The Ryan Hanley Show - 237. From GloveBox to Marshberry FirstChoice: The Andy Mathisen Story
Episode Date: March 14, 2024Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.comDiscover how Andy Matheson's leap from startup dynamo at Glovebox to the strategic role of a regional sales director at Marshberry's FirstChoi...ce isn't just a career change—it's a testament to the pursuit of balance.✅ Free step-by-step video series for generating inbound leads from YouTube: https://go.ryanhanley.com/youtube✅ For daily insights and ideas on peak performance: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanhanley✅ Subscribe to the YouTube show: https://youtube.com/ryanmhanleyMore on this EpisodeJoin us for a compelling look at the personal side of professional transitions, where we unpack the delicate art of prioritizing contentment over the grind.Andy's candid reflections set the stage for a broader conversation on the vital decisions we all face when our ambition and well-being seem at odds.Embarking on a new venture can stir a whirlwind of responses. As I share the journey behind Finding Peak, you’ll hear how empathy and support play pivotal roles in weathering the storm of societal expectations and self-doubt.From navigating criticism to embracing growth, this segment isn't just my narrative—it's a shared experience of resilience and the collective wisdom found in the camaraderie of like-minded professionals.Beyond personal stories, this episode cuts through the static to illuminate the evolving world of insurance agencies.We tackle the stereotypes of insurance networks and reveal their true significance in the industry's rapidly changing landscape. Insights into agency growth strategies, the importance of robust insurance foundations, and the implications of networking for independent agencies offer invaluable takeaways.Whether you're an industry insider or intrigued by the transformation of professional ecosystems, this episode promises a wealth of knowledge steeped in authenticity and forward-thinking expertise.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In a crude laboratory in the basement of his home. Hello everyone and welcome back to the show.
Today we have an absolutely tremendous episode for you.
A conversation with Andy Matheson, former co-founder of Glovebox and now regional sales director for First Choice,
which is a Marshberry company. And I wanted to have Andy on because Andy worked for more than
six years in a family-owned independent agency, Colorado Insurance. He then founds this incredible
startup, Glovebox, which I'm sure many of you have heard about.
And for a whole bunch of reasons, which Andy talks about, he now has left Glovebox and
become working with Marshberry First Choice as a regional sales director, helping agencies
across the country grow and develop.
And that type of move is a move that I think many would struggle with I think many would
worry what maybe the perception of that move is and Andy had to make this move for a lot of reasons
and those reasons are his and I think they're important And I think we all struggle at different times with how our professional life impacts our
personal life.
And I think that kind of the Andy Matheson story, which is obviously the title of this
episode, is a wonderful display of a thought process on how to make the right decision
for yourself and for your family and how to prioritize meaning and happiness
over public perception necessarily. I think Andy's an incredible guy. I always love talking to him
and I think you're going to love this episode, which is episode number 237. Guys, I love you
for listening to this show. As I've mentioned many times,
every week our show is growing and we have more and more subscribers, more and more listens,
more and more downloads, more and more watches or whatever you call them on YouTube. And
it's just such a pleasure to bring you these conversations and whether it's the solo episodes that i do where i
try to put you know a new you kind of reframed or contrarian or just you know some sort of idea
in front of you that you can consider and think through uh and just you know question some of the
norms in our industry in a way that you know hopefully some of which you can apply some of
which you can uh toss that into the you can toss that into the garbage.
I mean, that's the point. Not every idea works for everybody. And then these incredible
conversations that I have with people like Andy, who are so willing to come on and share their time
and their story and their expertise and their experience. I just, it's a very meaningful
process. And I just couldn't thank you more for being part of it.
Even if you're just a listener, uh, one-off and you decide not to subscribe and not to be,
you know, part of the community in a deeper way. Uh, I just appreciate you for, for, for taking
the time to, um, consider the thoughts that are shared and hopefully in some way they add value
to you. Uh, if you do want to go deeper down this journey, hopefully you subscribe on whatever audio podcast
you're listening there
or you subscribe to the YouTube channel.
If you have questions, comments,
you can leave them on social
or come over to the YouTube video
and leave your comments on the YouTube video.
I respond to every single comment
and it's a wonderful place to capture thoughts,
capture ideas.
And if you wanna go even farther down the rabbit hole,
go to masterclass.insure. That's masterclass.insure. Put your name, put your email in,
you'll get on the newsletter. And as we get closer to launching the coursework around being,
you know, kind of the first piece of coursework we're going to put out is kind of our one call
close process, you know, what it means to be a closer,
et cetera, talking through how to generate, kind of fill your funnel with inbound leads.
This is some of the early coursework that we're going to be doing. And when that becomes live,
you'll be the very first to know. That will also come with discounts to the program, et cetera,
for choosing to opt in and be part of the free newsletter community. So masterclass.insure gets you there.
But with all that said, I appreciate you.
I love you.
And let's get on to Andy Matheson.
I'm good to see you.
Yeah, good to see you too, bud.
What's the haps, man?
What's going down?
It depends on the moment.
Obviously, I'm moving target with all the new stuff going on for me but uh it's been
outstanding i mean i'm in a very comfortable place now and i'll be honest like my stress level went
from way up here to like way down here for the first time in like seven years so yeah feels good
feels good um needed that yeah i get it you know what you know, what? Yeah, I do. It's, you know, it's funny, I was
talking to I have a I have a mentorship call every other week with a very good friend of mine. And
we're kind of accountability partners and the different things that we're trying to do in our
lives. And, and it's funny, I was sharing a story with him about, you know, just, just how,
how much stress and anxiety will allow us, like, we'll, we'll, we'll believe anything our mind or
our body tell us when we're stressed or anxious, right? Like when you're, when you're, when you're
in a good place and you're feeling good and you're feeling motivated, your mind or your body can be like, I'm tired.
And you're like, you body or your mind can be like, oh, you need to have another drink or you need to be like, no, you like I'm good.
Like I'm crushing.
I'm going.
And then you hit a patch of anxiety and stress.
And all of a sudden your mind is like, hey, man, like, why don't you have like three glasses of whiskey tonight?
Or why don't you not go to the gym today?
And your body's like, oh, I'm kind of tired.
Sleep in.
And you're like, sure. You just say yes to all of it you fall into a lot of traps yeah and and then
all of a sudden you wake up when like you start that for whatever reason that stress or anxiety
like you get a little window like a window will open and you look and you'll go what am i freaking
doing like dude i had so many of cycles, so many of those cycles for the
past, like from 2022 to end of 23, it was just constant. And it, it became so obvious that,
you know, my brother and I had to have a heart to heart. And it was like, dude,
not that you're not bringing value to glove box, but we need to understand where your head's at because this in-and-out approach of being here, being gone, being here, being gone is draining to the company, and it sucks for you.
And I felt it worse than he did.
It was like I know that it's happening, and that sucks, and that's not what we set out to do and like a dude i i think i kind of most people
know by now but it's like single dad stressed as fuck can't lead a team anymore because i'm always
constantly being torn on every angle of my life and it was just weighing on me so i had to make
the right choice for the company and for myself and i'm so thankful that i'm in this in this seat
right now it feels a lot better.
So one, I'm happy for you.
I am.
And I know you don't need this, but I'm very proud of you for making this decision.
You know, also single dad also having gone through a lot of shit, you know, like I, I completely feel you.
And, you know, it's funny, um, since I Spining Peak, the coaching and consulting company that is now what
I do, dude, the number of people that have reached out to me on the side and said, bro, you know,
what's this just another thing you're going to do for like six months, or you always do this,
you're always changing, you know, you've never committed to any like, dude, the freaking people
that come out of the woodwork and like question your decisions, question. And I'm like, and, and, you know, it took me, took me a second. Right. Cause, cause
I was like taken back. And then actually, you know, I called, I called Jason Cass, who, you
know, he's been probably my, my oldest friend in the industry. And, you know, I just said, dude,
you know, I just was sharing with him my, my struggles is I'm sure, you know, I just said, dude, you know, I just was sharing with him my struggles, as I'm sure,
you know, you share with your brother or whoever else, you know, and you're just like,
you know, I'm just like, dude, like, you know, I don't understand why. I don't understand why
all I've ever wanted to do, and I know this about you, it's why you and me are friends,
it's why I connect with you, like, all you want to do is add value, build things, you know, help people, lead people,
like, like, this is what you're trying to do with your life. And life throws these curveballs at you
and you just have to make tough decisions. And that's kind of what I want to get back to with
you. But like, the lack of empathy, or lack of understanding understanding or just complete callousness that people will have to, I have to make a life decision that like, isn't on some linear path, linear expected path that you, you know, you might think is the right way to go based on what I was doing previously.
But like, it's also like the real world.
And being able to get through that is a superpower.
And I'm sure you've gotten some of it.
And that's what I'm really interested in, I guess, at the beginning here is like, I'm
sure you've gotten both sides of it, right?
Like, hey, man, so happy for you.
Glad you're in a place you're killing it.
And then the other side is like, dude, how could you leave this company?
I'm sure you've got both.
Like, how do you deal with that?
Just yesterday.
Yeah.
Yeah.
How do you deal with that?
That's really interesting.
The empathy piece is really interesting because typically people hear things, doesn't matter
what the topic is, and they have an immediate opinion.
Doesn't matter what, like putting yourself in someone else's shoes.
It's like, oh, how could they possibly, how could they possibly do A, B, or C?
For me, I always try and give the benefit of the doubt that they didn't consider
what people actually go through on a daily basis and so i'm typically like first my first reaction
now because i'm calloused as well is like okay they just don't get it it's fine like the false
narratives are all over the place and i have to be okay with the reality that like people are going
to think what they're going to think i don don't have to recreate the narrative. I don't necessarily need to even tell my story.
However, I want to.
Yeah, yeah.
And there's a lot of things that happened in the past 24 months
that have been entertaining.
Interesting to get a different perspective on.
Yep.
Have some insight into what other people
do that I've never realized before. And at the end of the day, that has made me a very well-rounded
expert in the industry. And so, but going, going back to your original question,
it's just gives me an opportunity to get in front of more people, talk about more things.
These are icebreakers, man. These are just icebreakers because now we lead into other
things together. So, um, I've just taken it asers, man. These are just icebreakers because now we lead into other things together.
So I've just taken it as opportunities, man.
That's really all it comes down to.
I'm not going to control what other people think, but I will turn it into an opportunity.
You know, man, a good buddy of mine, someone I've known for a while,
Aubie Knight, said to me the other day, dogs don't bark at parked cars. So how I've always wrapped my head around
this, you know, I take a lot of shit and I deserve some of it because I'm very open and
honest with my opinions. And a lot of my opinions are contrarian. And so I deserve to have people
push back on me and it's part of the job. So I totally, but sometimes people will say things and it'll get
under your skin a little bit, even though, you know, I don't care how, and I've heard like,
it was funny. I heard Tony Robbins on a clip the other day talking about this. And I'm like,
oh my God, I'm so glad I heard this because of Tony Rob, if people can still get under Tony
Robbins' skin, that's going to feel so bad when people get undermined. So like, you know, so, you know, and I just had to say myself, and it was funny,
Aubie, you know, I was sharing this with him.
I was like, you know, I've caught, you know, I don't want to tell the rogue story anymore.
It is what it is.
You know, all the details will never get out, right?
And for both legal reasons and because I don't think it's necessary for people to know.
I think everybody in that situation
made what they thought was the next best decision.
And it just, it is what it is.
But I have caught,
I've gotten a significant amount of blowback
from people about it.
And I was sharing that with Aubie.
And when he said, he just said,
you know, kind of off the cuff
and Aubie's a great dude. For those that don't know, he's the executive director of the Big Eye of North Carolina. And he just said, dude, dogs don't bark at parked cars. And I was like, when people meet, they know you, they see you, you have energy, you're thoughtful, you understand the industry, you have experience in the industry.
And I think that the key is for as much as you may or may not need to hear this,
if you hadn't built a reputation and people didn't see you as someone with standing,
they wouldn't say shit to you. You know what I mean? If it would go, the move would
go unnoticed, but the fact that people are noticing it both positive and negative speaks to
the impact that you've had, even, you know, at a relatively young age. So yeah, it's kind of a
similar, it's a similar quote to the, the lion doesn't concern himself with the opinions of a
sheep kind of thing in a similar vein, in a similar vein. But it comes with a respect factor. So well said, well said.
Yeah. I can appreciate that. Yeah.
So, so, so you said you had a story you wanted to tell it. Let's,
let's hear what parts, you know,
you can go into detail or not, or, or maybe just lessons you've learned,
things you've seen. I'm just interested in your perspective.
And then I want to, I want to hear more about, you know, what you're doing, smart choice, et cetera. I want to get into that as well, but
I'd love to spend a little bit of time just on it. And the reason I'm so interested in this and I,
and I don't want to over-index on it. Uh, it's not just because I've been through it. Although
I feel like I have a master's degree in having my life upside down. Um, I think there are a lot of
people who, who, who go through life and they're so nervous about a big
change like this, right? Maybe they're sitting in a job that they don't like or isn't fulfilling
them or they're not making enough money or whatever the issue is, right? Whatever their
particular thing is. And I think a lot of people allow others potential perspective or opinion on a move, stop them from doing what's best for them and best for their family.
And obviously you have made a fairly large transition to do what's best for you and for your family.
And I'm interested in what takeaways you have from that so far, what lessons, what thought process, et cetera, you've picked up during this time? Really good setting of the stage. Cause you know,
for those that don't know it's, it's very clear and obvious now,
like single dad had a tough separation divorce,
but it allowed me to kind of look at things differently as far as how I'm
going to handle my business, how I'm going to want to raise my kids.
And honestly, how I want to treat people because of the empathy thing.
So that's kind of the side, the back burner there.
But what I'm going to get at too is like when we were at our agency and from 2012 to 2019,
things were honestly pretty comfy.
I had, I was single for half of that.
I got married on the second half of that career, piece of the agency career.
But when I would come home to a support system that allowed me to do things really well at my agency, it made life very easy. Like things couldn't have been easier when I
was at my agency because we had our, you know, operations in place, our staff in place. I could
come in, do my job, come home, have a great life. We sold our agency in 2019. We had an influx of
cash that we reinvested into Glove box. When we did that, we actually had
no paycheck for 18 months. We were paying our company instead of our company paying us.
Very odd concept right there. So that's a perspective in and of itself. It changes the
way you go about your daily life, what your spending habits are, how you start a family.
And that's what I was doing. I was starting a family, starting a company the exact same time. We can go into detail about what I saw a glove box,
but really what I was going to get out here is that that trajectory of my career has had
bumps and bruises because of my support system at home. Long story short, when you go through
trials and tribulations at, in any phase of your career, you've got to have some sort of a grounding.
And my grounding was my family, my friends, my colleagues, my business partners, my referral partners, et cetera.
Conversation, insight, knowledge, advice, take it all.
It's like reading books all day, every day, but you're doing it with real life scenarios with real people. And I was doing that throughout the time at the agency, the startup company,
and now here at what I do now. And to kind of come to conclusion on this topic here,
it only makes sense when you can grasp what everyone is doing and you turn it into like
reality for yourself, meaning put it in perspective.
Everything is perspective. And now I can look at myself, honestly, look at myself in the mirror
and say, I'm doing well. Everything I'm going to do going forward is based on my experiences
and how hard it's been challenges. And it's honestly, it's going to be okay. It's never as
bad as, as good as it seems. It's never as bad as it seems. And that's kind of where I've been getting at with all this comfy lifestyle at the
agency, stressful times at the startup company for capital, um, turning it into a successful,
uh, company moving on and doing what I'm doing now. So kind of a long version for that answer
there. No, no, I love it, man. And I'll give the audience, and if you haven't read this book, I recommend this too,
The Gap and the Gain by Benjamin Hardy.
He wrote a book in partnership with Dan Sullivan.
It's a strategic coach original idea.
So Dan Sullivan's strategic coach is where this idea came from.
And then Ben Hardy worked with Dan Sullivan
to turn it into a book.
The concept is very simple.
The book is a good quick read. There's some depth to it, but the top level concept is very simple. The book is a good, quick read.
There's some depth to it,
but the top level concept is very simple.
And I explained it on the show a couple of weeks ago,
but I will again, because I can't,
there's sometimes these concepts hit you
and I feel like they're first principle ideas
and I just can't help but continue to bring them up.
Basically, we have where we started
and we have our ideal, right?
And I think the misconception, when we logically think about this, I think what I'm about to
say makes complete sense.
But emotionally, I think most of us emotionally assume that we're going to go start to ideal
in this linear line over some period of time and everything will just work out and everything
will be in that.
That's what happens, right? Like here, but everything's good and i get to this point
and that's not the way life works at all we've all seen that meme of like what people think
success is and it's a straight line and then what it really is it's like this tangled mess like
spaghetti mess right totally so the idea of the gap and the gain is that we have our start and our ideal and then where we actually are.
And stress and anxiety are the result of measuring ourselves between where we are and our ideal.
And what Dan Sullivan recommends and what he teaches all his entrepreneurs who come through
the strategic coach program is we need to measure ourselves not by the gap where we are to the ideal,
but from where we are from where we started.
Because if we're constantly measuring,
and this is written in the book over and over again,
always measure backwards.
If we think like, okay, who was I in 2012,
that first day I walked into my family agency?
Like, who was I there?
Probably a little disorganized,
probably slightly more cavalier,
brash, you know, unpolished. And then you kind of refine yourselves and you, not you learn the
agency business, like, like the back of your hand, you start this, you know, tech company,
you start to go through all those experiences and you look at yourself today and you're like,
oh shit, my job now as part of, and I wanna hear what you're doing
in Smart Choice in detail,
but I now have this job with this largest network
in the country and I now have this decade of wins,
losses, beats, stories, experience, et cetera,
to pull off of that make me this incredibly unique
value provider to members of Smart Choice,
where you could be like,
oh, I didn't exit Glovebox for $20 million, right?
Like maybe that was your ideal in a moment.
And you could have all that anxiety on yourself.
Or you could say, holy shit, I have a decade of experiences that no one else has.
And now I get to be this tremendous value provider, no anxiety.
And like, dude, that to me is something I constantly have to
remind myself of because I'm nowhere near my ideal. But when I look back at my experiences,
I'm like, I have like a PhD in this industry and, you know, people can believe that or not believe
it, but like, you know, and I see the same thing from you.
I see very similar moments in time.
And it's just like that I have to remind myself,
but here's the key.
And I'm interested in your take on this.
I literally have to remind myself of these things every day or I wake up and I'm riddled with anxiety, right?
Like every day I have to go, look, man,
here's where you're at.
Here's the value you provide.
Like, duh, duh, duh, duh, duh.
Go get it.
Okay, great.
Reset. Let's go. Feel great.
The days where I forget to do that, or maybe whatever, I get to two, three o'clock in the afternoon. I'm like, holy fuck. Finding Peak's never going to be anything. No one's ever going
to respect me. I've screwed my career up. My kids are going to hate me. I'm never going to be able
to make the payments on my new house. What's up, guys? Sorry to take you away from the episode.
But as you know, we do not run ads on this show.
And in 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,
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'd 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 all right i'm out of here peace let's get back to the episode
you know and then all of a sudden you're like vibrating and you can't wait to go get drunk that night to ease the pain it's like you know and i just it's like these little thoughts that just
i don't know they're so important so i don't know what i think the fairy tale ending is what you
hope to achieve but how many people get the fairy taleale ending? And honestly, I don't even know if that's ever a reality to have that.
I mean, we're, I always relate things to sports and we're in a, you know,
and sorry for your bills.
We're in the Superbowl conversation right now, as far as like timeframe.
And, you know,
these teams made it to the ultimate goal of getting to the Superbowl and
that's their fairytale ending of hopefully raising that trophy.
For me, it was start an insurtech company, sell it for a billion dollars, and ride off into the sunset.
By the way, I still had an outstanding experience.
I left on amazing terms.
I am going to have a positive ending to that story just along the same lines.
It's just not going to be that fairy tale.
My fairy tale was realigned.
That expectation went from here to here, and it's okay
because the new reality is still what you just described,
everything in between, the blood, sweat, tears,
the monetary earnings at the end of the day still in a good place.
Everything is actually going to work out just the way it needs
to with exception to the trajectory of like the scale, right? The scale just shrinked and that's
okay. Cause now there's a new scale and there's a new opportunity. So I don't know, like I I'm
always realigning expectations and I think that's what you're getting to. The anxiety kind of puts
you at grounds you a little bit and it's okay to have anxiety because I think it makes you aware of what's going on because in the middle of the day you get in your groove andiety kind of puts you – it grounds you a little bit, and it's okay to have anxiety because I think it makes you aware of what's going on.
Yes.
Because in the middle of the day, you get in your groove, and you kind of jump back out of it with anxiety.
But I think it's okay to constantly rebounce off – bounce ideas off people so that you can recalibrate, recalibrate once a month if not more.
And so that's where I'm at.
The fairy tale is just a new fairytale. So yeah, I have
one, I love the idea that anxiety keeps us aware. I do think that's true. I do think that, again,
I think there's a threshold, obviously, where you don't, you know, you don't necessarily want to put
yourself in places that go too high. But I do think a small, we want to keep a constant level of stress
and we'll put anxiety in that category
because otherwise we're not actually pushing ourselves.
Like if you're showing up every day
and everything is frigging easy and you have no stress,
you are not growing as a person.
And this kind of plays into my next question for you,
which is like, do you think we even,
like there's no fairyale ending for me.
Like, people are like, where are you trying to go?
I don't fucking know.
Honestly, like, I don't know.
I know, I don't have like a 10-year plan
where I have a second house in Florida
and a boat and whatever.
Like, I plan on working forever.
Like, I love doing, there's
certain things that I love doing. And I, and I guess my goal, my fairytale is more like being
able to work on the projects that I choose to work on as often as I can. But, but like, I guess my
point is, is, is shooting for like a fairytale or even having that as a goal, is that even a worthy
pursuit? Like, is that even something that we really want? Like, does anyone, is anyone truly happy
if they have nothing to do,
but put their feet up and drink,
you know, colorful alcoholic drinks out of umbrellas?
Like, is anybody really happy long-term in that life?
I don't know.
I wouldn't be.
So the only exception would be
if I'm playing golf every day, that'd be fun.
Like insurance agents typically do. No, I'm just kidding. No, I mean, yeah, you're onto something.
Because then what you do is you kind of look around at your peers and you think to yourself, like, what are they going through?
What does their trajectory look like? And how am I going to relate to that?
Why do we always have to compare ourselves to that notion there?
So I'm okay with where, where things are.
I think that's a, I think that's a perfect way to transition into your new role is just
this idea that I, and I see this, I see this in agencies all the time. It's in everybody. So I'm
not singling out agency owners or whatever, or even producers, but like, I think too often
we see chest thumping on LinkedIn. And I can tell all
of you listening to this with a hundred percent certainty that most of the people constantly
chest thumping on LinkedIn are doing some small portion of what they say or present online. Just,
just so we're all clear. Like I know a lot of these people and I know the backstory is like,
it doesn't mean they're not good people. And it doesn't mean they're not successful. Just be careful that we idolize people that are chest
thumping and shit. And like, I'll give you an example is I post on Instagram a lot videos of me
like working out now one that is not for the audience. That's for me, I go back and I look
at them and I look at form and whatever I put a little like, sometimes I put like some inspirational shit on top of it just
to make it interesting.
But like, but I suck at boxing and I know I suck at boxing and I put the sucky boxing
videos out so that to, and part to show people that you don't, like, I don't compare myself
to good boxers, but I still three times a week go and hit the bags for the workout.
And I think that what we need to stop doing is saying, because I'm not as good at so-and-so at cold calling, I'm going to be unhappy or I'm not going to cold call because I'm not as good as him or her or whatever.
We just have to, again, going back to this gap in the gain,
if we just think about our own personal growth, everything seems to work out the way it should.
Dude. I think if you consider what it looks like for others to see your posts, your,
you know, your story and you listen to your, you know, what we're talking about here,
I think it's okay to understand that everyone's going to
have a different opinion of you. And as long as you're doing right by the industry, your peers,
I think it's going to be a good reflection of who you really are and what you stand for.
And that's okay to me. Like, I don't want to be an influencer. I don't want to be this insurance
celebrity. I want to just do right by my peers,
work hard for insurance agencies, make good money and have a good life. And that's okay.
So that's where I'm at. So let's talk about that. So, okay. So I'm sure based on your experience,
your history, who, you know, you had options on what your next move would be. And you chose
smart choice. Talk to me a little bit about that. I'm at Marshberry. Marshberry. Sorry.
Marshberry first choice. No, it's first choice. Guys, I apologize. Marshberry first choice.
Sorry. I completely apologize. No, it's fair. So like, yeah, you're right. Like the free agency
market when I hit the, when I hit the market, market was kind of funny, like 10, 15 folks immediately like we must talk to definitely get set aside some time.
I knew in the first couple of course, networks to everything
outside the industry, mortgage companies, other insurance agencies, both publicly traded and
smaller mom and pops. It was pretty interesting to take on every conversation to realize what is
the next five to 10 years really going to look like and what do I actually want to do to make
it most effective for myself? Because I have two core pieces of logic for my next phase of my career.
Doing what I do best, which is marketing, lead generation, networking, professional
networking, et cetera, and challenging myself to learn something new inside the industry.
I've had experience as a, you know, inside the agency space, now at the startup space
in the insure tech world,
and now in the network space and what I really wanted to accomplish. Cause honestly, networks
were always fascinating to me. We're talking like the business model, um, everything you can do for
agencies. Um, you know, you're talking about, um, like honestly there's there, and this is what I
think of networks right now you have the one
and there's a big gap so like just like good insurance agencies and bad insurance agencies
uh the big gap is the value they bring to the to the to the client you can and i heard this
term the other day i was cracking up um uh what was it dang it now i'm spacing it it was uh
oh commission clubs networks are just commission clubs and i heard that and i was, oh, commission clubs. Networks are just commission clubs. And I heard that and
I was cracking up because I was like, okay, clearly the reputation for networks or groups
is that all it's doing is giving you market access and enhanced commissions, right? And okay,
that's probably the more antiquated old school approach and reputation for what networks and
groups are, but the good ones are
doing way more than that and so i was looking for things like how can i um help agencies operate
more effectively give them legitimate guidance into tech stack and how they can operate with
technology and in the next version of what a modern modern agent looks like how can i help
them invite like i just want to be an advisor because that's honestly what I can bring
to the table at this point.
Great advice.
Consult.
Lead by example.
I've done it.
I can show you what I did.
I can show you what other people are doing.
I talked to thousands of insurance agencies at Glovebox.
I saw what they did wrong.
I saw what they did right.
Everything in between.
A lot of gaps, a lot of overlaps.
There's things that, and here's kind of the reality too, is a lot of these agencies really are just insurance agents that happen to own an agency, and that is okay.
That's great.
The problem is you can't be an expert in everything.
You're worried about sales and service and marketing and commission statements and carrier relationships and training and
recruiting and all this stuff, there's no way in hell you're going to be an expert in all that.
So it's okay to lean into your resources, which for me was the network space. I've known First
Choice for years. I've watched them grow. They are the number one premium aggregator in the country.
When Marshberry acquired First
Choice in 2022, it was a huge opportunity to say, you have one of the best insurance agency
consulting firms now owning and operating or help provide distribution across the nation
for the aggregation side of the house.
And now I can team up with a great reputable name brand,
represent them the way I want to represent them.
It's all conducive to my first goal,
which is helping independent agents succeed. Everything just fit the bill.
So it was funny going through all those recruiting conversations,
hearing what possibly I could do. It was easy to eliminate. It was very simple. And it only took two weeks. I knew what I was going to do. Honestly, the first conversation I had with first choice, it was a done deal as
far as my, as far as I was concerned. So, yeah, that's awesome. I mean, it's, it's so exciting
when you feel that connection and, and you can dive it and and really feel like you uh like you're
being successful yeah what is that i don't know why i don't know what it is i'm sorry for everyone
listening for some reason when i do hand gestures certain hand gestures the video creates these
little bubble things which is weird and i'm gonna i gotta figure out how to turn it off
um for the youtube people they saw it and this is all just wasted time for them.
I want to go back to your comment around the, the commission club thing.
So have you heard that term? I was cracking up.
I have not heard that term before, but I think I could,
I can hear agents saying it like,
it sounds like something agents would say about networks.
And here's, here's one of the things that I always,
so I was part of rogue was part of two different networks.
So we were originally part of Indium, and then when we were Why did you decide to join Indium?
What's it like being part of SA?
What's it like being part of a network?
You'd get a lot of those questions, et cetera,
or people are in other networks trying to compare.
And I would get never a commission club,
but I would get basically like,
oh, they don't add any value.
They take more money, whatever.
And I'll be honest with you,
in both scenarios, when I did the math,
if it was just a commission club it was still worth being there
so I've never completely understood why revenues revenue yes yeah so like so like I I could
understand I mean someone could say oh geez they don't do anything but but aggregate premium or
whatever or it's a commission club okay okay but I make more money than I would if I wasn't
part of it. So I'm not really sure, you know, if it, if they were solely that, which neither one
were, you know, both had their own set of services, et cetera, just like Marshbury first choice. And
I just never understood why that is used as a negative. Like,
I think because I think it's because of the language in the contract.
You must remain independent.
You're an independent agent for a reason.
Don't join a group if you don't think you're going to remain independent.
If that group has aspirations of acquiring you or getting equity stake in your agency or taking your commissions
personal preference don't do it yeah i think that you lose independence you lose autonomy you're
actually working with not even a silent partner at that point that is just a true partner groups
networks that are benefiting an independent agent allow them to stay independent and they allow them
to we're just not we're not we're a silent partner. We don't touch your business. We advise,
we give you better opportunities with these carriers. We get you the access you deserve.
We're going to give you some outlets to lean into. So that's kind of where I'm going.
Yeah, no, I, I, I'm, I am, uh, just to be clear, I'm not saying that there isn't a hierarchy of value that different networks give you.
For sure there is.
I guess I just – assuming – I think most networks at face value at a minimum, if you do the net-net, you make more money being part of most networks.
I definitely think there are networks where that is not the case.
And I also think there are networks that add more value than don't. And I also, and I think to your point, which is very, very important and
probably the most important part before you join any network or any agency cluster, right? There's
all these little like five and six agency clusters forming. And I have heard, you know, some people
will be like, it's the best thing I ever did. It's great. And I've heard other people have these
horror stories and it's because we, we don't look at the exit clauses, right? You brought this up. And I think this is the
most important part of all these contracts is, is the, what happens if everything goes wrong,
right? It's awesome to talk about the good stuff, this commission level and this split and this
bonus structure. And you get to fly to Hawaii. If you hit the president's club or whatever, amazing. All those things are amazing.
What happens if things don't go right? What happens if, what happens if the agency principal
gets hit by a bus and his, his or her spouse who doesn't want to run the agency now wants to fire
sale it? How does that work? How do they get out? Do they get screwed? You know, the exit clause in these contracts is so important.
And the people that I know that have the biggest beefs with any network, it always comes back
to you didn't really read the exit clause.
That's what they'll, they got gripes and maybe those gripes are legitimate, but you didn't
read the exit clause and that's why you're pissed.
So that's the sign of an agency owner that needs help.
And I keep saying this.
It's okay.
That's okay.
You're not an expert in everything.
Neither am I, and neither is Ryan Hanley.
It's okay.
So I think leaning into networks is vital.
Actually, did you know 70% of agencies, independent agencies, are a part of a group in 2024 and beyond?
I didn't know it was that high, but I knew it was more than 50%, yeah.
Yeah, which is interesting.
So any agency of any size,
we're talking 250,000 in revenue,
we're talking 200 million in revenue.
So I think that's interesting to assume as well
because every agency is using it for different reasons.
And that's something that I keep an eye on as well.
Thankfully, at First Choice, we have a lot of reasons why we would get a big agency involved
versus a small agency. We're talking about the Marsh Berry ecosystem at that point, but we don't
need to dive into it. It's just kind of like, if we're leveraging our value adds for every agency,
it's not all one size, right? Yep. You need this, you need that.
I'm going to advise you according to who you are and the makeup of who you are and your,
your aspirations, your goals, and what you actually looking to accomplish. Is it perpetuation?
Is it sale? Is it just simply to benchmark myself against another agency and understand what are my,
my peaks and valleys, my gaps and overlaps. There's a lot to be said for every agency is treated uniquely. And that's not
something I think every network does. So that's another big point to observe.
Yeah, no, I think, I think it's a great point. And I love that you brought up that stat. I did
not know it was that high. What I think is really interesting is I wrote, I can't remember if it's
an article or I created something. It was probably a podcast, but I't remember if it was an article or I created something.
It was probably a podcast,
but I think it might've been an article around the idea that having,
when I first joined Indium,
which Cat Turns now runs and is doing a great job with,
it's kind of a different organization,
much more, a much better run organization under catch he's
doing a tremendous job um than it was when i joined it but um uh i just getting in in that
version of it which you know i wish that i was part of the cat cat turns version but i wasn't
um just getting in and getting my hands the first time I'd ever been part of a network because my previous agency that I worked for
was wasn't in a network and they were very against them there was like this idea that
you know my my my ex-father-in-law was like if you if you have to join a network then you're not a
good business owner you're failing or you can't sell or whatever and I'm like you know and I don't
want to make him sound so douchey it was just just his opinion. He wasn't. Well, no, that happens a lot.
Yeah, but that happens a lot.
And then I joined Indium and I was like, wait a minute.
Like, so I get access to these four carriers that I need, but probably don't have the ability
to feed enough.
So that's an advantage.
I get contingencies on this carrier immediately day one that I wouldn't have gotten commissions on
for another year.
I give up only the contingency point,
you know, whatever the deal was,
I can't remember exactly what it was,
but you know, and there was like some discounts
on a couple of technologies or whatever.
And I remember going like, okay, I don't,
is there going to be a day?
Here's my question for you.
I wrote an article at that time that said,
there may come a
day in the not too distant future when you cannot do this alone anymore. You have to, part of
starting an agency, part of, you know, like choosing your AMS or your CRM or your phone system,
one of those primary decisions pre-launch is going to be which network or aggregation system
am I going to join upon launch? Do, do you believe that day is coming?
Obviously, there'll always be exceptions,
but could you see this number 70 going to 90 someday?
Here's an interesting way to respond to that.
There is, I think we're at the mercy of the carriers.
I do.
Because I think they're starting to frown upon small groups,
like the five-person groups, the 10-person groups,
and just saying to themselves, if you think about it from a company standpoint, like if I'm progressive, why am I giving the benefit to these five agencies where they're really not bringing anything different to me as they were on an individual basis, right?
There was nothing differently they're doing for me with these five specific agency groups.
So the smaller groups could potentially fade just based
on the mercy of the carriers, right? They're the ones who are going to dictate, are these groups
worthy of the higher splits of the profit sharing incentives, et cetera. So to answer your question,
I think it's a wait and see. I think the big ones are in the clear as far as their relationships with the companies, their ability to get the most out of them, and kind of this mutual benefit to both the agency and the carrier.
But the small ones may have this plateau where they can no longer grow because they're at the mercy of the carrier.
So I think we should watch that. That's something to watch. Yeah. I think, I mean, it is not, you know, it's not breaking news that
there is a lot of downward pressure on agencies, particularly smaller agencies for production.
Right. And I've heard from, you know, a bunch of my, my agent connections that, you know,
and we were seeing this a little bit at Rogue pre pre moving
over to SIA that that obviously changed everything because of their scale in terms of the pressure
that we had. But, you know, we had some pretty substantial pressure before we made that move
from a few of our carriers on production. Right. And I was like, guys, I'm getting you in now
because I need you to believe in what I'm trying to do five years from now. Right. But because the market was changing, you know, there's obviously market dynamics at that
time.
We were starting to get the, yeah, but we still need X amount of production to like
keep your appointment, whatever.
And I've heard, right.
You know, from a few of my friends who are either more closer to startups or just run
smaller agencies, that that downward
pressure has continued and is starting to go up book. So like, you know, maybe before if you had
$250,000 in premium with a carrier, they were kind of pushing on you or $250,000 or below. Now it's
like $500,000 or $750,000, they're starting to push on you a little more. And that market dynamic to me is, you know, how high that pressure goes, like what size
book, you know, how high they go with that pressure, that downward pressure that the
carriers are putting on it, I think is going to determine a lot of the network adoption.
Because if you, you know, if carriers say, hey, if you're over five, if in general, again,
we're broad stroking here. If you have over 500,000 premium with us, you're good if carriers say, hey, if you're over five, if in general, again, we're broad stroking here.
If you have over 500,000 premium with us, you're good, right?
We're happy.
Just keep producing every year.
We're fine.
But if that starts to creep up and now it's like, geez, if you're not at 750, we're going
to really have to start to evaluate this.
Or if you're not at a million, we're going to start to evaluate this.
That's going to push a lot of agents into the network discussion because they're going
to want to keep writing that carrier,
but they're not going to want to deal with the downward pressure all the
time.
Dude, not only that, but there's some confusion right now,
obviously with these unprecedented times with the way this market is,
you're hearing from carriers, things like, Hey,
we no longer offer these products.
And we don't really offer those bonuses anymore.
So don't really worry about that. And by the way, you actually didn't grow with us last year. And Oh don't really offer those bonuses anymore. So don't really worry about that.
And by the way, you actually didn't grow with us last year. And oh, by the way, can you write more
business with us? And so there's this confusion. It's, we've pulled opportunities from you,
you have to become more niche, you're not going to get paid the same on that niche. And by the way,
I need you to do a lot more business with us.
And so it's very conflicting.
It's pulling the rug out from under you and making you get back on your feet immediately
and do better than you did previously.
So I think it's a bit of a confusing time we're in.
And so what that's going to do as well, kind of piggybacking off of what you said,
it is going to possibly force agencies to join because then they really aren't going to have to have that pressure of production.
They're not going to have to worry about these conversations as much. The confusion will probably dissipate because now that's the group's problem, not the individual's problem kind of thing, if you get what I'm saying.
So I think it's a strange time.
Yeah. Oh no, it's definitely a strange time. I have two, I have two, two questions for you.
I'm going to ask them both at the same time, cause I'm a bad podcast host, you know, so just, just deal with that. And then you answer them in the order that you want to. So one, you said we have to become more niche.
I'm very interested in that because considering the market dynamics, I actually think it will pay dividends and create sustainability in agencies if they become more of generalists.
And my reason for saying that, just let me articulate, and then we'll go one at a time because this is kind of a big question. So I push back then that only from the standpoint of
if I have, let's say I have three carriers and I know what goes where and they have appetites and
I've been growing with them and feeling good. Then all of a sudden the last two, three years
happened, this hard market comes in and now there's holes in all those appetites because
those carriers rightfully, and I'm trying not to bang on carriers as much
because I know they're businesses, right?
And we have to deal with the reality of who they are,
the reality that they face.
So they're looking at profitability
and they're starting to pull out of markets
or jacking up pricing, et cetera.
And now you add like these three or four
or five class of business that you wrote really well,
you know where they go or where they went,
all of a sudden, you don't know where to put them. Okay. If instead you wrote 20 classes of business
instead of five, again, just broad stroking the numbers here, guys, don't hold me to five versus
20 or whatever. But like, if you became more of a generalist and said, okay, we know how to write
these five really well, But what we're going to
do is add five more or 10 more classes that we write really well and really work on. Now, all
of a sudden your pool becomes bigger and you have more opportunities. And are you, you know, does
that make sense? I'm saying like by broadening our appetite as agents, we are, we are giving ourselves the flexibility to move with the market.
And, you know, maybe all of a sudden, yeah, we can't write those auto repair shops anymore that
we've been killing it with the last couple of years because so-and-so carrier is, it doesn't
want them, but man, we could slide into bakeries for a while and crush because they'll still write
bakeries and they want bakeries and whatever. And I think, so I guess that's just my thought. And what do you think about
niching more versus going more generalist as a way to weather this storm?
Well, it changes your business model because if I'm an insurance agency and I do one thing really
well, and for us, that was always personal lines, professional networking. That was my mission.
Carrier comes in, or carriers, plural, come in and say, that's just no longer the
way we're going to take on business. Obviously, personal lines is a mess. You got to change your
business model. All right, well, shoot, scratch that idea. I can't proceed with my current referral
partners, my professional network changes, my day-to-day changes. I think it sets an agency
back a little bit as far as how they're going to recalibrate and reassess how they're going to accomplish what a carrier wants.
Now, although going back to the original question, being more of a generalist is better long-term for the health of your agency.
In the near term, I think it's a hindrance on your success rate, which ultimately hinders your revenue, which hinders your growth, which hinders your ability to hire and do well with your tech. And I think we're in this very
funky state of the industry. It really, it's putting a halt and saying, reassess yourselves,
come back to us in a little bit. And then you can realize what you're going to do for us as a
company, like an insurance carrier, an agency relationship. Dude, I love that perspective.
I actually agree with you.
And I think that's a really good perspective. I would completely agree that if you say had three
to five niche markets that were your primary specialty, if you followed my advice in the most
straightforward manner, it definitely would set you back. I think that's a very fair assessment.
And I'm kind of thinking about this in real time. I love that you said that. If I were to game plan
that, what I would say is one, I think the earlier you can create a base, an inbound base
that can, so what I'm advocating in general with my consulting agency is that what creating an inbound flow
and base of business does is give you the sustainability to ride these out because you've
created a mechanism to place a wide range of accounts that come in on their own accord
because they've chosen.
So it's easy to close, high converting, but it does come, you have to cast a little wider
net, all right?
And that's what
i teach people to do okay that's great but i had an awesome conversation with charles speck who um
uh it's going to be a couple episodes before this one comes out so people have heard that
where we were talking about how uh the answer is probably now today you're going to face some
turmoil but i think i think this really is the answer for agencies moving forward. It's we need to have this layer, this inbound layer that creates kind of a steadily
increasing foundation of revenue generation, right? Inbound is never going to give you,
I shouldn't say that. It is very rare that inbound is going to give you, I shouldn't say that. It is very rare. The inbound is going to give you these
huge monumental growth moments. What it does is just incrementally increase every month. And then
all of a sudden, two, three years later, you pop your head up and you're like, holy crap,
I'm doing nothing and bringing in X amount of premium every month. That's awesome.
Yeah. And what Charles and I kind of got to,
and this, and just, you said this and it it just set this thought off in my head. I think you're so right, dude. I think both are necessary. We pick our three to five niches. He recommends one to three max. So say we have those and those are our big wins. Those are our accounts we crush.
Those are the ones that put those big spikes
and revenue on the board.
But underneath that, having that base layer of inbound
allows us to ride out these types of storms,
which if you haven't built it today,
you're gonna feel some pain.
But like understanding that it doesn't feel
like the market is gonna become any less dynamic in the next five to 10 years, considering what's going on politically and economically, et cetera.
That feels like the formula, right?
Like have your nice base layer and then these targeted big wins that you go after with maybe an outbound program.
Does that sound like what you're saying?
Yeah.
And I think that base layer you're talking about is probably only attainable if you are part of something bigger because it might not be something you can achieve on your own.
And so that's why I'm advocating a network.
It's because it's okay to lean into the network for the foundational stuff that you're talking about that can no longer be accomplished with the way the market is. And it's okay to be niche when you feel like you already have that access and relationship
with the people and companies that you know you can get done.
But then you're talking two different business models in one.
But here's what I would advise.
If you're an agency owner and you do have this issue, start to hire producers for the niches that you're trying
to expect and grow in. So for example, if you're a commercial line shop, you have your specific
producer, one or two individuals who specifically go after roofers and plumbers and contractors.
And then you work on another individual who goes after the habitational stuff
and maybe the cannabis stuff. And then you have individuals that represent your niches.
And then you can grow those verticals within your organization and they know their markets.
And some are going to lean into the network access and some are going to lean into your
individual access that you have as an agency. And that allows you to be versatile because now
you're not relying on one
vertical or one or two or three, kind of like you mentioned, you can lean into your, your,
your specific silos of production, right? You have, you're looking over here with these producers,
these first, and that's the right way to, in my opinion, grow your agency long-term
because now you're not worried about these market influxes. It's just, okay. Like some are going to
drive more revenue today. Some are going to drive more revenue tomorrow. And I'm just going with the punches. And so what I hear you saying as
well is being intentional about the thought process, right? So like, you won't, you know,
it might not from a sustainability standpoint, right? Which is a lot of like, I have this concept
and actually shared it in a solo video that will have also been out most likely by the time this
one comes out. But it's this idea that like how I used to pitch people who'd push
me, who'd push back on me about the value of insurance. So at Rogue, we wrote a lot of
startups. Even when I was back at the Murray Group, we wrote a lot of startups or new businesses,
et cetera. And a lot of times, what I think is amazing, people who have been in business for
10 years and all the, you know, you'll know this too.
I mean, everyone who's been an agent knows this.
10 years in business, completely respect insurance for the most part.
You know, listen to you, you know, take your advice.
New in business, know everything they've ever needed to know about insurance.
You're an asshole and you don't know anything, right?
Totally.
So they would call and I'd say, okay, man, here's my pitch on why insurance is important.
Insurance provides the foundation in which you build growth.
You can't grow without insurance. And I could almost hear them on the phone, like taking that
in. And depending on the response, you know, I'd be like, look, man, here's the deal. If you don't
have, you can't hire more people unless you have workers' compensation insurance. You want to add
a professional element to your business, you need E&O, you want to go raise money. Now you have a board of directors. You need DNO.
You need, you know, all these different coverages. You want to, you know, expand
the size jobs that you work on. You need a commercial umbrella. So like your growth,
your top line revenue growth that turns you on, none of it is possible without this foundation.
So I've never heard anyone say it like that. That's outstanding. Yeah, and everyone can steal that
or just join my Join Finding Peak today.
Learn even more tidbits like that.
You know, ba-dum-bum, dynamite drop.
So, but I think this also,
that kind of foundation to growth analogy,
this is, again, I love what you said
about the niche markets. My only thing
that I would add to that is I think you also need to have a, what I call closer, completely
different position, completely different psychological profile who handles your inbound
accounts as well. Right. So it's, it's like creating a generalist inbound niche. Like
my, my niche, if you were to hire me to come work at your agency would not be to cold call people.
I would not be amazing at that. I don't want to do it and I wouldn't be great. However,
you put me as a closer, right? You, you know, you, you just have my phone ring and have me close,
dude, I'll close 90% of the accounts that come in. And that, cause that's what I'm good at. There are other people who couldn't do that,
but dominate as outbound producers. I think we almost have to think about this inbound position,
like another niche that we, that we work on that just gets us this consistent flow of business
that's coming in. And then we have these other guys and
gals, people, humans, who are doing that. Hey, they're going after those $10,000 revenue accounts,
5,000, 20,000 revenue accounts. So now every month you're seeing-
And when they pop, they pop. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. And then that way, no matter what happens-
You're protected.
Yeah. You're always kind of like, ah, you know, just like this.
The ebbs and flows don't impact you as much.
Yeah, I see what you're saying.
Yeah, and I think, I guess, I completely agree.
But I don't think you can accomplish that without your network
because otherwise you're fighting your carriers all day.
And I think that's the point that I want to reiterate that point.
That was a really good point that I hope people didn't lose.
In order for inbound to work, right, that inbound position to work,
you have to have a decent carrier set.
You know, two or three carriers in inbound is not going to help you.
Like the thing with Rogue, and again, you know, some of this,
I'm not advocating for you to have as many markets as we have.
The day that we closed, we had 61 markets. And some of this, I'm not advocating for you to have as many markets as we have.
The day that we closed, we had 61 markets.
You can't even be an expert, huh?
Yeah.
So that was too many markets, way too many markets.
And I get it. Everyone's like, oh, I get it, traditionalists.
You don't have to hit me.
I know that was too many.
However, what it did allow us to do is I could place, we had 271 industry classes that we
placed at Rogue Rit.
No, that's right. 221, sorry. 21 industry classes that we placed at Rogue Grit. 200, no, that's right, 221, sorry.
221 industry classes that we placed.
So I think 62 is insane.
That's not what I'm advocating for.
But I do think finding a network
that matches your value structure is important
if you don't have a broad portfolio of carriers directly
because what that allows you to do
is place the business exactly where
it's supposed to go versus trying to wedge it in somewhere.
Again, speaking specifically to inbound and because you are going to have kind of a broad
set, you'll have a bakery, then a contractor, then a marketing consultant, then whatever,
a delivery person and having a broad set of carriers,
which I believe is probably only possible
through some sort of network relationship today
is the only way to get that done.
That is a perfect opportunity for me
to transition over to something real quick.
Yeah.
Because I think it's just as important.
You can't plan for your business
without some sort of financial guarantees. And with the way we are right now with the lack of personal lines, new business and our commercial lines in and out of niche opportunity, you are banking on your current revenue, but that can fluctuate so strongly with regards to your production and your retention. If you are a
part of a network, you have a little bit more guarantee that you're going to know your financial
outlook every year because there are some profit sharing guarantees. There are some contingency
bonuses that are a part of the fold. There are some commission enhancements that are specific
to each company you write with.
And that allows you to plan ahead for things like, you know, building up those silos we talked about,
hiring and training and getting software in place to do all these things. So I think it adds another
element of the financial aspect. You got to plan out your year or a couple years in advance. And
if you can't financially back that plan, then it's not going
to work anyway. So a network also financially would benefit you because you have some guarantees
behind what you're planning your business. And so, yeah, you're talking about what we were talking
about a few minutes ago. And then the other consideration is financially, you have to have
some guarantees and know what that outlook is going to look like. I want to ask you, I know
we're kind of getting up against the number, but I have one more question that I want to ask you
specific about this before we wrap. The way I've seen a lot of network memberships pitched,
right? When they're pitching to the agency and I'm not just talking about Indium or SIA,
I've heard this, been part of different
conversations, et cetera, with a bunch of different stuff. If I'm being honest, never
first choice Marshberry. So I have no intrinsic knowledge there, but I've heard this pitch from
a bunch of different networks. And it usually boils down to owner income? It comes down to, hey, overtime, discounts, relationship, whatever your
value things are, that you can make more money agency owner by being part of this network.
Okay. That's usually where the pitch comes back to, however they get there. Okay.
My question for you is, do you think in the times we're in today, that pitch should change from owner
income improvements to growth?
Like to me today, you know, if you're the owner and you have a lifestyle, et cetera,
I'm not saying you should get rid of your income or whatever.
I'm not trying to knock that.
I guess my point is like, if I were pitching a network today and I'm just interested in your
take, cause I could be completely off here. If it were me and I was pitching a network,
I would focus on growth. I would be like, look, the only way to get through these times is not
to maximize your personal income. It's to grow your agency. And the best way to do that is to be here.
And I've always found it interesting. I think the pitch 10, 20 years ago was when the markets were
really stable and they were soft, right? It was owner income, owner income, owner. You're going
to grow regardless. Prices are always coming down, owner income. Today, I feel like that needs to be
changed to growth, growth, growth. Is that wrong? Do you disagree? What are your thoughts on that?
No, it makes me think of a really good point that my brother Ryan actually mentioned to me
just literally this morning. And I'm just going to read it because it's sitting right here in
front of me. And it says, basically, let me start me start it for a second.
So building a business fast is way easier than building it slow.
And what Ryan meant by that is it's kind of twofold.
Growing agencies have a tendency to take profits out of the company far too early.
That could be specific to the agency owner's compensation.
And put it in their own pockets. It as a sacrifice of the agency's growth.
When you're in pure growth mode, reinvest most of the profits back in to fuel the growth
in that way.
So pour the gas on the fire now in favor of larger returns later.
The business is going to go through waves of growth where you figure out strategies
that just seem to align with the market at the right time.
It's important to triple down on what's working and put the blinders on as you don't know how
long that specific wave is going to last. And when Ryan said that, I was like, yep, that's
completely what agency owners should be focusing on right now. You are not in a market to make
money for yourself today. You are in a market that's allowing you to take opportunities,
do whatever you can to grow now because your benefit is triple down the road.
Yes, dude. I, I, I literally, I love that. That, that, that is guys go back, hit the back button, you know, 30 seconds or whatever, and go back and listen to that again. I couldn't agree more. You know, I had someone, I had a former employee at Rogue
kind of troll me on the internet and make a comment about how Rogue wasn't profitable.
And my, you know, I don't engage in trolls because people don't know who the idiots are, but like,
you know, in my head, I was like, that is such a stupid statement because we were a three-year-old agency.
Our growth rate was probably, if we were to put our growth rate against, and again,
I can't talk about specific numbers, but if I were to put our growth rate against any other
agency in the country, we would freaking blow everyone out of the water. It wasn't,
wouldn't even be close. The things we were doing were effing insane. And yes, we weren't profitable because we were a three-year-old
agency. I wanted to grab as much market share as I possibly could as fast as I could and gain,
because you can always cut expenses out of a business, but it's really hard to put revenue
on the top, right? So I could not agree with that more. This hard market, if you are complaining
about not being able to grow in this hard market,
I know there are extenuating circumstances
and I'm not saying it's easy,
but this is an opportunity to, you said,
small gains today will spring forward in the future
and all of a sudden you'll look up
and you'll be light years from where you are.
I couldn't agree with that sentiment more.
This is-
Now is not the time to take profits, guys.
Now is not the time.
Reinvest hard, harder, double, triple down.
So I'd like-
It's time to become a wartime general, bro.
It's time to become a wartime general.
If you are not a wartime general,
find someone in your agency
or find someone you can bring in who is,
or find a coach or a mentor or a consultant
who can come in and be a wartime general for you. Cause that, that is what you need right now. And
the people who do what you just said, man, they're, they're gonna, they're going to be the
ones we have on pedestals three, five, 10 years from now. So yeah, I love it. Yeah. I love it.
That's it's a, I'm glad we recovered that. That's really important right now. All right, dude,
I appreciate the hell out of you.
I love this.
Where can people connect with you personally?
And if they would just want to learn more
about what you're doing or Marshberry Smart,
first choice, where do they go?
Always on LinkedIn.
So Andy Matheson on LinkedIn is the best.
If I may get in touch with me, chat with me, DM,
and we can set something up specific.
I think you're going to be pleasantly surprised
at what networks are doing right now.
It is not what you thought five, 10 years ago. So just consider that. Don't just think
your agency doesn't fit the mold just because of what you think it is. Get some education,
understand what it really means, and then you can make an educated decision.
Dude, appreciate the hell out of you. I'm so happy for you.
Oh, thanks.
I'm proud of that journey. Not that you need to hear that, but just as, you know, as someone
who cares about your success, I'm proud that you're in a place that you feel better. I can
see it in you. Like you just, dude, you seem, you know, last couple of times I saw you, you could
just stress on you a little bit. I love it. I heard that from a few. Yeah, no, I feel, I feel
it too. I feel that sense of, uh, of, of relief. So, and, uh, just, and, uh, very appreciative that you would come on and share your story,
share your emotions, appreciate you to hear that stuff. So awesome, bud.
I'll let's get out of here. Awesome. Good to talk to you, man. Thank you. Thank you. close twice as many deals by this time next week.
Sound impossible? It's not.
With the OneCall 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.
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 masteroftheclosed.com.
That's masteroftheclosed.com.
Do it today.