that end up making a difference in the long run that I feel like people just don't want to think that deeply on the nuance. But it is important. No, it absolutely is.
Starting point is 00:10:04 And I mean, I'm sure that you're aware of this, right? But like, if you watch any of the stuff, you know, from Mr. Beast, right? Like interviews that he's done with, with Rogan or whoever, right? And like, I mean, this, the, literally the most successful and prolific YouTuber in history, right? And if you ask him, like, he doesn't think that he's a creator, right? He's like, I'm a data nerd. And he says that, you know, literally from the beginning, he has just obsessed over analytics. and like what you were talking about, right?
Starting point is 00:10:36 And like, you know, A, B, C, D, EFG testing, right? And like, you know, just absolutely obsessing over that. And, yeah, I mean, it matters. You absolutely, you know, can get results. But it's work, right? It's a lot of work. And I think this goes into really everything, everything that we do, you know, and probably outside of insurance too,
Starting point is 00:11:03 but it's, it is this ability to test, test, test, test, test and not chair and not, you know, I actually just, I had a couple days ago and I've talked a little bit about this on the podcast, but I had this kind of back and forth a couple of people, because I have this perspective that when you are working with inbound leads in a business, particularly an insurance business, but that's what I know best. So we'll just stick to that is that you solve the people's problem. You round out the account later. That is my particular take.
Starting point is 00:11:33 that is not my take because I ideologically believe that that's what it is. It's my take because I think I personally have dealt with more and more diverse segments of inbound leads in this industry than maybe anybody that operates in it currently, right? Like multiple different businesses, multiple different formats, listening to hundreds of agents, my own businesses, businesses I've consulting for, etc. And if you focus, and I know there are people listening to this, you are not going to want to hear this. But if you have a hard focus on rounding out accounts in the initial call or the initial sale, you're going to lose business. And this is the part that everyone gets like pushes back on me on. Just because you solve someone's problem and that's one policy today, that does not mean that's a bad account. Everyone immediately jumps to, well, if it's not a rounded out account, then the business isn't going to stick.
Starting point is 00:12:34 And I'm like, I buy clothes from like four or five different brands and I go back when I need them. Like also, just because you only have one account today doesn't mean that you can't call them back in a couple of weeks and get the rest. But there's like this sense. And I think it goes for all of us. like, you know, and I ultimately want to get into like where your technical expertise in the industry is too. Like, but I feel like when someone calls you for a problem, don't, don't you just, or if you call someone for a problem, don't you just want them to solve your problem?
Starting point is 00:13:12 Or do you want them to try to figure out all the problems that you have? And in that call, then try to solve all the problems that you have. Like, you're like, no, no, no, no. I just have this one problem I need to solve today so I can get this off my brain. And, and, you know, I just, you know, it's just funny how people get so. ideologically bent on things. You know what I mean? And it's like, this is the way it is.
Starting point is 00:13:30 No, you have to round out accounts or it's a bad account. It won't be profitable. And like, says who? Yeah. No, and I saw your post yesterday about that and saw some of the pushback and enjoyed the thought process, you know. And I can see, you know, see both sides of it. I feel like there is an interesting parallel maybe to some extent, you know, because I'm, I'm personally not on the agency side, but more on the insure tech side.
Starting point is 00:13:56 and in a in a B-to-B space, right? And, you know, so my clients are insurance carriers and MGAs. But I can totally see parallels even with, you know, for instance, just this in the past six months, you know, we had a, had a tier one carrier that came, you know, came to me and said, hey, like, you know, we are looking for a new field inspection vendor, right? Well, yeah, we do field inspections, but that's like we're shifting really quickly towards self-inspection, right? and we've built our proprietary technology on that.
Starting point is 00:14:28 And we're kind of making a somewhat strategic shift in that direction, although it's happening organically as well. So like with that carrier, quite frankly, I'm not terribly interested in doing field inspections for them, but I absolutely want to be a self-inspection provider for them. But I'm like, yeah, absolutely. Like, you know, if I get that opportunity with them, so we're doing field inspections with them
Starting point is 00:14:54 and not making any money, quite frankly, but I want that door open, right? I want to have my foot in the door. Yes. I just feel like there's some bit of parallel there, right? 100% there is. Like, hey, let's, you know, I want that opportunity. Let's open the door.
Starting point is 00:15:09 Let's start to establish a relationship. And, you know, even though the, the quote unquote, solution that I'm providing for them right now is, is not exactly what I want to be doing for them. But I'm going to establish myself as, you know, as a resource, as a solution provider. and continue to foster that relationship. And quite frankly, I mean, that was three months ago that we started. And next month I already have a demo set up with them for self-inspection, right? So there's definitely that fostering process and bringing people along.
Starting point is 00:15:37 And yeah, I can totally see that. And I think that's a, I think it's a tremendous parallel because I completely agree. And this is one of my arguments is like, why is it that most of those people who are pushing back on me in almost every other aspect of their leg, they would probably agree solve the original problem. But for some reason in our space, it becomes, no, we have to solve all the problems. Yeah, you know what I mean? So I think it's a wonderful parallel because it is, it is exactly how people want to buy, right?
Starting point is 00:16:09 None of us wake up in the morning and go, I need to find someone to solve every problem that I possibly have in X. You know, you're like, you know, my, whatever, think about a problem with your home or your, you know, whatever's going on in your life. Like, I need this thing solved. I don't need all the problem solved. I need this one thing solved. And if you can solve it for me now, you go into the column of value creator.
Starting point is 00:16:32 And now I'm willing to come back to you over and over again because I know you're a value creator. I just think that it's kind of an old school methodology. I think you can be successful, guys. Please don't start blasting me again or blowing on my DMs. This is the beauty of America. You get to do it however you want. I just don't believe that. I just don't believe that's the future.
Starting point is 00:16:54 I don't believe the future is continuing to force people down the path that makes the most sense to you, the provider. I think we have to be like the Bruce Lee's philosophy of, you know, fit to fit the solution to what they need. And if writing their entire account or, you know, pitching them every service you have, you know, if you're an insure tech or whatever, is what makes sense in that moment, great. But you should be, have the nimbleness or mental dexterity to know when, you're, you should be, have. this person just needs me to solve this one problem, and it's, as you said, a shoe in the door to do the rest. So we can move on from that topic. I actually, you know, one of the memes,
Starting point is 00:17:34 I think it might even be the one. Yeah, you posted it today. You have this meme out there, which is awesome. I'll have it linked up in the show notes, guys. But it's the one where the guys, it says insurance and the guys run on the treadmill, but he's attached to all these weights, and it says innovation is where he's running,
Starting point is 00:17:49 and technical debt is the weights. And I wanted to ask you about this, because I actually was talking to Margo Giles, whose episode will come out maybe a couple before this. I'm not sure where it'll all fall, but before this episode, so you can go back and listen to her episode, guys, if you haven't. But this topic came up in our conversation with her
Starting point is 00:18:08 because she was, you know, she was kind of talking through some of her feelings and thoughts on why, you know, her competitors, her legacy competitors in her vertical haven't made the change. And, you know, she brought up a couple ideas, which were 100% legitimate. But she didn't address the techno-depth side. And I said, how much do you think their unwillingness to move at pace
Starting point is 00:18:34 or at least the pace that say innovators and early adopters in our space would like them to move back? Because I think everybody, even the big guys in the AMS space would agree, that they do not move at the pace that innovators and early adopters would like them to. I think they tend to move at like a early majority or late majority pace, depending on which one it is. Okay. So I said,
Starting point is 00:18:56 how much do you think technical debt plays a role? And I don't want to necessarily mince, I don't want to misrepresent her feelings, but in general it was she thought it was more a philosophical slash profit decision than it was a, you know, turning the Titanic and the New York Harbor kind of thing. Where do you fall in general? And it doesn't have to be about the AMS systems, but just in general legacy tech and the technical debt associated with it.
Starting point is 00:19:22 and how that's created opportunities. Because I think that's a topic that maybe like you and I kind of understand, but maybe most of our listeners don't get maybe what technical that is. Maybe we can start there and then talk about how you see it impacting the industry as a whole. Yeah, definitely. I mean, it's a super interesting topic. And I'm looking forward to listening to Margot's episode. She's awesome.
Starting point is 00:19:43 Yeah, yeah, she is. But, yeah, I mean, it's interesting as, you know, for my company, National Insurance inspection services. And we're a, you know, decades old, you know, started as a family-owned business. And, you know, built on, I mean, we started doing these property field inspections for underwriting, right, back on, you know, notepads and Polaroid cameras, right? Like, that was the genesis of our company back in the day, right? And so we, you know, have had this transition, you know, slowly over time.
Starting point is 00:20:19 And like, you know, when we moves to, you know, inspectors having digital cameras, like that was mind blowing, right? Like to move from Polaroid photos in the mail getting sent to carriers and now to have a digital workflow like that, you know, was just cutting edge, right? And then fast forward. And it's like, okay, now instead of using digital cameras, now our inspectors have a mobile app that they can use, right? And now they're all taking photos with their phones, right? And so like there's all of that. But then for our company, no company is immune to this, right? Like as technology evolves, like if you're not evolving as a business, like you're going to develop technical debt.
Starting point is 00:20:58 Right. And I think literally every company has some. And just for the audience, I think just for the audience, you may not understand exactly what is technical debt so that they can kind of have an understanding of what that means. Yeah. I mean, I'll take my best shot at it. And you might have a better answer than I would, right? But essentially, you know, as technology advances and as you need and want your business to evolve along with that and take advantage of new technology so that you, you know, ultimately at the end of the day, hopefully can be more profitable, right? Drive efficiency and all of those types of things.
Starting point is 00:21:31 But, you know, as that technology advances, if you're not moving along, moving your business along that pipeline of technology advancements and you're just relying on, you know, infrastructure systems. and it doesn't matter whether that's hardware or software or whatever the case may be. In some sense, it's even just business processes, right, that are enabled by technology. That literally becomes debt, you know, and that is going to hold your company back. It's going to hold you back from reaching the milestones of profitability that you, you know, would have been able to reach had you not gone ahead and say, look, we haven't upgraded our systems in a decade and this is absolutely holding us back. And ultimately, I mean, that's, that technical debt kills businesses every day.
Starting point is 00:22:18 You know what I mean? It is just, you know, and it can be perpetuated just by a, it kind of an old school mentality, right? And, and I think the, you know, it's the old cliche, right? If it ain't broke, don't fix it. And sometime, like, that can be a big hurdle for people, you know, because that, that cliche basically drives more technical debt, right? Yep. because the reality is nothing is going to work forever.
Starting point is 00:22:46 And especially, you know, today as the, you know, the speed of technology and advancement is just, you know, the momentum is growing every single day, right? And things are changing so quickly, you know, that if it ain't broke, don't fix it mentality, you're going to die. You're just not going to survive, right? Yeah. Because there are absolutely going to be competitors in your space that come in and do not have any of that technical debt holding them back and they're going to get catapulted, you know, ahead of you. So, yeah, it's funny. That's a long drawn out.
Starting point is 00:23:18 No, I think it's a perfect. It's a perfect way to describe it. It's, it's, uh, with each year removed from when you built your system, there's almost like, uh, it's not a linear scale on how much it's going to cost to upgrade that system. And actually, it's like a logarithmic scale almost. Like maybe the first couple of years, if you were to update it, no big deal. But you get too far. removed from the newest technology and now that upgrade costs exponentially more.
Starting point is 00:23:47 And I actually heard this described one time, not the technical debt part, but the decision to upgrade an antiquated system. I can't remember it was some entrepreneur forum. I was watching on YouTube or whatever. And I can't remember who the guy was. So I'm going to try. But he basically referred to this as when to kill the golden goose is kind of paraphrasing what he said is like he's like as a CEO of a mature company one of the hardest decisions to make is
Starting point is 00:24:17 how or when do you kill your golden goose and what are you referring to this kind of thing like if you have this system that's 20 years old that is almost impossible to upgrade but man there's still people using it and you're making money but you also know like at some point those people are going to leave and you're not going to be able to provide them with a product that is up to today's standards like how do you make that decision? What do you do there? And he didn't necessarily have an answer. He was mostly just like, this is a question every CEO of a mature company has to ask or answer,
Starting point is 00:24:48 sorry. And, you know, he was like, how you answer it could determine success, failure, you know, you turn the page and become a whole new company and it's amazing or you crash that plane right inside the mound. So it's a really, it is something that I think a lot of people. And I just want to spend some time here just because I feel like we do give, you know, specifically applied in vertifor get yelled at a lot right and i'm sure as guilty of that as anybody else at the same time i am appreciative of the the true struggle that they have with their own
Starting point is 00:25:22 internal technical debt and the fact that they have golden geese that that pay their bills that still that companies still operate on and it is a very tough decision on what to do and i think it doesn't always make a lack of innovation. It doesn't excuse a lack of innovation, but it is a real legitimate business problem that they're dealing with every day, I think is something that at least needs to be said to be fair to them.
Starting point is 00:25:49 Yeah, no, absolutely. I couldn't agree more. And I do think that progress is always being made, right? There are always innovators. There are always people that are, you know, trying to push that along. And I think especially on, you know, on the carrier side, you know, I mean, we've worked with some,
Starting point is 00:26:04 amazing innovation teams, you know, over the last three, four years, you know, that are doing incredible work. But at the same time, I mean, you cannot get away from the reality that what's up, guys? Sorry to take you away from the episode, 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, leave a rating review if you're on Spotify or Apple iTunes, et cetera. This helps the show grow. It helps me bring more guests in. We have a tremendous lineup of people coming in,
Starting point is 00:26:53 men and women who've done incredible things, sharing their stories around peak performance, leadership, growth, sales. The things that are going to help you grow as a person and grow your business, but they all check out comments, ratings, reviews. They check out all this information before they come on. So as I reach out to more and more people and want to bring them in and share their stories with you, I need your help. Share the show. Subscribe if you're not subscribed. And I love for you to leave a comment about the show 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.
Starting point is 00:27:32 All right, I'm out of here. Peace. Let's get back to the episode. Pretty much, I can't say this unequivocally, but, you know, I think it's fairly accurate to say that certainly the top 10 P&C carriers in the country, like the core of these businesses are still running on old AS 400. You know, I mean, they still have server rooms that are, you know, the size of both of our houses combined, a full cloud migration. like it's just it's mind boggling and you know I think that so like I get it I understand the struggle there and I also think and something that we've seen and experienced a lot as well is there's so much danger in those migrations you know and those innovations right because I mean you know we've all heard
Starting point is 00:28:22 the horror stories right of trying to move onto you know a new policy management system or whatever and And, you know, I mean, millions of dollars, sometimes tens of millions of dollars get spent and a five or six year migration. And it literally never, like they never get to the end goal. You know what I mean? It just becomes a huge money pit. And like, they just couldn't actually get it over the finish line. And like, there's a very real risk of that happening, you know? Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:50 That can certainly understandably perpetuate that mindset of, to your point, hey, you know, things are running, right? Like, we're writing business. We're making money. Although, you know, today and this year, maybe we're not making money, but, you know what I mean? Like the wheels aren't falling off. We're not crashing and burning today. And, you know, we don't necessarily see that happening tomorrow. So there's just, there's a lot of hesitancy, you know, there to make those tough decisions.
Starting point is 00:29:20 So for your business particularly, what other pressures do you see coming from carriers? What are the things are you hearing like? Like when you're talking to a client or a customer and they're walking through the things that are important to them, like, what's on their brain? Like I love getting perspectives. You know, so often, you know, just because it's where my area of expertise is, we talk through the framework of the agency space. But I'm really interested always in the challenges, the frustrations, the things that people are excited about that aren't necessarily that vantage point. So when you're sitting there and you're like, this is going to be a big change or, man, maybe everyone doesn't see this. problem coming? What are some things that are like high on your mind? Yeah, I mean, it's,
Starting point is 00:30:03 it's so interesting because, you know, the, the industry is just, it's so fluid, like, things change so quickly. And there are so many different factors, right? Like, I mean, insurance is complex. The ecosystem sometimes feels hopelessly complex, right? And I certainly, you know, I'm no expert. I quite frankly have a pretty narrow, you know, scope of expertise in the industry at large. But, you know, but I am absolutely fascinated by, you know, this current hard market cycle that we are in and how that's going to play out because, and I have these conversations with a lot of our, you know, carrier partners, you know, that nobody knows how this cycle is going to play out. But I think everybody agrees that this one is different than anything that we faced in the
Starting point is 00:30:54 past because we have this confluence of factors, you know, all coming at us at the same time that we've, we've never had, you know, in this specific combination before. And I mean, you can tie that back into, you know, COVID or whatever, right? Like, it's like the, you know, the word of the day continues to be unprecedented. And, you know, we, yeah, I think the industry as a whole is, is in uncharted waters, right? And we don't really know, we don't really know where it's going to go from here. So, you know, but with with that in mind, you know, I think with our clients and folks that we're working with on the innovation side, and again, we're, we are strictly, you know, kind of in this little, little niche of the underwriting for property and casualty and, and even more specifically than that, you know, just residential homeowners stuff, right? Like, that's what my company is, is laser focused on. Like that's where our expertise lies.
Starting point is 00:31:52 And I try not to get, you know, to chase every opportunity that comes our way, right? I want to be master of one. So no commercial property. No commercial property. No commercial property. We're not doing anything with commercial stuff right now. And maybe we will at some point in the future. But again, we're mastering what we're best at right now.
Starting point is 00:32:10 So, you know, so but from that perspective, I think with that kind of uncertainty of how things are going to go. moving forward. I know that carriers are absolutely, you know, looking for options and opportunities that are going to move the needle for them, you know, meaningfully. And because, again, any, you know, any improvement that can come is going to,
Starting point is 00:32:39 regardless of how things evolve in the next few years, you know, any improvement is better than no improvement, right? And I think everybody realizes that, hey, the status quo is is not good enough anymore, right? And so, you know, especially when you look at some of these, you know, really tough markets, you know, like California, you know, West Coast, all the wildfire issues, you know, all of the coastal stuff as well, I think that a growing number of people understand the fragility maybe, you know, kind of of these markets and, you know, knock on wood.
Starting point is 00:33:15 But, you know, thankfully, we kind of made it through this. year with the wildfire severity this year was super low. We did not have. Especially versus last year, right? I mean, it wasn't last year like where it was like the California's on fire the entire entire year. Yep, absolutely. And I mean, and even thinking back from that, I mean, you know, 2017 was really kind of
Starting point is 00:33:32 the turning point like the come to Jesus moment, you know, with with wildfire. And then, but again, you know, and this year we, we kind of dodged the bullet with Atlantic hurricane season, right? And we didn't have, you know, any of these, you know, major multi-hundred billion dollar cat events, right? But I think everyone understands and, you know, like if you look at the Florida market specifically and all of the issues and the madness that's going on there. I think that people understand that, you know, we really are kind of in a fragile place where if sometime in the next handful of years, you know, we end up having a bad year, you know, if we had a 2017 wildfire year
Starting point is 00:34:13 and, you know, and then, you know, a two or three major cat event, you know, coastal exposure year, like, like that could blow things up in a way that no one has ever, like, we're just not prepared for that, you know? So you, so we're that close. You know, it's interesting. So I think that's a really interesting perspective. And I would love for you to just maybe expand a little bit on that because I don't think most of the people who, listen to this show, myself included, I don't think most people are aware of that, like that, that or have spent the time to think about it. Maybe if they really sit down, they could rationalize it. But the idea that our industry could be that close to, to, to like true, like,
Starting point is 00:35:04 the world's on fire. We don't know how to pay things, you know, large carriers going out of business, M&A activity, you know, bailouts, like that we could be that close. of that, most people are probably don't have their head wrapped around that idea. So if you could just, you know, any insights that you have there that you can expand upon, I think it would be really interesting because I don't know that I've spent any time thinking about that. Like, geez, what would happen if we had, you know, you know, Mississippi Delta flooding, some, some, some wildfires going on in California and all of a sudden a hurricane
Starting point is 00:35:38 smashes into South Carolina. What happens? You know what I mean? like how does that, you know, are we able to sustain that? You know, I mean, that's the kind of thing. Yeah, no, absolutely. And then on top of that, I mean, the, you know, the huge surprise this year was the, you know, they called SCS they're being referred to, right?
Starting point is 00:35:57 Severe convective storms, right? And I mean, through the Midwest, you know, though we had, you know, multiple billion dollar plus SCS events that, you know, are not necessarily, you know, categorized as cat events, but like collectively those added up this year, you know, to, to, I don't remember, I looked at the figure the other day. I mean, it's over $100 billion, you know, this year of losses, you know, from these tornadoes and whatnot, you know, so. Yeah. And that's, that's unprecedented. Like, we've never seen that, right? So, you know, I think between those. Can I ask you one question? I'm sorry, keeping around you, we keep saying things that I'm, like, interested in. So I apologize.
Starting point is 00:36:36 So an SCS, I never heard of that term, severe connected storm. This would be something. something like a convective storm. Sorry. This would be something like a like a swath of tornadoes touching down. Okay. All right. So when you say, you know, we saw a hundred billion in losses from that and that that's kind of an unprecedented number, is that have to do with, and this is just something I'm
Starting point is 00:37:00 interested in in general, is that it have to do with the number of storms and the power of the storms or is it some combination of that and the fact that just everything seems to cost more today? Like, what is the percentage of kind of why it's that high, if that makes sense? Yeah, no, it absolutely does. And, you know, the simple answer is all of the above, right? Like, the number of storms and the severity of those storms was actually, you know, significantly higher this year than we've ever seen before. But then also, you know, that's combined with, you know, this explosion of loss costs, you know, because of inflation. And, you know, all of this, you know, all of these things that are going on.
Starting point is 00:37:44 You know, so all of, it's like a, you know, it's a perfect storm, right? It just, it truly is in every way. So, anyway, yeah, I guess, you know, and I don't, you know, I don't like to be the doom and gloom type person, right? Yeah. But at the same time, I think we have to face reality, you know, we, you know, sticking your head in the sand is not going to, you know, is not going to help. And at the same time, none of us have, has a crystal ball, right?
Starting point is 00:38:09 We don't know what the future is going to bring. However, when you look at just the past decade, you know, and you look back at 2017, you know, and you see the wildfire season that happened in California and how devastating that was, not just with property, but loss of life, you know, and then you look at some of the worst hurricane years that we've had, you know, with coastal exposure. And then this year with these severe convective storms like we've never had before. And again, I'm just looking, you know, subjectively in saying, look, you know, if we had, you know, 2017 and say 2021 and then, you know, 2023 with those three specific, you know, perils and and cat events, and you put those all together in the same year, you know, that would be catastrophic for, you know, for a lot of, you know, regionals. And I'm not saying that, you know, top 10 carriers are just going to fold overnight.
Starting point is 00:39:08 I certainly don't think that that would be the scenario, but it is going to have a massive impact that trickles down and impacts everyone. Right. And like, you know, you don't have to do much research at all on the Florida market now to understand what a mess that is. You know, and policyholders. And same thing in California. You know, but if you're in these high risk places, you know, people are, it's just become completely unaffordable. right people can't afford insurance it's more than their mortgage payment right and they're seeing you know premiums increased by you know 50 60 70 80 sometimes 100
Starting point is 00:39:43 plus percent you know year over year and and sometimes that can sound like hyperbole but it's not like that's the reality for a lot of people right like their insurance costs more than their mortgage right and you know the average person that they can't do that right it's not sustainable and that's why you know in florida specifically now the last figure that i saw was over 20 percent of people who, you know, don't have a mortgage that requires insurance, they're just foregoing it all together, right? They're going bare, right? No homeowners insurance. And, you know, that's everyone's individual decision to make, but that is, you know, that's, that's terrifying. That's not good for,
Starting point is 00:40:22 that's not good for anyone. I wonder, are they also going without liability? Can you get a liability only policy on a, on a homeowners? Like, I don't, I've never heard of that, but like, you know, because I could see like I mean honestly with some of the premiums that I've heard you know which I've absolutely heard all these stories too and I got friends down there or agents and it's just it's a bedlam you know you're 100% right and uh you know it's interesting to think like is there what I go if I knew I kind of had a hurricane roof a home you know whatever and up to date uh what I go drop the property and just carry the liability. in case that happened and you probably cut your premium.
Starting point is 00:41:07 I mean, I'm assuming most of the loss comes from the property, not the liability on these places. You know, I don't know that there's a drastically increased liability exposure in Florida. It's all the property stuff. So I wonder if that's a product that comes out of the industry will adapt and morph to make money off these people who don't have property. Maybe I just threw out a new idea if there's any carrier people listening.
Starting point is 00:41:33 There's an opportunity for you. liability only homeowners in Florida. I mean, we laugh. It's sad that, you know, that we would end up in a scenario like that. But yeah, who knows? I mean, it could definitely be a thing. You might be on to something there. But I think what's important on this topic is that the insurance carriers don't have infinite money, right?
Starting point is 00:41:58 And that all these factors do play a role in what we do. And I think, you know, especially where you sit, you have kind of a unique perspective in that you're, you're the ones out there looking at these properties and coming back and understanding how the valuations increase and change. And I remember, like, back when I first started writing insurance, I mean, this is 18 years ago, but like, we would just do like $142 times a square feet. And like, that's how much, you know, we'd put on there. Now with the way the homes are and some of this is the technology in the homes, et cetera. and, you know, it's just, I don't know, it's just completely different. Like, you need to do this type of deep analysis to understand what would cost to replace it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:39 And it's everything so expensive. Yeah, no, absolutely. And I do think, it has become abundantly clear to me just, even just in the last three years. That, you know, unfortunately, you know, for a lot of carriers, like the chickens are kind of coming home to roost. and I post a fair amount about this on LinkedIn, but the fact that there are, to varying degrees, but there are a ton of carriers out there that, I mean, it kind of ties back in a weird sense,
Starting point is 00:43:17 there's a parallel to that technical debt, right? But if you have a book of business, you know, with whatever, you know, but hundreds of thousands of properties for some of these larger carriers millions of properties, right? And literally 80% of that book they have not looked at in, you know, five years and 50% of it, they've not looked at in 10 years. That is a huge liability for them, right? And I think that, you know, we'd be foolish to think that that fact is not at play.
Starting point is 00:43:53 and especially when you look at, you know, just the way that the world has evolved and that culture has evolved, you know, the ever-increasing litigious society that we're in, right? Like all of that kind of plays into this. And quite frankly, you know, macroeconomics as well, right? Where people just don't have the money to take care of their homes and properties the way that maybe they used to. And obviously, inflation plays a big factor in that, right? Where it's like, hey, maybe. you know, eight years ago, I could have gotten my roof replaced, you know, for seven, eight grand. And now today it's going to cost 25 grand to get my roof replaced, right? Like, that's just, you know, people can't. And so like all of these things kind of snowball, right? And they, you know, they exacerbate each other. And so all of that to say, right? Like, you know, when you look at at 2023, the final numbers aren't out yet. I had posted about it the other day. But, you know, just the first six months of 2023. You know, homeowners underwriting losses as a whole were just like through the roof, right?
Starting point is 00:44:58 Like nobody's making a profit on the underwriting side, you know, on the personal lines, homeowners side, right? And massive losses, right? And that's, you know, I think that's a big part of it, right? Like, the longer that you go without getting eyeballs on the risks that you're ensuring, there's a time we see them every day and have been posting, you know, posting glimpses of them. But like we literally look at them. And we're, you know, we're processing 40,000 inspections a month now.
Starting point is 00:45:29 You know, self inspections and field inspections. And like, so we look at a boatload of properties and the stuff that we see coming through for carriers that finally are doing more renewal inspections because they understand, holy cow. You know, our losses are piling up based on, you know, all of this old book that we haven't looked at in forever. And we have no idea what's going on, right? with all of this stuff that's, you know, we haven't looked at in a decade. You know, but there are, there's interesting aspects, aspects to that as well. You know, even when you think about the, you know, the societal issue, I guess, maybe that's not the right word, right?
Starting point is 00:46:09 But it's like, it's tough. Like, these are hard problems because, you know, for instance, so you do a renewal inspection project, right? You know, and you're going to identify a ton of property. properties that are not a good risk, right? You're going to identify those homes that, you know, have a roof that is 10 years past its lifespan, right? And, and these are just major claims waiting to happen. And so, you know, those people are going to get non-renewed, right? Or they're going to get a correction letter that says, hey, you've got to replace your roof in the next 60
Starting point is 00:46:38 days or we're not going to extend your coverage, right? And that's tough because that puts those consumers in a hard spot, right? Like, and again, as, you know, as carriers are becoming more in tune with this. And, you know, if you've got a roof that is 10 years past his life expectancy and is falling apart, like, nobody's going to insure you today. Or if they do, you know, it's going to be a strip down policy and it's going to cost you twice as much as. Yeah, like an H-O-1 or something. Yep, up to it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:09 Yeah, exactly. So that's tough. I think the next, you know, if I were, if I were a bold carrier exec right now, um, which I'm not sure that that exists. But if it were, what I would be doing is spinning up a finance company on the side and saying, hey, you got 60 days redo your roof. And if you can't pay, we'll help you finance it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:36 That's a fucking billion dollar idea right there. This is the second billion dollar idea. We've got the liability-only policies in Florida. And now we've got throwing them out there. If I say the word patented, can I get credit for that if it actually happens? I don't know how to create a liability only homeowner's policy, but I'll tell you what, the financing home improvements alongside your insurance policy is brilliant.
Starting point is 00:48:00 And since you probably priority, you have all the correct filings to make that a reality, as long as this is a separate company, you could probably spin that up pretty quick if you're an insurance carrier. Yeah, and there's, there are cool things happening kind of along those lines anyway with, I'm not sure if you're familiar with the fortified program, right, where you can get a fortified, a certified roof, right,
Starting point is 00:48:23 that's fortified to, you know, withstand, you know, whether it's coastal exposure or, you know, this kind of SCS stuff in the Midwest or whatever. You know, and there are a growing number of carriers that, you know, will provide significant premium discounts, right? If you have, you know, a fortified, certified roof that, you know, has proper strap downs and all this stuff, you know, to withstand these larger storms and whatnot.
Starting point is 00:48:46 But, you know, so there are some incentives there. And I'm excited about some of the stuff that's happening in California as well on the wildfire front. You know, again, there's tons of work that needs to be done there. But there are some, you know, some innovative ideas out there. I think the big picture is that, you know, I foresee moving forward. You know, the industry as a whole, like we need to do a much better job of educating. you know, general public, right? Educating the consumer, educating the policyholder.
Starting point is 00:49:21 And I guess the angle that I'm excited about is when you look at, you know, markets like Florida, other coastal exposures, California with wildfire, people that are in these high risk areas, right, that are experiencing these insurance issues firsthand, right? Like, they're feeling the pain. And people are just, they're not taking insurance coverage for granted anymore. right? Like it's not just an auto, it's not automatic, you know, you don't just have to make a phone call and, you know, have a conversation and write a check and you're good to go, right? It's way more complicated than that now. And so that is beginning to tie in with, you know, this concept from the carrier side of the more predict and prevent mentality, right? And engaging policyholders in active mitigation, you know, for their home and property, right? Whether that's, again, you know, wildfire is kind of the lowest. hanging fruit there and where a lot of activity is focused. But at the end of the day, I think
Starting point is 00:50:21 that's a big part of the answer to the, you know, the big picture issues that we're facing is, you know, that people's risk needs to be minimized, right? Carriers need it at a macro level, but engaging policyholders in that process and educating them on, you know, why this is important. And quite frankly, the tough part about that is it's like, that's a big change, you know, That's a huge change. It's a huge mindset shift. And, you know, at the consumer level, we need to educate consumers and somehow convince them that, yeah, you may not like this, but like the world has changed.
Starting point is 00:51:00 Things have changed, right, significantly. And we're doing, I mean, we, I see this every single day firsthand just with our self-inspection initiatives, right? Like, you know, our company contracts with the carrier. And then, you know, guess what? Your policyholder is getting a text message in an email from us. saying, hey, here's an invitation to do yourself inspection, right? And people are, we see the feedback on a daily basis.
Starting point is 00:51:22 You know, I've been insured, you know, with XYZ company for 26 years and I've never had to do this, right? Well, yeah, that's absolutely true. You know, you never have, but we're not living 26 years ago. You know, we're living in today. And we have major problems today. And this is one of those solutions. And it takes work from everyone, right?
Starting point is 00:51:42 So I think we're moving towards that insurance for the consumer no longer being like this set it and forget it type thing, right? Where it's just completely out of sight, out of mind. And especially on the wildfire front, you know, because effective wildfire mitigation is not a once a year thing. You know, when you look at these highest wildfire risk factors like tree debris on your roof and in your gutters, right? Like, and, you know, all of these types of things, defensible space, these are very fluid. factors, right? Like, you don't just trim back your trees and handle defensible space once a year, and then you're good, right? Like, all of that stuff grows back. Um, you know, so those, those risk factors are very fluid and, and we need to get to a point where we're, you know,
Starting point is 00:52:28 again, I think education is the key, right? Because it's, it's tough to, you know, throw these, these things at the consumer and they're looking at it as additional work, right? Like, you're telling me that I have to do this now and I've never had to do it before. for, right? That can be a tough pill to swallow. But again, I think that's where the education piece as a whole is one of the biggest tasks that we have in front of us. I think you're 100% right. There is an enormous opportunity for an insurance carrier to step out front and lead with education that doesn't also come with a right hook, right? You mentioned Gary Vaynerchuk, famous for Jab, Jab, Jab, Right? Our industry
Starting point is 00:53:12 tends to be right hook, right hook, right hook, right, maybe a jab, right hook, right, you know what mean? Like we can't, I mean, you could just do a whole series of PSAs and educational things and segment them and the way the internet works now. You can literally create specific, you know, specific pieces of content that are distributed for California homeowners and Florida homeowners. And there are entire veins of education. educational content that these carriers could invest in and think through.
Starting point is 00:53:46 And really, I think, define themselves as market leaders in the education space. And they just don't want to do it. And again, a lot of that goes back to, you know, that feels. And I've talked to the, I've talked to some carrier people about this before. And it's one, it's culturally not what they're used to, right? Very much our industry has always been. If you want the information, you have to come to me. We've been gatekeepers.
Starting point is 00:54:10 And I remember back in 2012, I was telling people. guys, we're no longer the gatekeepers of insurance information. Like, it's out there in the world now. You know, and it's still a concept that people have not grabbed on to. I think what you have described is a reality that we don't have to like, but is absolutely what the world looks like. And while it may not be what we're used to, it certainly only creates new opportunities for the people who want to,
Starting point is 00:54:42 just adapt and and grab hold of it. And for the insurance agents that are listening to this, particularly those that are in the PL space, but also in the commercial property space, like these are opportunities to set yourself apart for all those, you know, I'm a trusted advisors out there. Like this is what being a trusted advisor is, you know, walking through. How do you properly trim your trees back for your home?
Starting point is 00:55:07 How do you properly make sure that there's drainage in case there's flooding? How do you properly insert whatever the thing is? They're rare. And I know some people do this, but it's very, very rare. There is so much opportunity in the educational space in our area that if every agent was creating educational content, there still wouldn't be enough. So I think that I love your point. This has been a tremendous conversation.
Starting point is 00:55:35 I appreciate what you're doing. I appreciate your perspective. And, guys, Curtis is a tremendous follow on LinkedIn. I just looked and you only have like, I shouldn't say only, but you have 2200 followers. That is freaking crazy because dude is sharing awesome information I love is one of my favorite and one of my favorite follows on LinkedIn. The memes are just hilarious and real and thought provoking. And I highly encourage everybody listening to go and connect with Curtis on LinkedIn.
Starting point is 00:56:01 I'll have it that in the show notes. Where else can they learn more about it or if, you know, for the carrier people that are listening, if they don't work with you or just want to connect with you, you know, like where's the best place for people to learn more about what you do? Yeah, absolutely. I mean, connect on LinkedIn, you know, shoot me a DM. I'm, you know, getting those on the daily now. You know, NationalIS.com is, is our website.
Starting point is 00:56:25 And yeah, I love, you know, my network is kind of exploding here over the last few months, and it's super fun. I love meeting new people and having conversations like this. There's a ton of great people out there that are working on a lot of these problems that we're, you know, that we kind of discussed here today. I'm excited for the future. Lots of cool stuff happening. Awesome, man.
Starting point is 00:56:45 Well, I appreciate you, wishing nothing about the best, and so glad we had a chance to connect and have you on the show. Yeah, thanks so much, Ryan. Lots of fun. I'm going to Shaboo! Twice as many deals by this time next week.
Starting point is 00:58:44 Sound impossible, it's not. With the one-call-close system, you'll stop chasing leads and start closing deals. In one call. This is the exact method we use to close 1,200 clients under three years during the pandemic.
Starting point is 00:58:57 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-theclose.com. That's masterof-theclose.com. Do it today.
Starting point is 00:59:23 Worried about your future in tech? Master new skills. Accelerate your team's impact and redefine what's possible. with Pluralsight. We're more than just another online learning platform. We're shattering the skills gap and shaping future generations of technologists. Transform your work.
Starting point is 00:59:44 Transform your team. Ready to tap in? Visit us at Pluralsight.com to learn more. If you like the show, please take a moment to rate, review, and subscribe. It really does help the show to grow. Thank you for listening. Happy Holocet.
Starting point is 01:00:09 Want to give your host a gift? Consider subscribing, rating, and reviewing the show this holiday season. It really helps the show grow. From all of us at Believe, have a Merry Christmas, everyone, and a happy holiday.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.