The Ryan Hanley Show - RHS 049 -Scott Howell on Crushing the Transition from Captive to Independent Agent
Episode Date: July 22, 2020Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.comScott Howell, president of iProtect Insurance and co-host of The Insurance Guys podcast stops by the show for one of the most EPIC episodes we...'ve ever released. We talk about insurance industry obstacles, sales, life, transitioning to independent, leadership, and everything in-between. Get more: https://ryanhanley.com/Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello everyone and welcome back to the show.
Today we have what ended up being one of my all-time favorite conversations I've ever had on this podcast.
Maybe conversations I've ever had and ever on any of the podcasts that I've done.
And that's actually saying something.
Today's guest is Scott Howell.
He is the founder, president, CEO, whatever, of iProtect
Insurance Services down in Alabama. And Scott is a 10-year veteran of Nationwide, who, as many of
you probably know, or if you didn't know, Nationwide just recently, as of July 1st, moved all their captive agents to independent, and Scott was one of those.
And he's now living that independent life. And I guess that was the crux of bringing him on,
that transition in his agency's history, I found to be interesting. We didn't end up talking about
that really at all. I mean, a little bit we did, and it's interesting, but we went so many places, so deep down into running an agency, the emotional aspect of it,
the mental, the leadership aspect of it, dealing with people, dealing with clients. This is just,
I think you're just going to love this episode. And here's what I'm going to ask you. If you love
this episode, please share it. Scott is a
tremendous guy. And beyond just being an agency owner, he also runs one of the best podcasts
in our industry with Bradley Flowers. They co-host the Insurance Guys podcast. So
share this episode. If you're not subscribed, if you enjoy what I do, you will love what the insurance guys
do as well.
So make sure you jump over and subscribe to their podcast as well and connect with Scott
on LinkedIn because as an independent agency owner, I think this is going to take Scott
to a whole nother level.
I think he's a really deep dude. I think he's goofy and crazy
and says, you know, just the banana shit that people from Alabama say. But he's also incredibly
deep. That's like the fun side of him. And then he has this whole other deep side, which is the
business owner. And I just, we really got into that side and I loved it. I just loved it. So I hope you love it too.
I hope if you will subscribe to this show if you're not already.
You can also subscribe by email.
Just type in ryanhanley.com right on top.
You see a little box.
Punch your email in there.
And I just hope that you love this episode.
But before we get there, I just want to give a quick shout out to our longtime sponsor,
Tarmaca. Tarmaca makes this show happen. There are expenses that come along with running a podcast,
and I am always going to give this content to you for free as I have for forever. Every podcast I've
ever done has been free to you, the listeners, and it will always be that way. I'm never going the subscription model ever.
I say that and I mean it because I'm willing to work with sponsors and I'm willing to do the work of having a sponsor.
But when it comes to Tarmaca, it's not really work.
I've talked about them a lot.
You're probably sick of hearing about them and that's okay.
I think they're them a lot. You're probably sick of hearing about them, and that's okay. I think they're a great tool, and if you haven't got a demo yet, take the time to get a demo.
I'm not saying you need to subscribe to Tarmaka. Now might not be the right time for you,
but know what they're about. Go get the demo. Go to T-A-R-M-I-K-A.com, Tarmaka.com. Get the demo.
Know what it's about.
And if you're into small commercial, I think there's something there.
So check out Tarmaka.
I appreciate you for listening to this show.
I love you for listening to this show.
Let's get on to Scott.
You are a tough man to get on a Zoom call.
Tell you what, I was on the wrong thing.
I clicked the button on my calendar
and it took me to a google hangout thing yeah it's that's my fault i um for some reason because i use
google calendar and now they've added this feature that you can't turn off where when you send an
invite it automatically adds a google meeting right you have to turn that off and turn Zoom on every time or it
automatically sends the Google one and I just forgot to do that. Oh man, don't worry about that.
Don't worry about that. Yeah, I'm good though. As long as you want to go today, I'm good. I've got,
I'm pretty much free. I mean, I've got people calling and all, you know, the usual bullshit,
but that's fine. We'll deal with them later. Yeah, no, it's good, man. Well, hey, I've got people calling and all, you know, the usual bullshit, but that's fine. We'll deal with them later.
Yeah.
No, it's good, man.
Well, hey, I appreciate you coming on the show.
I'm super excited to chat.
I want to hear all about what's going on with your agency.
Yeah, dude, it's just, it's exciting.
It's exciting to, you know, we were chatting the other day when we both, I think I was
the one I had something come up or whatever.
One of us had to reschedule and we were chatting a little bit.
Dude, I'm so excited to hear about your move to independent.
Like, you know, the fun stuff, the stuff that's trouble.
Like, I just, I want to learn more.
And, you know, I think I'm just interested.
I'm so interested in what you have going on.
Well, you know, like we talked about the other day, it's easy to talk about.
But it's once you get into the thick of it, and you know this,
you've been dealing with this now for a while too.
It's just, I call it an up-at-dawn pride-swallowing siege.
There's that, have you ever been in a situation, and I know you have, Ryan, in your life, where
whether you're changing seasons of your life, and I don't know, maybe we need to start the
podcast and kind of talk about this, or maybe this is the podcast and I don't even know it.
Yeah, we're rolling, homie. Okay okay well you know you and I both have been at
times in our life where you can almost feel inside you that something big is about to change.
Sometimes you know it you know you kind of know it the day you graduate high school. You're like, nah, something big's about to happen.
Same thing in college.
Same thing with changes in occupation, changes in marital status,
when your kids are born, all that stuff.
You kind of feel something big's about to happen.
And I think as it relates to you and I specifically,
and a lot of other people that are listening to this podcast right now,
and by the way, I am a huge fan of your podcast.
I listen to your podcast a lot more than you know I do.
Well, thank you.
That's very nice.
I enjoy your podcast so much because a lot of times,
you're a little bit like Joe Rogan in that you're very, very talented.
You're a five tool player. You can write,
you can blog, you're great on video. You ask great questions. And you have people on your podcast sometimes that are kind of outside the mainstream. And those are the I'll be honest with you, those are the ones I enjoy the most.
Sometimes, you know, I mean, sometimes you just get tired of listening to this insurance shit all the time.
And you've had people on there that were writers and other things.
And that's something that I really enjoy with the Insurance Guys podcast
is when we have someone that is kind of outside of insurance,
but has a,
has a very compelling story or a topic that I can deep dive into and get,
you know,
get outside of just the norm.
I love that stuff.
And you do that a lot.
I really enjoy that,
but.
Well,
thank you.
I,
you know,
I will say that I love talking to insurance people. I love talking about insurance. I love getting into tactics. I like, I just like hearing, I guess for me, my goal in podcasting is if in whatever time period I have, usually episodes are 40 minutes to an hour if they're
less than 40 minutes then I'm doing something wrong usually right but if I can just find for
one if I can get one question that dials into exactly what that person actually wants to talk
about right then that that's my job like that's what I see my job as is like sometimes I'll have
someone on for a reason but I can tell as soon as they get on the podcast that's my job. Like that's what I see my job as is like sometimes I'll have someone on for a reason,
but I can tell as soon as they get on the podcast,
that's not what they actually want to talk about.
You know, something happened in their day or something happened that week
that just has them dialed in that has, you know,
gets their hairs on their back, stand up a little bit.
And I can, you can see it in the way they are, you know, you hear it in their voice.
It's like a, and that's really what I'm going for.
I, I, I have people that will email me and be like, Hey, can you send me some bullets?
What we're going to talk about?
And I will send them bullets.
But I also put a little caveat on the end.
That's like, and there's a decent chance I'm not going to ask you one of these questions.
So just be prepared for that.
Right.
You know, I don't know.
I, it's, it's, um, you, you had a podcast one time. I guess it was about six months ago. Maybe it may have been a year ago. I don't remember the time frame. But the lady came on. You guys are talking. And I love this so much. Somehow you two kind of. And this goes back to exactly what you're saying right now, you spun off and you started having this, you know, fairly deep
conversation about the benefits and the negatives of nuclear power. Do you remember that? Yeah.
And I, that might've been the podcast of yours I've enjoyed the most. We're sitting there
listening to you two kind of go back and forth and discuss that. And I was like, man, this is the, this is the content I'm after right here.
I'm very pro nuclear power.
So, and yeah, but, um, and I do the same thing.
I get guests on the show and I'm a little bit different.
I know what the topic is that Bradley has picked out for me to talk about,
but, but every single time I do a podcast, one of the, I think the strengths
that I have, and I tell people this all the time, I am 98, I am horrible at 98% of things, horrible.
But one of the strengths I have is I have this ability to intently listen to what someone says. And every single podcast I get on, somebody will say something and I go,
hold on, stop, stop right there.
I want to talk.
In my mind, I'm thinking, I want to talk about that.
I want to talk about that, more about that.
And you're right.
A lot of times it doesn't even have anything to do about insurance
or it'll be something that we never even expected to talk about when we got on
the show. So I feel you on that, man. But, you know,
getting back to what we're doing here and I, you know,
we can small talk all you want, but I, you know,
the deep dive into what we're doing you know,
I started out with nationwide back in 2010 as a Prince,
as a scratch agent and was expecting to sell more home and auto insurance.
Although, it's kind of like a good psychologist that will tell you that you really need to pay attention to your kids as they're growing up. Because a lot of times,
you can look back at when they were little or, you know, middle school, high school age,
and kind of see the things that they were interested in or their personality, and it can
help them, you know, with what they want to do when they become an adult. And I think for me, when I look back on it, I'm like, man,
I was selling the shit out of commercial insurance when I was with State Farm
my first two years in the business.
And ain't nobody in Birmingham, Alabama selling commercial insurance
with State Farm.
I mean, it was just home auto, home auto, home auto.
So I was always kind of commercial oriented and then about five
years ago nationwide came out the powers to be came out and they're like hey we're going to give
you guys this was the first shot across the bow right here they came out and they said hey we're
going to give you guys a letter of authority to sell commercial insurance through whoever you want to
sell it through. And I think for nationwide agents, they were like, okay.
No, most nationwide agents were not commercial oriented at that time.
And the, and the tricky thing about that was, hell,
nobody would give you a contract to sell commercial because they wanted,
you know, companies like travelers would say oh
yeah we'll give you a contract scott but we gotta we gotta you gotta get a personal lines contract
with us too we're not just gonna do commercial so it was kind of a it was kind of a double-edged
sword there but we did start brokering a lot of business through you know mgas and stuff like that
so i've been calling myself a hybrid independent for five years.
But when this thing all came down about two years ago, and nationwide publicly announced that they
were going to send everybody independent. For me personally, it was very much like Brer Rabbit,
Brer Rabbit getting thrown in the briar patch. Yeah. You know, I was like, oh, okay.
You know, a lot of people had, you know, some consternation about that.
And they were very, you know, I don't know about this,
but I was more of the mindset that I was already independent.
So it wasn't quite as – I wasn't quite as shook as I think a lot of people were.
Yeah. But then, as I told a lot of people were. Yeah.
But then as I told you on the phone the other day,
and when we started talking a little bit off air,
it's real easy to talk about stuff,
but then there comes a time when you have to,
you have to do it. And I think our timeframe for me, I just let it all go.
I let everybody else worry about the contracts and, you know,
for a year and a half.
But I set a deadline for March the 1st.
And on March the 1st,
that was when we were going to put all of our effort into the transition to independent because
I knew it was probably going to take the better part of four or five six months to get everything
set up the way we wanted I knew how much work was going to be there and then I had something
happen to me that I don't know if you'd call it a God thing. I don't
know if it was just a stroke of lightning that hit. I don't know if it's clean living. I don't
know what you call it. But on March the 1st, which was the date that we started kind of really
getting into this pandemic stuff, I had an old friend of mine.
I'd known him for about 10 years here in Huntsville.
He was a farmer's principal agent when I started with Nationwide.
And his agency was on one side of the strip center,
and my agency was on the other.
So we were the anchor tenants in the strip center.
He's farmers.
I'm Nationwide.
And so we had known each other and become friends,
even though we were competitors in the exact same place.
I've always said, I don't care who sells insurance against me,
how far away they are, all that.
I've always tried my best to keep a good relationship with agents around me
as best I could.
But he left Farmers,
went independent with a pretty good size independent agency for about four or five years and did some other stuff. But March 1st, he called me and he said, hey, I'm looking for a job.
Some stuff's happened, but just life, things that boss he couldn't get along with, you know, that kind of thing.
You don't know anything about that, do you?
I know I do.
I know I do.
But that guy has been beyond instrumental because of what I didn't know about
him until he got in here.
Now, remember, we're smack dab in the middle of changing everything we do.
I told somebody the other day, I said,
only thing that hadn't changed in our agency is the phone number and the name
on the door.
That's the only thing that hasn't changed.
But I did not know that he was as technically and technology savvy as he was
to the point of being 10 steps beyond me in technology.
And so almost literally like a gift from God, he comes in.
First of all, he's new, so he wants to make a great impression, right?
Now, we've got $6 million of premium that we've got to move from the very antiquated nationwide
CRM system over to what we chose, which was Hawksoft, which so far has been a fantastic
decision on our part. Hawksoft is solid. They are.
They are.
They're really good.
And for us, it was a great decision because of the mix of business we have.
I knew that my people were going to need a lot of handholding,
and Hawksoft is the – I can't imagine there being a better company out there
for handholding.
That's a rep on them is that their customer service is tremendous.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
But having Justin to spearhead all that and be able to manipulate
spreadsheets and, you know,
all the different technologies that we're using now where he's able to
integrate all this kind of stuff and zap your connect just all of it
it's just been uh my wife looked at me the other night we were sitting on our back porch and she
goes what in the hell would you have done if justin miller hadn't come along in march and i said hell
i i don't know what i would have done i mean it it would have gotten done but it wouldn't be what
it is now yeah in terms of our integrations and what we're able to do
and all the things that happened,
it was literally just a blessing that he came along
because I think we would have been okay.
I would have probably worked an extra hundred hours more than I did
and still probably couldn't have done it
like somebody that's that technology savvy can
do it. Well, good people flow to good people, man. I mean, this is why I was talking to,
I had an insurtech call me the other day and they just wanted to, you know, I try to take at least
one of these calls a week, right? Just one half hour, like just someone wants to talk about
something and I'm,
and I'm cool with it. I don't mean that like it's a burden. I do this on purpose. I just,
with the agency, I used to take more, I used to do three, but with the agency,
I just can't take more than one. So this insured tech company reached out to me and I had a call
and they said, you know, how do we make an impact with independent insurance agents? And I said, so many technologists have been dicks to IAs
and really the insurance industry for so long
that a good start would just be a good person
because this is such a small industry.
If you're a dick, you get found out super super quick and there are companies
i mean i just had an amazing conversation which i will not talk about the details of
with um with chefy from coverger yesterday we talked for an hour we were supposed to only talk
for 10 minutes and we ended up talking for an hour um but we were discussing companies that had risen and fell in our just since 2016 just since
the insure tech you know quote-unquote revolution and um and i said you can pin every one of those
companies look at the leader was the leader a good guy who a woman, good person? Most of them didn't be guys.
Sorry, my female listeners.
A good person who gave and was thoughtful and considerate
and understood that the IA channel isn't broken.
It just needs to be optimized, right?
They don't start their pitch with,
look at all the shit that you're doing wrong.
Like they help people.
They're part of the community.
They engage. Look at those companies. All of those companies are still here.
Look at all the companies that are gone.
They're the companies who treated people poorly,
who acted like I didn't know what they were doing,
who gave people a hard time, who played like the Steve jobs,
Silicon Valley emperor thing, which just doesn't play in our industry.
You have to be a good person.
It's too small.
And when you are, you just,
it's amazing what happens.
It's just absolutely amazing.
You can just see, look at all the people
in our circle of influence.
And the reason they got there
isn't because any of us are more intelligent
than anyone else.
I mean, certainly there's some smart people. There's just good people who give and share and care. And it's just,
dude, I mean, I'm with you. I mean, you call it clean living. I find that hard to believe knowing
you the little bit that I do, but you are a good guy. So that doesn't make sense to me.
Yeah. I could not agree with you more. I mean, I could sit here and rattle off names, you know, and not just the leader, although that's important too, because that culture flows down from the top.
But then you got people representing that leader, the Nick Berries of Rocket Referrals, you know, the, I could name a hundred of them that are representative of that company. And you are so right about one other fact, which is it is a very small fraternity of people who,
I shouldn't say very small, but a small fraternity of people who have a platform like you and I have and word gets out pretty dadgum quickly when somebody's
you know not doing what they say they're gonna do or calls to chew your ass or makes you sign
some long-term contract or and I'm gonna go one step further than that even if just their product's
not very good yeah because you know I'll call Ryan Hanley or Bradley Flowers or, you know, 100 different people and they'll say, don't do it.
Don't do it.
It's either I tried that and this is what happened or I've heard that this is what's going to happen.
And usually it's true.
And you know what the flip side to that is, man?
Let's say your product's not like here's where you vision your product to be, but it's right
here right now, but you're a good person and you're transparent and you're honest. And you say,
look, like this is where we want to, I, no one can see me, but I'm where I have my hand high.
I'm one side, right? Like this is where we want to be. We want to be way up here. And right now
we're kind of like 40% of the way there, we're working to get there. You know, but that transparency and honesty,
I know our community of agents that the broad we'll, we'll, we'll buy into that. They'll go,
okay, I see the vision. I want to be part of it. I get that you're only 40% of the way there
and that's okay. What, what absolutely drives me nuts is the, they're 40% of the way there,
but they sell you the a hundred percent vision without telling you that they're only 40% of
the way there. And then you get in and you look around and you're like, what the fuck?
This isn't what you sold. And then, you know, and that's how people get in trouble, but they think,
you know, they, they, you know, uh, you know, we could go on and on.
I learned so many lessons about technologists in general.
And someone asked me the other day, why Tarmaca and not SEMC?
Why did I choose Tarmaca and not SEMC or not Bold Penguin or not any of these other commercial
lines traders?
They asked me that question. And I said, one, I think that, uh,
I don't know enough about SEMC, um, and I, but I do know, uh,
and I'm forgetting his name. I know him to be a good guy.
And I think they have a good product. So it's nothing against them. Right.
I said, you know, bold penguin is more enterprise. Um, you know,
I spent time there. I have some history there and whatever.
And I don't really see any other real players in the market.
The thing about Tarmaka to me is not that off the shelf right now.
Is it everything that Raggith and Geetha wanted to be?
No, they're still building it.
It works.
Don't get me wrong.
I use it every day, but it's not 100% of where they want it to be. If they're building and releasing things
all the time, but I just, I spent 10 minutes with Ryan. I spent 10 minutes with him the first time
in person. I said, here's a guy I can trust off the shelf. He said, look, Ryan, you know,
we have four carriers that we don't have yet at the time they have nationwide now,
but they didn't at the time. He's like, we don't have Hartford yet.
We don't have travelers. Both of those. I know are,
I think both of them are signed contracts. If they're not, they're coming.
I know they're heavy talking to them. Hartford may even already be done.
And they need, they were talking about, he's talking about one more Markel.
He's like, he's like, these are our next four. He's like, once we get these,
you know, we wide up. And he was so transparent.
And he always is.
On the podcast, he was transparent.
He was on Cass's podcast.
Has he been on your guys yet?
Yes, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
Dude, he's always so – and that, to me, that level of transparency
and understanding of our channel said to me, like,
I'm going to ride the ups and downs of a new technology being built because i believe that
this human and the other humans like chris lane and his in his in github obviously um his his
technology co-founder like that i believe that they give a shit about us right they care about
us rock referrals exact same way chris langell at referrals, exact same way. Chris Langell at Advisory Vault, exact same way.
Things break.
Things work.
Things don't work.
Agency, Better Agency, which I just made the move to last week.
I moved to Better Agency.
And when they made the Lightspeed voice integration, that kind of set my bells off in my head that it's time to make the move.
They had a little power power out a little glitch,
like late,
late at night.
And only a few agents caught it,
but they did.
Cause they were working late.
They immediately fixed it,
you know,
put all the things out,
apologize for the issue.
Like the way they handle it.
I'm not describing it.
Well,
I said,
you know,
William Shaw,
the whole team,
they care about us.
They care.
And it's,
it's not being perfect. It's giving a shit.
That's why I make decisions. Let me go one step deeper for you with that. And you're 100% right.
So you can take that same methodology and culture and approach to what companies like Tarmaca
and some of these other companies that you and I both deal with
on the technology side.
And you can apply that same methodology
and that same belief system, or excuse me,
value structure to an insurance agency. And i think that's one of my strong
points is i ain't afraid to call somebody and say did it this morning had my girls call me
at 8 45 this morning and start telling me about this policy holder that was so upset about this
claim and he had just called and his wife was in a wreck Monday. Hadn't heard from anybody with claims as of now.
And I said, put me on a three-way call with him right now.
I want to talk to him.
Because in my agency, we have what's called the code red button.
And the code red button is when a customer, a client, a member, whatever you want to call them, when they call the office, doesn't matter who they talk to, but my people can hear in their voice that they are upset, that they are confused, that they start this, I haven't heard from anybody since Tuesday, whatever, whatever it is. The code red button is we get Scott involved immediately.
Call Scott or text Scott, and we get on the phone together,
our group, the person that's been talked to,
and we discuss what's happened so far,
and then I immediately call that person
because I believe it's Grant Cardone that said this.
He said, don't ever give problems oxygen.
The faster you can get to them, the better off you are.
So I called this guy this morning at 830, and I said, let me explain.
I said, first thing I want to say to you is I want to profusely apologize
that you filed a claim on Monday, and here we are Friday,
and you haven't heard from
anybody. But I said, and I go into this, we talked for like 30 minutes and I basically said,
we're not here to take money from you. We're not here because of premium dollars.
The only reason that this insurance agency exists, this is exactly what
I told him. I said, every single human being that picks up that phone and calls my agency
has a problem. Unless they're picking the phone up to call us because they want to quote. And if they're doing that,
they're probably doing that because they have a problem with somebody else. And so I told him,
I said, I told Harley in my office before we called him, I said, Harley, let me explain
something to you. These people that call us all have problems. We've got four insurance agents
in this office who are focused on selling insurance. Everybody else here, including Scott,
especially Scott, is only here to solve problems. Whether that's, you know, can't figure out my billing account, need to make a
payment, got, you know, had a claim, looked on my schedule and one of my policies that every single
phone call is a problem. Now, how well my people are able to communicate to that person and help them solve that problem is going to be the long tail metric
of how big this agency can get. And what we do is when the problem's big enough, meaning Mr.
Johnson's just called and chewed somebody's ass and said, I am not happy.
I am not happy.
The first thing they do, the first thing they're supposed to do, and they better do,
or they're going to get their ass chewed worse than they've ever had their
ass chewed, is pick up the phone, call Scott, and get him involved.
Have you ever seen the movie Pulp Fiction where they kill the guy in the car
and they're worried and they go to this buddy's house. He's like, dude, y'all can't stay here.
And they call, I believe his name was Marcus. And he says, hey, y'all don't worry about it.
I'm sending the wolf. I'm the wolf. I'm the guy that gets the call every time when it gets to
that point. And you can hear it in people's voice.
And so my job, once I get on the phone is to do the same thing that Rogoff does to you with Tarmaca is to be open and honest and, and admit that somebody somewhere has made a mistake. And I do a lot of listening to, you know, first thing I tell people when I get on the phone with them most of the time
is I say, tell me what happened.
And then I just shut up.
And I sit there and I listen for about five minutes
while they tell me this problem.
Then I repeat the problem back to them.
So, Ryan, what I'm hearing you say right now is that you had an adjuster come out to your house
and instead of getting on the roof, he pulled his pants off and smeared butter all over his ass,
poured chicken wings on his head and ran around your house three times yelling,
I'm not paying this plane. Is that what happened? And every time they go, thank God,
somebody understands what's going on.
Yes, Scott, that's exactly what happened.
So I think that same methodology you're talking about with these technology people being open and honest and, hey, Ryan, man,
we really want you to be a part of this.
Let me tell you where we are right now and where we want to be six months from
now.
And I think that just goes a long way towards both you and I.
And then you've got that gut thing in your gut that's like,
man, this dude's just a good dude.
He's just a good guy.
I feel the same way with carriers.
You know, you get such a good feeling from some.
And this is one of the things that I feel like, you know,
starting this agency has been a very odd experience for me. And by odd, I don't mean negative, just
just odd. Because I knew this, I know this industry so well, you know, I do. I've been in it for 15
years in so many different capacities, and looked at it from so many different
angles and sat at so many different tables from tables full of CSRs talking about certain
issues to claims adjusters, to principals, to agency, you know, Fortune Top 50 agency,
you know, principal.
I mean, I've been in all these things, I've heard all these different things.
And then to attack it as a principal where you're making the decisions,
your eyes are open to, it's like, it's like all that stuff came through filters. And now I'm
getting the unfiltered version. And it's just a very odd sensation because you, you feel like you
understand something and then you get the full hose, the full thing.
The throttle is completely open and it's a very different feeling.
And I've gotten that.
One of the areas that I've been, I found that to be very interesting is in the carriers.
And in particular, the carrier relationships.
Because, you know, you can have very intimate relationships with very large
carriers. That's possible. You can also have very distant and disassociated relationships with
carriers that you would otherwise think would be your best friend. And, um, that is a very
interesting thing. And I'll tell you, I said this to my Hanover rep the other day, because I was having
some issues with their technology. Like they haven't, they still make you quote an internet
explorer. And, you know, I just, every, I said to you, I said to, I say to both my underwriter
and everybody I talked to there, every time I talked to them, I said, you, you lose business
from me because you haven't, because I have to log into internet, not even Microsoft edge,
right. Internet Explorer to hold business with you. And because that's a piece of technology
that was outdated in 2014, right. There are times when I'll be in the middle of the quote,
the screen will just go blank. And the answer will be, we'll call us. And then we just reset
it from our end and that we'll get it back. And I'm like, that's great. And for big pieces of business that I know are the right fit for you, I'm going to work through
that process. But those thousand dollar bops, you just don't get them. I mean, I can't wait
till I can put them with you, but you don't get them today because it takes me extra work. And here's my point is that they are receptive and open and, and are trying to help in different
ways and understand that that's a limitation of theirs and that they're working on it.
And that, you know, and he even said, he goes, look, our update that's coming out in the
beginning of next year is going to fix that problem.
How do we get you, how do we get some more business in the door?
So we started talking about co-op programs and you know, what it made me feel was I've been heard. No, here's a limitation that this particular carrier that I actually really like has. And I'm willing to work through that limitation because they acknowledge the problem. And then they try to find some ways to say, hey, we get that that frustrates you. Are there some things that we can do to help you
through this time until we can get you to where you want to be? And that's so meaningful because
you know, it's a big, I think, I think sometimes it gets lost in the velocity in which we all do
business, but it's a big freaking deal. What care you put a piece of business with? It's a really
big deal. And I think once you've been business with? It's a really big deal.
And I think once you've been in the game for a long time, you take that for granted. I know I
did at the Murray group. I just took it for granted where I put business, but being as an
agency owner, and I think everyone listening can agree. And obviously this is new to me. It's why
I'm sharing it is where I put a piece of business means a lot. Right. It means a lot to me.
I'm,
I'm considering it every time.
It's not just,
Oh,
they're the cheapest.
Let's go there.
Sure.
How do I interact with these guys?
How do they interact with me?
And,
and,
um,
so I think this idea of,
of showing that you give a shit,
like it,
it really is the currency of our entire ecosystem and probably of life, but
not right.
But, um, but certainly of this space, like it just isn't transactional.
It feels transactional, but I think that's the surface level.
I think what the, what really gets business done and where relationships really happen
is, is below that.
And it's, do they care or not? Are they
willing to work with me? Are they willing to help me and listen to me? And I just,
we can't gloss over that fact. Well, there's so many things you could address
that are subsets of what you just said. First and foremost,
I always try to look at people that come to us as a prospect before they're a client and I think
about them as my mom or dad or my sister and I think are we representing carriers
and I'm talking about standard home and auto and commercial insurance, are we representing carriers that when something happens,
because again,
we don't make our money when we take premium from people,
we make our money when we solve those problems,
i.e. your house just burned down,
you just had a three car accident.
And I always think about,
am I representative or the carriers that we represent,
are they the kind of people, are they the kind of carriers and the kind of company that I would want
to put my mom and dad with or my sister with? Would I, would I, you know, we had a carrier
that's one of the biggest, probably top five or six carriers in the United States that,
as of right now, we've decided that we are not going to represent that we had an opportunity to
get a contract with just because we felt like as a group that of my team
members and business partners, we just thought, you know,
I just heard good heard a lot of not so good things about this carrier.
And I,
we just really don't
feel confident putting people with them when they come to us. And then as another subset of that,
I have an acquaintance of mine that's one of the largest agents in the country.
And back in the late 1980s, he was probably a three or $4 million agency back then. But he, unlike all of his contemporaries that had come in with him here in North Alabama,
he figured out that in order for him to reach the level that he wanted to reach,
he was going to have to make all these trips that nationwide insurance provided.
However, he had to do that where everybody else really didn't care about that. They're like,
well, if we make it great, if we don't great it. His thought process was,
if I can make all these big trips that nationwide has, that gives me one week to build relationships
with the people at Nationwide who are running Nationwide. The board members, the CEO, the CFO,
all those people. I can spend time with them, go on small trips within the trip with them, get to know them,
get cell phone numbers, you know, all that.
And over the course of about the last 25 or 30 years, he's built those types of relationships
and parlayed that into, you know, getting just about whatever he wants.
And I think the more I'm around bigger agencies and see guys that have that
mindset, the more I realize how important that is to have those personal
relationships with these people that are running these companies.
And then when things happen or you have a problem
or you need something or you want something
or you want to start a program or whatever,
now you've got somebody's cell phone number
that you can pick up and call and say,
Steve, man, what's happening?
I haven't seen you since we were down in Costa Rica last year.
What's been going on, man?
Hey, listen, I've got something that I just want to run by
and see what you think about it.
And that's just invaluable. I can't, the more, the longer I've been something that I want you, I just want to run by you and see what you think about it. And that's just invaluable.
I can't,
uh,
the more I've,
the longer I've been in this,
the more I realized that.
And then the third leg of that is I can't even begin to tell people,
especially if you're in commercial insurance,
how important those relationships are with your underwriters.
If you've got a premier underwriter or you're writing enough business where
you've got a single underwriter, not a pool, but a single underwriter, man,
if you're in good graces with them and they like you and you like them, man,
that can just, it's just, it's like pouring,
it's like pouring gasoline on the fire, Ryan.
I'm going to give you, so I'm going to go back to Hanover, right?
So that's another reason why I like them.
So I have my commercial underwriter.
Her name is Cindy.
She's tremendous.
And I had an issue where, not an issue, I had an agent from South Carolina call me up on the phone and say,
Hey, Ryan, I have this client.
They have people in seven states. One of those states is a admin only work from home person, but she lives in Hyde
Park, New York. And the carrier that I wrote this account with will write comp in every state that
they're in except for New York. So I need a split policy with just New York.
Can you help me? So I reach out. So I, first of all, all the systems auto decline because it's
a split account. Um, and then, so I had to reach out to the underwriters. So I reach out to five
or six. No, we won't do that. Now we won't do that. Now we won't do that. And then finally I
get to Hanover and I email my Hanover rep and I said,
Hey Cindy, I have an agent I'm doing a favor for. I mean, we're doing, we're talking about like $275
in premium here. I mean, this is like, you know, there's, there's no money to be made by anybody,
but you know, this is what we do for each other as independent agents. We help each other.
So I reach out to this, to her and I said, look, this is, I know you don't do this.
I know you don't really want to do it, but I'm helping another agent.
It would mean a lot to me to just, it's a, it's a woman in her home doing admin work
in Hyde Park.
There's, there's no, there's no risk here.
You know what I mean?
Boom.
She says, you know what, Ryan, we'll do it.
Write it up, put it in all good.
Like that's the stupidest little thing, but you know what that does?
That gets them every opportunity that I can get them moving forward because I now know that she'll listen to me and not go, Nope, that doesn't fit my little box. No, you rejected. She's going to go,
Hey, this is a stupid little thing that I can do for one of my agents. And I'm pot. I mean,
she's coming from that abundance mindset
that by giving him this little bit of help,
this stupid little thing where I'm doing a favor
for someone else, that enamors me to her to say,
I'm going to get you more business.
I'm going to find you more business.
I'm going to make sure that you guys are getting chances
at accounts because I appreciate that you were willing
to help me help that guy down
in South Carolina. And those are those little things, man. And you know, I, there's another
carrier that I took on that, um, that I was so excited to get them so excited. And I was like,
man, this is gonna be great. It's the perfect, like I had, um, Cincy Hanover and
Chubb and I needed like, uh, I needed one. There was one, I was missing a segment in the New York
market because New York is, is wacky. So in other, other States, you won't maybe necessarily
understand, but New York is a wacky state. Like the way certain carriers just don't write certain
things. It's, it's really odd. And I mean, just couldn't, it's cause New York is a over regulated liberal Haven.
Um, but, uh, and, and I took, so I took this carrier on, I'm so excited.
I haven't been able to write a single thing with them. I, I, I mean,
I've been quote, I probably quoted 30 accounts easily, maybe more.
And you get this generic templated declination. You try to respond
and it's like this ridiculous phone tree to get to your, you know, which underwriter do I have
this time? They have no idea who I am. And I'm like, I'm sitting here going, I'm just going to
stop quoting with these guys. Like I get these, it gets declined. And then you have no ability
to explain or say, Hey, you know, like,
like, like I was quoting a commercial auto the other day, the guy's got this little crane on
the back. It's a tiny little crane and it's just to help him move. Cause he's a plumber and he's
got a couple of his materials just to get him in the back of the truck. That's all it is. He's not
towing anybody. And I have a picture of it, dude. This crane is like an out of the truck that's all it is he's not towing anybody and and i have a picture of it dude this crane is like an out-of-the-box crane this isn't some big custom thing right right so
i quote the account um and and and and i get a i get a declination like an hour later
or i decline and i'm like i and i email back and I'm like, they're like, yeah, we don't write
cranes. And I said, well, can you look at the picture that I attached? Because when you look
at the picture, this isn't really like a crane crane. This is more just like a, an arm that
helps the guy get some of his heavier tools onto the back of his truck. Nope. Decline. And I'm just
like, fuck you. Thanks for nothing. Like, you know what I mean? Like, I'm telling you, this is a perfectly fine account.
The guy hasn't had an auto claim in 10 years.
Right.
And you can't even open your eyes a little bit
to see that this account is worth writing.
I mean, I just, it was like the lack of humanity in it
just made me go, I don't care anymore.
Like, I'm ready to give up on you. Like
that you're not, this isn't, this isn't the type of relationship that I'm looking for. And you're
certainly not helping me because I haven't been able to write anything with them.
As an independent agent, you're always going to put business with carriers that make it easy to
do business with them. You're always going to put business with carriers who your
underwriter answers the phone and seems to want to help regardless of what the situation is.
And then you can also kind of tell where that carrier is in the cycle of insurance
based on how much of that, you know, nope, not doing it. Nope. Can't do it. Nope.
Versus, yeah, let me, let me see what I can do. Yeah. And so there's, there's probably a couple
of things going on there when you see stuff like that happen, but I'm with you. I mean, when we
write, when we go to write a piece of business and we put it with three different companies that we think might be
a good fit, it's usually the same underwriters that we work with that, you know, that are
aggressive, that are wanting to get business in the door. We had an underwriter, this is kind of
the same, goes in the same vein that what you just talked about. We had an underwriter. This is kind of the same, goes in the same vein that what you just talked about.
We had an underwriter with a major carrier.
We had been appointed with them,
I think in February, March, and we'd quoted something like 25 mid-market accounts
with this underwriter.
And we had a great relationship with the marketing manager that represented
this very large carrier.
We quoted 25 mid-market accounts.
These are pretty damn big accounts.
All 25 came back no for some reason.
And one of the funny things that we do here is when we get an underwriter assigned to us on commercial,
we'll go Facebook stalk them and see who they are.
So as soon as we got this underwriter, my big commercial producer sends me this text message
with a picture of this person, and below the picture it said, Oh shit, we're in trouble because you could just tell from the Facebook profile picture
of this person that they were not going to,
they were not about writing any business and you know, I mean,
you just see it. Yeah. So I guess it was June the first,
Tuesday afternoon at four o'clock,
this marketing manager for this carrier calls me, and he says,
hey, can you jump on a call tomorrow with your guys and your agency?
I need to talk to you for a minute.
And I said, oh, shit, what did we do now?
He goes, no, no, no, no, you're not in trouble.
You're not in trouble.
He says, I need to talk to you.
So we all jump on a call.
It's like 10 o'clock the next morning.
He goes, hey, guys, I just want to let you know, you know,
your mid-market underwriter that you had, that you hadn't placed any business with,
but you put well over a half million dollars in premium that you quoted.
She's retiring July the 1st.
And this is who she's going to be replaced with.
So I think what today's July the 17th,
as we sit here and talk,
and I think we probably put well over $200,000 with them.
Same accounts, same types of accounts.
Same company, same everything, different underwriter.
Young, aggressive.
This goes to your point.
This is why you have to have, especially in commercial,
you have to have a relationship with your underwriters.
Yep.
Because if you are not nurturing that relationship,
you never realize what's cause you knew what was
going on there. You knew what was going on that she's looking at her book of business going for
me to get my max retirement bonus. I need to have a loss ratio that is, you know, in this range.
And I'm not taking on any accounts that could hose me up in this, in this, you know, in these last
six months. And that's perfectly fine for her to do that. But if you're not on top of that, you don't know. And, and, and I, dude, I just, I completely agree
with you that this, this is a huge part of the game, huge part of the game. And, and obviously,
I think some of the seasoned, especially commercial, commercial agents who've been
around for a while know this, but for anybody who's coming up, you know, I'm kind of relearning
this, I guess you could say
to a certain extent, but like, this is just, it's become so obvious in me quoting every piece of
business myself. Like there are carriers I go to who I know are going to listen, even if the answer
is no, it's going to be a thoughtful listen. They're going to listen and they're going to say,
Hey, there's a couple of things I'm uncomfortable with. Here they are. So that I understand better for the next time.
Right.
But, you know, the companies that just flat no or I get some automated, you know, email in tiny little font that says, sorry, we're declining.
And then to get to that underwriter, I have to go through a 17 trigger phone tree.
Like, no, thank you.
Yeah.
Thank you. Yeah. Thank you. So we have a saying here in our agency that every time we sell a policy,
we've got – and I'm speaking of commercial now because personal lines is just
so – it's been so bastardized now that, you know, I can remember 10 years ago,
Kristen Claiborne, I'll never forget her,
was our premier personal lines underwriter with Nationwide.
And, my God, that woman probably gave me 100 exceptions
why she was a personal lines underwriter.
But now I don't know of any carrier that we represent
that we have a dedicated underwriter.
It's always, you know, hit six to go to the underwriting team and then it's just potluck
what you get.
But we have a saying on the commercial side and that is, every time you sell a commercial
policy, you've got two sales to make.
You got to sell the client and then you got to sell the underwriter not always
especially not on the real small stuff but especially the bigger you get on stuff or
yeah anything anything that's got hair on it uh you definitely got two sales to make right there
but yeah so so so let me ask you um you've been now i I think, what was it, around March? March 9th.
Yeah.
Tell me about how things are going on your side of the house
and where you guys are at right now with what you're doing.
So I'm doing okay.
I am happy with my performance in some regards.
And I would give myself, I don't know if I give myself any A's.
I think I have some solid B pluses on some aspects of the business.
What's your biggest weakness as an agent?
Terrible. I have an immense fear of cold calling. I have to like Metallica,
Rage Against the Machine up to cold call. And I hate that about myself because in
person there, I would have no fear over the phone. There's something about not being able to see the
person, not knowing exactly who I'm going to talk to. I just, dude, it's this weird thing about me.
I like become a whole different person. It's so weird. And I have to cold call like,
like my agency is set up for commercial. It's not set up for personal. I can write it. I have to cold call like like my agency is set up for commercial it's not set up for personal I
can write it I have some good carriers on personal but my strength and and that's why I went out and
got Cincinnati it's why I went out and got Chubb it's why I went out and got Hanover um there you
know I have Liberty and then I have Travelers and Hartford through Indium so I have everybody
that I can need and even uh I have a couple mutuals uh here in the state because in the
northeast this is a little different from where you are right in I have a couple of mutuals here in the state because in the Northeast,
this is a little different from where you are in the Northeast, dude, there's mutuals and domestics
everywhere, everywhere. I mean, there's just tons of them. I lost an account the other day,
not lost, but I wrote the comp, but the package in the auto, every other carrier that I quoted,
and I quoted everybody in Vermont, everybody was twice the
price of this domestic, this domestic mutual, because that's what they can do, right? They just
see an account. They're like, we're willing to take 3% margin on this account so that we can
keep it, right? It was like a $50,000 account premium. I was coming in 70, 70, 80,000 with
everybody else. It was just, it's just what they can do so so
there's some nuance there with the mutuals but um my point in saying that to you is um
i have the carriers i have the markets i have the education i have the background i know what to say
but over the phone i turn into like a like a uh uh uh i don't even know what this i just turn into like a, like a, uh, uh, uh, I don't even know what this, I just turned into like,
I become the completely different person and I need,
and I have to overcome it. So I'm working hard at that.
You know, that's, that's really hard to run because
one of the big things that I've found about cold calling that I personally believe is true is when you cold call someone,
people are like dogs. They can smell fear and they can smell indecision or someone not being confident, even on the telephone.
And so when you are that way, it's probably harder for you to gain altitude until you kind of get into that phone call, if they will stay on the phone with you
and keep talking.
And I'm sure knowing you, the longer you talk and you're very knowledgeable,
you know what you're doing, they probably pick up on that but not having that confidence yeah you're 100%
right yeah the moment I can get through if I can get through the first two minutes yeah I'm having
some success right I am really and this sounds like a stupid problem right but you know we
I can like you said I can create videos.
I can create podcasts.
I can blog posts in my sleep.
But the first two minutes of a cold call are like, it's like fear.
And I can stand up in front of a stage in front of 2,000 people and not even break a sweat, right?
I just feel confident and comfortable.
But two minutes on the phone not knowing who I'm talking to, not knowing that person's name, you know, whoever the gatekeeper is like that.
Just, and it, it keeps me from picking up the phone as much as I should.
I'm working on that. Uh, David Carothers is helping me.
Mick Hunt is helping me. Who's, who's a tremendous, uh,
I'm going to get him on a podcast eventually. Um, and,
and Cass has helped me a little bit with some stuff. You know, he's,
he's starting to do some of this. So we're sharing notes a little bit. We talk like once a week, but, um, cold calling is
just right now in New York, it has to be done. You can't go to businesses. You just can't. Um,
so you have to cold call. I'm doing some, I'm doing some, uh, I'm using Zywave to do some,
um, cold drip marketing. I love Zywave. Yeah. I love Zywave to do some cold drip marketing.
I love Zywave.
Yeah, I love Zywave.
I would love to implement it in our agency, and it's not out of the realm of possibility.
I've dated with them for a couple years now.
We've talked about doing it.
I can see some opportunities even in our niche,
which our guys, property investors, habitational, they don't
really have a big need for workers comp, but I can still see some things within Zywave that could be
very beneficial. We can talk about that offline if you want. Zywave is the second largest investment
in my agency that I've made. And I do not regret it in any regard. I, you know, if you, my wave connect
is an incredible tool. Mod master is great for, for, for, if you have people who have experienced
mod issues, like it's a tremendous tool, but if you just like, let's say you're not in the
workers comp space. So don't, you don't need mod master broker briefcase, PNC Broker Briefcase, and MyWave Connect, just those two
tools, if they have employees, those are game changers, absolute game changers. The content
on the front end from an education perspective, and then the resources, tools, and content on the
back end with MyWave Connect, just those two tools together, it really is, you're putting
walls up around your clients and you're
providing them with services that no one else is providing them because most, most Zywave users
don't even take advantage of my wave connect. Right. And I've, I've started out of my, you know,
I have 22 clients, uh, 12 of which are commercial clients, right? Um, those 12 clients, I have them
all on my wave connect and I've already started to get people
going, Oh shit, what is this man? What is this total cost of risk tool? Can you walk me through
it? Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. I mean, once I walked them through these
tools, they're never going to leave. You've never gotten from anybody else. And they're having
someone talk to them about things that no insurance professionals ever talked to them about before. So, you know, and then I'm using Better Agency. I'm start,
I haven't actually implemented this, but I'll have like an onboarding thing. So when someone
becomes a new commercial client, I can onboard them into MyWave Connect, let them know what it
is, send them some videos, just some like walkthroughs and stuff. So I see, you know,
these are the kinds of tools, man,
when I talk about I'm actually writing an article for the big eye of Illinois right now, on the
human optimized agency, but like this idea of optimizing your humans, like this is what it's
about. This is these are the tools that are getting us there. And yeah, do they all talk
together perfectly? No, we'll get there someday. It doesn't matter. But man, thinking a little deeper about your clients and providing them
with some of this stuff, it is a game changer. They just, no one. So I obviously I'm a talker
and I'm a nerd. You put those two things together. And I have heard from 12 out of 12 clients.
No one has ever talked to me about insurance like this before. Right. 12 out of 12.
That's $500 bops all the way up to $40,000 package policies.
Right.
That would be the span of clients that I've written so far.
12 out of 12.
That's because you're not selling.
You're not selling insurance.
You're literally getting with those people building a relationship and showing them
uh through communicating with them how you can help their business be better and dude instead
of just calling saying hey i'm scott howell and i mean we'd love to quote your insurance so i was
talking to somebody i was talking to somebody else who's in sales that
isn't in insurance about my cold calling issue. And I said, you know, I said, the issue is
all I want to do is add value. That's my goal. I care about the person, right? I probably too
much. My wife says this all the time. She's like, part of your issue with sales is that you care
too much. And I don't mean humble bragging. It is a crutch because what it doesn't allow me to do is
be aggressive enough at times to actually get the person to make the move that is going to help them.
Right. I'm almost to value added service. And I think there's a happy medium. I swing way too far
one way. And again, we're all have to be self aware of our of our pros and cons. But I think
that I think there are a lot of agencies who are value providers, but I think are caught in the
sell, sell, sell mentality. And their problem is they just need to swing the other way. It's not
that they're not value providers or can't be. They're just, they've been conditioned over so
many years to just sell, sell at all costs, do whatever you got to do. And if we can, you know, for them, they have to swing back the other
way a little bit. And, um, it's that middle ground and where, you know, where I think where the,
where the success lies. Which industry do you sell that kind of mirrors your personality the
most? So my disposition tends to be contractors yeah it's just
because i curse and i don't give a shit and i'm very it's very hard to offend me so you know when
they're when you call one of these contractors and they're telling you how insurance works and
you know some people like get mad about that i just laugh because i'm like all right bro you
know i've been doing this for 15 years.
You've been digging holes for 15 years. Like I wouldn't tell you how to dig a hole, you know?
And, and I can say that to a contractor because I don't give a shit if they come right back at me,
you know what I mean? It doesn't matter to me. So that, you know, the, I'm not good with uppity
people, even though I'm in a blue, white collar job, I'm not super good with white collar people i wasn't raised that way
i think i think from your perspective of the cold calling issues you had
it sounds to me like it's just that uh that fear of the unknown
from the time you dial the number and the phone's ringing.
Because I could see you once they answered and y'all have exchanged pleasantries,
kind of settling down and being fine.
It's more that something in your mind psychologically is like,
you're not in control at that moment.
You don't know what's going to happen.
You don't know who's going to pick up the phone on the other end.
But it doesn't sound to me like you have problems once you really get into the conversation
because you are so knowledgeable and you know probably more than 90% of people out there about what you're doing.
Dude, it's the classic.
It is.
I'm letting a tiny little fear dictate an action that, uh, I actually,
James clear. I don't know if you know, James clear. He wrote atomic habits. It's a tremendous
book. If you haven't read it. Um, he he's, he's also an awesome tweeter. His tweets are, they're
just, they're like little nuggets that just get your brain, right? They're not like inspirational
bullshit. It's just like, here, here's the way to think. And he basically said, he said, take today and do things that will help you 10 years from now,
not 10 minutes from now. Right. So, okay. So I saw that I didn't do any cold calling today
because Fridays are service days for the most part. But, um, uh, you know, I said to myself,
I saved it. I took a screen capture of it. And I set a task for myself to
have that pop up on Monday. And the reason was because I am allowing and I'm always sharing this
with people not because this isn't supposed to be about me, but just like, you know, in case anyone
else has this idea, I am currently allowing a 10 second fear to keep me from doing an activity that will pay enormous
dividends 10 years from now.
And I feel guilt and disgust with myself for allowing that to happen.
And, but sometimes talking about it like this, this is like my therapy.
So, you know, I'm not gonna, when we, next time we talk,
you're going to be like Hanley, you mother effort.
Did you make your phone calls? And if I say no, you no, I give you permission to either virtually or physically bitch slap me,
depending on what venue we're currently in.
Well, I'll say a couple things about it.
Number one, you are not the Lone Ranger.
I think if you asked most insurance agents, meaning like agency staff that are associate agents and stuff like that.
If you took a poll, I guarantee you 90% of the people you polled in the industry about cold calling would say they absolutely hate it.
It's like phones like barbed wire. That is not a unusual, uh, you know, problem to have is to not like cold calling
because people in general don't like rejection. And again, it goes back to some people about
control and not knowing how the conversation is going to go and that kind of thing.
What I always tell myself is when I do cold call somebody is,
what's the worst thing that could happen?
I mean, is he going to come over here and whip my ass?
No, that is not going to happen.
So the worst thing he can – the absolute worst possible outcome would be him
or her getting on the phone and being like, hey, Scott, yeah, we're good.
You know, love my insurance agent.
We've been with them for a long time, and we're just not interested.
That's pretty much the worst thing that's going to happen.
Maybe they hang up on you.
Big freaking deal.
You know, I had a saying a long time ago.
I used to say it all the time when I was cold
calling every day, all day long. I would say, some will, some won't. God bless, who's next?
I don't care if you're the best insurance agent in the world. There will be people that you pick
up the phone and call. Maybe you caught them on a bad day or maybe they just don't you
know sales people call you and i all the time and a lot of times i don't have time to talk to them
yeah and i may come off as being rude or whatever but it's just like hey man i i don't have time to
talk right now buddy i got 16 different things going on so i it's like it's psychology i think
you just have to tell yourself like i said what's the worst thing that could possibly happen?
And then be okay with that.
You know, I like your saying there.
When you said that, a quote from Bull Durham came to my mind.
You know, sometimes you win, sometimes you lose, sometimes it rains.
And that's one of my favorite quotes, like, all the time.
Because it is so true.
And, you know it is so true.
And, you know, it's funny talking to you about this right now.
I feel silly, right?
Because I'm like, this is a silly problem.
But you're you, you have more experience and you're more intelligent than to allow this way, then to allow the silly fear to stop you from growing an agency that is vitally
important to the success
of my family for very, for different reasons. And, and really to my own mental, like I started
this agency to become my own man, because I was sick of being someone else's man. And, um,
and I'm letting something, I'm letting that issue and I'm doing all that, you know, I'm doing all
this crazy shit. I mean, we can spend another
hour telling you about all the crazy shit that I've done to get business. That isn't just the
most direct way, which is pick up the phone and ask somebody if they need help. And it's just nuts
and telling you that I feel silly, but I just got to do the work and I'll tell you I'll tell you one way I got over it
I used to have to make 150 phone calls a day I was in this this uh building called Target
Marketing for a publishing company when I started you had to stay in Target Marketing until the guy
that ran Target Marketing who was a former Navy veteran, and is still a friend of mine,
would tell the powers to be at the publishing company that you were ready to come out of Target Marketing and get your big boy job.
But before then, you'd go down to this metal butler building, and it was probably almost 100 yards long,
at least 75 yards long, and there was just rows and rows and rows and rows of cubicles,
straight lines, people on headsets, calling, calling, you know,
it was, you know, things where you just make phone calls all day.
And they'd keep up with all that.
They'd keep up with success ratio, buying ratio, stuff like that.
But so I had some buddies of mine that started with me when I did.
And we were good friends and we were all crazy as hell so about three of us got
together we came up with this thing where we would bet each other on who
could call a major corporation like Texaco or Amazon and get the CEO of a company on the phone.
And so we would start with like the gatekeeper and we'd all like pile up and watch each other
do this. And sometimes like some gatekeeper for like Johnson and Johnson's medical supply division would give us the cell phone number
of the freaking CEO at Johnson & Johnson, and then you'd call him on his cell phone,
and you really didn't even know what to say to the guy.
The whole object of the game was to just get this dude's cell phone
and call him and be like, hey, bro, what's up?
And every time you'd get one of these guys like, uh,
like Bezos on the phone on their cell phone, they'd be like,
how in the hell did you get my cell phone number?
And we would just die laughing because we're in Tuscaloosa, Alabama,
talking to the CEO of Texaco corporation. Oh God,
it was freaking priceless. But stuff like that kind of Texaco Corporation. Oh, God, it was freaking priceless.
But stuff like that kind of gets you over the hump of calling the dude
that runs an auto supply store and wherever.
I know.
Dude, you know, it's just funny.
I love this stuff.
You know, so here's what I'm going to tell you.
I could talk to you for another hour.
This again, I got to go pick up my kids. Um, but I, I just, I've enjoyed this so much. Um, I, we said at the beginning, I don't
know where I'm going and I had no idea we'd get to where we got, but I'm glad we did. And, um,
and I just, I appreciate you. I appreciate the way you approach business. And, and I'm just going to share, I want to share just a quick 30 second story before we get off the phone here. So it was March. It was the end
of March, early April. I can't remember the exact day. And I got a phone number from all it said was
Alabama with two big red X's on it because us Northerners don't like to pick up phone calls
from Southerners. So you never know what you crazy a-holes are going to say, but I did it.
Um, and unbeknownst to all my Northern training that we get up here. And, uh, I hear this Yahoo
on the phone and he says, how are you doing? And I said, I'm doing okay. And he said, look, man,
he said, whatever you need, if you need me to fly up to
Albany and make cold calls for you, I will. If you need me to get Bradley or a whole army of guys,
I'll do that. He goes, if you need me to max out my credit cards and send you cash in the mail,
I'll do that. He goes, whatever you need, you call me and we'll get it done because you can't fail and you're not going to fail. And you have, you have people who will
help you not fail. And, um, I don't know that you'll ever know how much that phone call meant
to me at that moment. That was, I was in the middle of a dark time. I just started an agency.
And at that time, both COVID and social unrest and all this craziness was going on. It felt like
the phone was never going to ring and I was going to be a failure and I was scared out of my mind. And, uh, and that brief phone, it couldn't have lasted 10
minutes. Um, uh, that was a bright shining light in a time when I needed it. And, uh, you just
never know how much that phone call meant to me. So I just wanted to share with you that it publicly,
uh, how much I appreciated it. I will never forget it. And I will forever be
indebted to you from the standpoint of how much caring and thought and just what that meant to me
at the time. Well, I'm not going to get emotional, or at least I'm going to try not to. But I'll say
this, you know, I was driving down the road that day and I was thinking about you and I was
thinking about the, how hard it was when, for me, when I started my journey just in the insurance
business in general. And then, you know, like you, I've started over a couple of times and,
and, um, and I got to thinking about it, and I thought, you know,
Ryan has provided so much value and given so much of himself to this industry and to the people in this industry,
and I just started thinking about the fact that I just didn't think there was any way that we, and when I say we, I mean all these
guys that are doing podcasting and the quote unquote thought leaders and anti-thought leaders
in the industry that we could let you fail because I just felt like if for some reason you fail,
then we were all going to fail.
It was selfish, I guess, in one way because I thought, you know, he's one of us.
We cannot let him fail.
And so that still stands today.
Whatever you need from me, whatever, whatever, it doesn't matter what it is,
pick up the phone and call me because uh
i love you and i you mean a lot to me a lot more than you know and uh i just on behalf of all the
independent insurance agents out there over the years where you've done videos and you've put out
content and you've done all the stuff that you've done for them, free of charge, by the way, no charge, we can't let you fail in this.
So whatever we have to do is what we're going to do.
So that's all I have to say about that.
I do this only because I just love this industry.
I love the people.
I probably said this
before, and I don't mean over dramatize it. But the place that I sit in my life today,
thankfully, I made a very good decision who I married, I have a tremendous partner.
Besides that decision, being part of this industry is the second best decision I ever
made in my life, because it has taken me from living out in the middle of nowhere,
you know, barely scraping by with two parents who did the best they could, but we never had
anything more than the basics to living a life where I can provide my children the life that
we provide them today. That is because of the insurance industry and because of the people
in the insurance industry, not just the business, but the people who, you know, good and bad, right and wrong
fights and friends and everything we've done together as a space, I feel indebted to this
industry and to the people of this industry. And, and, and, and when, you know, just to get that
note, man, it was it was super meaningful. And I've, I've, I've purposefully held off
sharing that because I wanted to have you on the show when I did because it was just, it was like, you talked before about clean living. I certainly don't live clean,
but that was a moment when I needed a phone call like that. It came and I just appreciate it.
Well, you're welcome. And I told Bradley when you left the industry, whenever it was,
I don't remember when. I told Bradley, I said, he'll be back.
I said, Ryan is passionate about the insurance industry,
and it comes through on his videos, on his blogs, on his blogs,
on the things he writes.
He loves the insurance industry.
You're probably a lot like me.
I don't necessarily love selling insurance every day and dealing with claims and dumbasses that call me for stuff
that I'm like, you just burned your house down
with freaking baller rockets?
Are you freaking kidding me?
But, you know, I do love the industry and I love the people.
Yeah.
And I just never felt like, and I openly said this,
that I didn't think that you were going to be able to stay away from
it because I did see that passion and videos and the things you did. And I thought, man,
wherever his place is in the industry, whatever little, you know, part or big part he plays is,
he'll be back because he loves it and he loves the people here. And I
think you've made a wise decision doing what you've done. And if I had to bet $100,000 in poker
chips, I would bet them on you to be successful. You're going to be. Well, thank you, man. All
right. With that, brother, that a little sappy ending there. Love you. Thank you. I love you. Thank you. Thank you. Close twice as many deals by this time next week.
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