The Ryan Hanley Show - RHS 124 `- Ciara Gravier on Winning the Start-Up Agency Game
Episode Date: November 11, 2021Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.comIn this episode of The Ryan Hanley Show, Ciara Gravier CIC, CRM, CCIC, PWCA, CPIA, Founder and CEO of The Bunker Insurance & Risk Management j...oins the show to share all her secrets to winning the start-up independent agency game. Ciara is someone I’ve personally been a fan of for a long time and it was an absolute pleasure to be able to spend time and learn more about her story. You're going to love this episode...Episode Highlights: Why did Ciara establish her own agency? (5:15) Did Ciara ever regret letting the Allstate brands go? (8:09) Ciara shares what they did when she first started the agency. (12:41) Ciara mentions that they were able to assist others in starting their own businesses from the ground up. (15:16) Ciara discusses some of the challenges of not having direct appointments. (18:28) Ciara explains why including business in the books has been difficult for her. (25:02) Ciara explains why engaging in the killing commercial is one of the best things their agency has ever done. (30:53) Ciara mentions that she enjoyed the podcast with Ryan and James Jenkins. (44:26) Ciara and Ryan discuss Crypto. (51:42) Ciara shares why she believes that her agency is on the right track. (1:04:04) Key Quotes: “We're able to help these people find an attorney, find an accountant, you know, set up their businesses from the ground up. They can trust us.” - Ciara Gravier “So we joined Killing Commercial and that has really been the best thing that we've done.” - Ciara Gravier “What's great about this industry is that everyone can achieve success however they want. And everyone has a different roadmap to it.” - Ciara Gravier Resources Mentioned: Ciara Gravier LinkedIn The Bunker Insurance & Risk Management Reach out to Ryan Hanley Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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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. We'll be talking with Ciara Gravier, the founder of The Bunker Insurance down in Florida,
doing tremendous stuff, commercial lines agency.
Love Ciara.
She's an absolute killer, great at branding, great insurance agent, great agency owner,
and someone I've wanted to have on the show for a long time, and glad that we finally
got a chance to spend some time.
I just, I think the world of the way she thinks, tremendous respect for what she's doing
and just very happy to share her thoughts, her experience, and her story with you guys. You're
going to love this episode. Before we get there, I want to give a quick shout out to our newest
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Here we go.
Hey.
Hey, what's up?
How are you?
I'm good.
How's it going? It's Monday. Yeah. You know, trying to solve all the problems that came up from Friday at five o'clock till
this morning. Yeah. Same. Yeah. I can't believe we weren't connected on LinkedIn.
I always pull up someone and I saw, I was like, Oh shoot. I got it.
So we're remedying that problem. Yeah.
Immediately. No, I'm excited to have you on the show. It's, um, uh,
you know, I've been a fan from afar for a while and just obviously uh every time i talk to carothers
he's like oh see what cr is doing oh see what cr is now it's like oh i follow on social so um
what i said except linkedin apparently
although yeah because it's funny how and this is just a funny thing about the internet like
if you follow some someone one place which i think i think the place is probably linkedin
and facebook i know we're connected in those two places you just kind of like assume that
you're connected in all the places everywhere right yeah yeah because you know in my mind if
someone did i mean not that anyone like goes around and, insurance agent, are you connected to this other insurance?
Not that that's like a video or like a game show or whatever.
But yeah, I would have said 100%.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
But all good.
But no, I appreciate you taking some time.
I know you're busy and running the agency and everything.
But I think you have a super cool story.
I know you've told it on David's podcast, but no one listens to that podcast.
I want to get it out to the broader market. And, um, uh, and I just, I just wanted to,
you know, I got a whole bunch of questions I want to ask and stuff. So I have some questions for
you on it. Hey, you can fire away too. I got a couple. This is a, this is a conversation. It is not a, uh, an inquisition.
So you can, uh, you can flip the script whenever you feel you want to, but I guess my, my first
question is always, um, in, in scenarios like yours, like why, why, why start your own agency?
It's so frigging hard.
We started around the same time. I guess I started a couple months before you.
Yeah. I think you're just like six months before November. We had started a little on paper. We
started it earlier, but we weren't really doing anything. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So that's not even
six months. Cause I was like five months, maybe four or five months. I was very beginning of March of 2020 is when we launched.
So, yeah, I was like November 2019. Yeah. You know, we've had several agencies in my family.
Like, you know, my dad had small states before and my parents always worked for corporate America and they were tired of being abused really in that and being overworked. And
at 49, my dad was like, I've had enough and I'm going to open an Allstate. And so I was with him
during those long, hard days of, we started from scratch, zero. We didn't buy a book,
you know, and we built it up. And then we, we figured out that every Allstate agent has an
independent on the side. So then I opened up my independent i was upstairs he was downstairs and so he would just you know walk
at that time people still came into the office right so like he would walk people upstairs
um and then we there was way more money to be made on this side so we got rid of the all-states
we had two locations got rid of those, kept the independent.
And then he ended up taking that over and he sold and now he's retired.
And and then I was like, well, what am I going to do? Right. I'm still young.
Yeah. So he always made it a point to tell me, listen, if you're going to stay in this industry, make it your career.
So he he was one of the people, he was always after me,
get your designations. You're going to have to set yourself apart because you're young
and you're a woman. It's, it is what it is. So that's why, you know, I have a couple of
designations. He was like, you just have to show that you you're invested in this as your career.
It's not like you're trying it out, you know? So that's what I did. And then what am I going to do? You know, I, I liked the agency
side. I hadn't really worked for anyone ever outside of, out of high school. Yeah. I had a
job in high school at a veterinarian office, which I loved because I love dogs, but, you know,
from working for my dad and responding to him as a boss to going, I've never done it.
Yep. I've been very fortunate with that. So he was just like, just be your own boss. You can do it.
We've done it twice. This is what you know. And I was like, and he, he, you know, gave me the
platform to try it again. He, he always pushes me to just try it again. And I'm like, well, yeah,
I think I should. And then here I am doing commercial only. Yeah. Okay. So this might be, this might be trivial, but did you ever regret letting the
all state brands go? Was that a good lead gen or not? Or no. Yeah. Never regret it ever. Yeah.
We regret it ever. We learned a lot with all state as far as underwriting. It was, I think that
it's very good training for someone that has no knowledge of insurance.
Yeah.
Very good training because the, at least at that time, I'm talking 20 years ago, you know,
they were very hands-on, almost two hands-on.
And then once you got the hang of it and they still were hands-on, it's like, all right,
I got it.
You know, I know how to do it now, but we learned a lot and we've, we've been very successful
with kind of being underwriters
upfront. You know, we don't write bad business, even at our independent, we never wrote like
non-standard business ever. We don't do that now ever. Like it's just, it does teach you some of
the initial underwriting, how to make a complete submission, how to just, you know, do things right. So we were very appreciative of our time with Allstate. Yeah. Why do you think a couple is five in South Florida?
It's like a South Florida thing. Cause you said a couple of designations and you have at least
five designations. So I'm wondering, is that like a Southida thing where you say a couple and you know i just hold up okay let's be okay the cac and the crm you can get both
you know together yeah so i was like well i mean i have the time i might as well do that
so that was a two for one guys yeah the only one if you had if you threw the cpcu on the end of it
one you'd run out of c's i don't
think that i don't think you can use any more c's i'm gonna get rid of the last one i'm gonna get
rid of the last one that's like the one that i got first and it was like it's like a it's nothing
it's not like real yeah the cpcu is crazy i passed the first one and then i was just like i did it
when when we had sold and
I was like, well, if I'm going to become an underwriter, you know, maybe that one, that one
is good for that. And I did, I passed the first course. And then the second one, it was like
actuarial stuff. And I'm like, I'm out. Yeah. I'm out. And it's self-taught. Yeah. So it's
difficult. Yeah. It's very, very, that one's very hard at my wife's agency.
One of the women who is, is she has a CP, she got her CPCU and it took her like a decade. And
that's not because she's not brilliant. I mean, she's very, very, she's awesome at her job. She's
awesome. I mean, to be honest with you, if I could hire her away from my wife, I would, but,
but it just was that hard and time consuming
and the self-study.
And it was just,
it was like a huge deal
once you got it.
And then you buy the books
and then if you don't do it
within that window,
they could update the material.
You got to rebuy it.
So it's, I was like, it's enough.
I will say,
and this is,
I'm going to develop some haters
out there.
I don't mean it.
I don't mean this
in a negative sense.
It is just an observation that I've made is that people with the CPCU, I think, tend to struggle if they're not
of the right disposition in sales only because they're taught underwriting, which is saying,
no, here's all the reasons why you need to say no. Where sales is, here's all the reasons why I think you should say yes.
And I have found, now again, I'm going to get 10 freaking LinkedIn DMs.
I sell a million dollars in revenue every year, Ryan, like on my CPC.
Yeah, I'm just saying in general, broad sweeping stroke.
I feel like it is a designation, unlike the CIC, which I found incredibly helpful for sales, incredibly helpful.
And to a certain extent, I wish I still had, I'm a dumb ass. And I, when I went to
trust a choice, I let it, I let it lapse. Yeah. I'm an idiot. And if I, if I, I wish I could
have kept it going. I know I really do. But I've just found the CPCU sometimes is a little no based
because we're a little underwriting heavy.
So I mean, I only did the first one, but I can understand how it's useful in that space
more than on the sales side for sure. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Cool. So so another thing
I want to get, I want to talk a little bit about the brand too, but the decision to go,
so Allstate is obviously highly, I mean, you have some commercial, but definitely I'm sure
you were writing tons of personal.
Personal.
Right. And then you get the independent. I'm sure you picked up a little bit of commercial, but probably still did a lot of personal.
When you started the bunker, you went fully commercial. Do you do any personal at all?
We did. We started doing some commercial because that's what we know. We did some commercial
at our last agency. We bought a book. It had a couple of large accounts. So, so we did,
we know how to do commercial, but not like, well, that's why we joined killing commercial,
not the middle market stuff of trying to get in there. Like that's a whole nother thing that we
did not do. Um, but we did, uh, do, I did start with some homeowners, but you know, it's impossible to
get appointments here. Yeah. Almost nearly impossible. So I had some relationships with
some of the homeowners carriers that had been with us in Salt State and they came through for me
real big. That's great. But as soon as COVID came, they shut down. Yeah. Everything is going to
citizens, which is the state. And I do not write with citizens. I don't want to, and it's a hassle and they pay you nothing. Yeah. Um,
so I was like, I'm not going to open this agency to be a citizen's agency. Yep. So then I, I,
I checked this morning. I have a 4% of my book is personal. I have about nine policies.
That's it. That's pretty similar to us. I actually
just have, I have, it's funny. So I have this guy, uh, he's a nice enough guy, but he has a,
he has a $900 auto policy and a $481 homeowners policy with us. And he wants to talk to me specifically. And I said, Hey, Robert, can you talk to Leslie
on my team? She has the answers that you're looking for, which is basically like, dude,
you out, you're paying nothing for your insurance. Stay where you are. Like, especially because rates
in New York, we just got an announcement, you know, we're probably going to see 15 to 20%
increases in rates, which we're going to see around the country, but you know, that that's
all coming. So, um, but like, so it's just like, stay right where you are.
You're in perfect. And she says it. And then he writes me this whole big email about how
he's concerned about his relationship with our agency. And I emailed my wife and I'm like,
do you want this guy? Like I will be, or this account to you right now. Like you can have him.
He's perfect. You know what I mean? Like, let let him like you will crush this guy and he'll be happy with you he's not gonna be happy with me you know what i mean
so it's like i i'm with you i feel like it's so difficult the deeper i get into doing commercial
and and doing it better right i'm not gonna say i do it right yet because there's a lot of things
i'd like to tweak but certainly doing it better every day. Man, the less I'm less, I have zero interest in person.
And here, yes, the premiums are big.
They're big.
I mean, a homeowner's policy is five grand, right?
But dealing with the mortgage brokers and the realtors and the closings, and I don't
have the staff to keep up with it and the service behind it.
And then the competition, it's just, I feel like there's
not much extra value that you can add in that space. Personally, I feel like in the commercial
space, especially because we are in South Florida, there's a lot of people that come from other
countries that have money and have, and are coming here to open businesses and they have no idea how
anything works here. So I feel like we have, I mean, we speak Spanish.
All of us here speak Spanish.
So we're able to help these people find an attorney,
find an accountant, you know,
set up their businesses from the ground up.
Right.
They can trust us.
That's the problem.
They come here and they don't know who to trust.
So I feel like, and then it just makes me feel good
because I feel like I'm actually helping someone.
I'm not just slinging a homeowner's policy.
Here's your deductibles.
You know, like I like it way more.
Have you got into the startup scene at all?
I know Miami is one of the fastest growing startup and tech scenes in the entire country.
Have you been able to tap into that at all?
I haven't yet, but it is on my list.
I've been noticing that and seeing the influx.
I just saw like last week, I think it was, there's about like 16
companies coming in. Yeah. Yeah. I know that that's picking up. I mean, I probably know a
little bit too much about, not the specific companies, just a couple of the podcasts that
I listened to that are in the crypto space, not necessarily about crypto in particular,
but they're just startup related. And these guys are just talking about how there are just so many companies that are either opening
up large offices here or moving offices here, or that are like founders that would have normally
started up in Silicon Valley are now founding in South Florida for a whole bunch of reasons.
If you start your company there, you're not having to deal with California taxes and regulation. And, um, the other side is it's
just such a budding new scene. It's just, it's cool. And you're, you know, you're right there
Fort Lauderdale, you know, you're basically right there. So that's cool. It's not far. Yeah. It's,
it's definitely on my, on my list. Like I, I, I follow a couple of hashtags on Instagram of like
women in tech, Miami tech and stuff. And I'm seeing some of the events, which I'm going to go to.
Yeah, that's cool.
To pop up.
Yeah.
I find that that tech stuff is really interesting.
We don't have a ton of accounts.
I say all this to you and then, you know, obviously I'm not drinking my own Kool-Aid.
We have New York, you know, it was only two and a half hours from here.
I've gotten a few accounts from New York City that are startup tech related.
And they are really fun to work on.
I find it a very interesting class because- Who do you write them with?
So we've written Chubb and Hartford have been the majority.
And then the tech E&O, Chubb has a tech, you know, product.
They just, that's, that's actually pretty good. I like it, but, um, they tend to be fairly selective
in who they'll, they'll, they'll write it with. So then we have, I've pretty much written all
the rest of the tech, you know, has been with Beasley. So Beasley has been the tech, you know,
for us yeah
I don't I don't have any direct appointments like that so I have to go through brokers so it's a
challenge for me to even get familiar like I asked for like uh specimens of the policies and stuff
but I live in like excess and surplus world yeah yeah so, it's been, that's been a challenge for me to, you know,
and then you have these underwriters and these brokers that say that they do it all. Yes,
they can do it. But like, that's why I'm, I'm, I started working with pro writers and they've been
very, very helpful. They're reliable. My underwriter there will take the time, explain
things to me. Like I've really really enjoyed it my relationship so far with them
because of that because they're the specialists I really like pro writers um I I use RT specialty
to get to Beasley because Pro Writers doesn't have Beasley yet but other than that Beasley
relationship that's I've gone to Pro Writers quite Pro W pros has been the big one i i agree with you i think
brian thornton and oh geez what is her name uh man our direct our direct underwriters they've
just been they have been uh very good very professional i like that they have multiple
carriers they can walk you through i think that's tremendous so i I don't know. I, I felt like I,
I, you know, I, I feel bad that you don't have direct appointments.
I can't as, as it's got to find a way there's gotta be a way, right?
I mean, what, what is the, why would they say no?
What are they saying no to?
Well, I mean, progressive,
I had a book with progressive at my other agency for 12 years
on their special tier commission.
And they won't give me an appointment because I don't have three years of, because I'm not
an agency owner for three years.
Progressive is the worst though.
But I wrote business, good business with you.
I'm on a higher tier commission for 12 years.
So you're going to take someone, someone that will show you that, okay, I've owned an agency
for three years, but you've never seen me produce. Yeah. That doesn't make any sense.
Is it the South? Is it the Southern Florida thing? That's what it is.
Yeah. Because none of these people write property here either. So it's like they,
so even I have access to like the Hartford through Halcyon, which is also owned through
Brown and Brown. So I don't like to use them. So, you know, like I'm, I feel like I can't trust them with my stuff.
You know, what might be a good fit for you is, um, uh, the Simon agency, which is they're, uh,
they're just a straight wholesaler out of New York city, but they have, they have next,
they have Hartford, they have Amtrust. They have, and I'll tell you for small
liability policies, next is great. Um, did you hook up with Coterie? I did. Yeah. Coterie is
great too. I'm very happy that they added hired and not owned. Now I will use them. Yes. That,
that was, I know the other thing that I wanted them to add, and I think they're coming out with
it in early 2022 is a sublimit for sexual abuse for some of their like professional and sports and camp line, like sports camps.
Like I wrote a tennis instructor the other day who does events and it was perfect.
You get your GL, your PL, it's all together.
Like it's super clean, super easy.
But then we had to write the sexual abuse on like a separate form, which, which
sucked, you know what I mean? Cause then it's just like another thing, which, you know, but, but
I'm very happy though. I have them and I haven't used them because I need that hired and on, on,
but I'm glad that they came out with it. It is very difficult to write a general liability
policy today and not have a hired and on, on endorsement on it. Like that's, you know, unless they,
unless they have that, that separate auto policy, you know, you're,
I don't know. I feel like.
Like, so down here with the bops, right. It's,
it's a challenge because any of those Bob cares,
which there's not many still doing it. They don't, they won't do the wind.
Yeah. So it's like,
I can't move them
there and then have not have the hired or not own i have to give them at least that and then i do
the separate property yep yeah that makes a lot of sense i'm very happy that they came out with
that though that's good yeah that was a good one well i think simon would be a good one um well
i'll send you some other recommendations offline that i mean these are these are, these are not tried and these aren't like set in stone.
They're just some of the, I do have an Amtras appointment for the comp.
I have some direct, I have an Amtras and ICW.
Amtras is good.
Yeah.
I wish, but they won't do anything else.
Amtrasism is, oh, they, they haven't opened up the rest.
Just beat them over the head.
Just pound them over the head.
Pound them over the head.
I just need a daycare, right?
A daycare.
I have a direct appointment with Amtrust only for
workers comp. I got a quote through Wesco for the daycare through Halcyon. I can't do it direct.
Just here's, here's my method. And for, for, for marketing reps, I will literally email them
every, I'll just make their life hell. I'll just email, email, email, email. Here's another account
you lost. Here's another account you lost. Here's another account you lost. And finally they're just like,
what? I got to get more aggressive with that. It's a button push for them. This is, you know
what I mean? All the guy goes, it goes into a system and he goes, the bunker open. I mean,
it's not like, and in their mind, they're like, Oh, we need to make sure that she's going to
write enough comp with us. Come on. I don't get it. I don't get it. And here's the, this is, this is what I said to him. I said, bro,
if you open up your stupid comp restrictions and you make it so I can
actually write accounts, I'll write accounts.
But if you say the first nine things I sent to Amtrust, they declined.
And I was like, guys, this is not how you start a relationship.
Like, you know, you can't, you know, but they're like, well, you're new.
So we're, we got a heavier pen. I'm like, wait, wait, just think about that.
You want me to get rolling with you? You just sent me an email that said, Hey, let's get rolling.
Right. Like some stupid marketing email. And you climb the first nine things because I'm new and
you're unsure about my submissions. I'm like, where's the logic here? Where's the logic. Now
I will say once we had
these talks and stuff, um, we, we've been, we've been, we've been writing more and more with Amtrust,
but, um, it just, I just, I don't know. I have no problem talking smack about how these carriers
operate at our level. Right. Like, because, because, and this is why, you know, it's a big
game because if you add if you like were swinging some
like three million dollar book they would do anything that you wanted they would
anything what do you want us to do we'll do it it's like i mean i had it though yeah i did have
it you know they have someone's track record like you have it should it should not be that it
shouldn't matter yeah it really should but i mean and I just did come through and it's like the same rep. Our rep is super nice, very helpful.
Yeah. So I'm glad that I have them on my side, but it's that, that has been a challenge for me.
Um, you know, putting business on the books because my, my, my, my arms are tied.
Yeah. The, the, that, that extended, that extended relationship is tough. That's one of the reasons. So I will only work with excess lines brokers now who have quote bind issue platforms. So like we're really developing relationships with Pathpoint and RT specialties version of that, which is RT connector. So now I love these two platforms
and I won't say that I have a winner or loser yet. They both have advantages and disadvantages.
I'm perfectly fine using both of them. I like both of them. I think both are doing a good job.
I just think I'm very happy and excited about this movement to where like some of these smaller excess lines accounts and property accounts in particular,
like I had a guy he needed,
he needed $50,000 in property coverage for chemicals that he stored that
weren't necessarily hazardous, but they were, you know, chemicals.
And who the heck is going to write that? So, you know, it's excess lines.
Well, normally now I got to put together a 125. I'm going to put together a 140 or whatever it is. And then, you know chemicals and you know who the heck is going to write that so you know it's excess lines well normally now i got to put together a 125 i'm gonna put together a 140 or whatever it is and then
you know and that's so much time and with connector you just jump in you know 10 seconds
later you're like oh 700 bucks perfect let's go and um that's a game changer i think a lot of this
stuff it is especially for someone like me that I have
everything I do has to wait. I have to wait. Like I got this one really good underwriter now that
he's young and he like, I have his cell phone. I can text him. I call him and he turns things
around for me same day, which has had a substantial change in our agency because now he's my first
choice. Yeah. I don't have like, even the prior relationships that I have,
it's just like, I can't wait two days for a quote anymore. I just can't.
Yeah. I, I really struggle with the,
I had a, I had a carrier give me the,
the franchise value talk the other day. Just just don't do you understand the franchise value
of having an appointment with us and i was like no what am i get what does that get me you know
what i mean like like what am i how much am i are you increasing the multiple on my when someone
buys me because i have an appointment with you i don't know yeah i guess i don't i don't understand
and and and um and they were responding to my beef which was they were like well how come we're
not getting as many submissions as we did earlier you know like when you first were starting and i
said well i've taken on a couple more carriers and they respond to me quicker and i could care
less if i write them with them or you and it's like, they had, they were blown away. Like they were like, what,
what do you mean? You don't care. I'm like, I don't care if I placed a business with you or
them and whoever gets back to me first is who gets the, like what you're the paper, you know,
the words on the piece of paper and your contract are almost verbatim to the words on the paper and
their contract. So I don't, I don't care if it's with you or with them.
It's whoever gets back to me first. If I got to wait three days for you and they're getting back
to me in a day, they're getting the business. That's there's no, I don't care about franchise
value. It doesn't mean anything to me. This morning, I just got a declination for a workers
comp account that had an effective date of 10 22. We sent that to them in September. I just this
morning, I sent it to Guillermo. I said, just in case you were waiting. So here's your declination.
Well, here's the worst part. Someone was working on that. Like, that's the crazy part.
There is someone at a carrier who's who was working on that account morning at six o'clock
in the morning. They're like, Oh, I got to get this out declined you know and and they're wasting and you're like i didn't
even know that this was still out there they had already declined it it's it's baffling it's it's
it's baffling and then you get the uh again we're just trashing carriers right now but i think
i think they need general ribbing it's i mean we mean, we, we're all partners. I get it. We all need each other, but like the same point,
like, I don't know, like I got this from my chub guy the other day, Ryan,
you don't understand.
We're having a hard time staffing because of COVID I'm like, bro, we're,
we're almost 24 months into this thing. Like you need to figure it out.
Like we're, you know what I mean? Like, come on your job, throw a freaking.
Indeed zip recruiter, LinkedIn, LinkedIn recruiting.
Like there you go. Go get some.
I mean, that's not an excuse at that level.
Oh, I just was like, bro, this is taking way too long. Right.
You don't understand. He's the nicest guy too. He's the nicest guy.
Yeah. He's the nicest guy. I have no beef with him. I just like, man, cause I know it's not, he's not the guy too he's like yeah he's the nicest guy i have no beef with him i just
like man because i know it's not he's not the one doing the staff and making the decisions he's just
messenger but i'm like dude i don't care no everyone's having the same issues you're not i
am like we're having the issues of of finding people so i mean we can't tell that to our
customers yeah so um so what uh what stuff is working for you like what and i can't tell that to our customers. Yeah. So, um, so what, uh, what stuff is working
for you? Like what, and I don't mean that like a bunch of stuff isn't working just, you know,
what is, what is, so you've, you've kind of had this very unique career and that you, you haven't
had to go work for it. You've been able to kind of craft and have a lot of autonomy and insight
into running a business. And you've seen the personal lines and you've seen captive and you've
seen independent, and now you're fully commercial, essentially your own agency.
Like what is the stuff that's really hitting home for you?
What do you get excited about?
You know, what is it for you?
Yeah, we, we, so we joined killing commercial and we have our, you know, what we're doing
there.
And that has really been the best thing that we've done because I did some commercial,
but it was also either we bought it in
the book, it was a referral, we never went and got it ourselves, like those large, large middle
market accounts. So learning how to do that has been very good. And I'm very, I mean, COVID has
been a terrible thing. But I think if COVID wouldn't have happened, I don't know that I would
have done, you know, made the investment into think if COVID wouldn't have happened, I don't know that I would have done,
you know, made the investment into killing commercial because I would have been busy
doing homeowners policies. So I think that for our agency, you know, we, we use that time to
really learn how to get it, our foot in the door and the process down and all of that stuff. And
the lingo to speak, um, We just had, we didn't get
the account, but it was our first one of the killing commercial, you know, target that we
were going after. And it was us versus Brown and Brown, which was the incumbent. And, you know,
we asked all the right questions we did. You know, we asked her, listen, if we're going to,
if she had a mod above a one, we did everything. It was textbook. You know, and know we asked her listen if we're gonna she had a mod above a one we did everything it was
text you know and then we asked the question listen you don't have an insurance problem
you know you need risk management you're gonna you're they're gonna close your doors
if you don't get this under control yeah because she had a lot auto losses too
and she said no she said she was not going to sign the vr and we were like okay well
we did it anyway we felt felt like we needed to get
that experience at that level. And also, especially going up against Brown and Brown and another
really, really large agency down here in South Florida. So we were like, let's, let's just go
through the process and learn. And at least it gives us the confidence to ask the questions.
She was, she was helpful. She, she wasn't like, no, I'm not going to send you anything. I'm not going to sign that. She was helpful giving us all the information we, we needed.
And we even asked her, what's your connection to your Brown and Brown person? Cause they,
she had just gotten to them last year. So this was her first renewal with them. So we're like,
okay, she's not connected. There's not like a relationship there. So, you know, she ended up
staying with them. And then when we're sitting there presenting to her
what we had she's like oh you know i do a lot of work for them you're electricians
why do you waste your time there yeah i mean you know but it that that experience has already given
us the the knowledge of how to ask the questions and how to get our foot in the door.
It was necessary.
We, we learned a lot.
It was a win for us anyway, because right after that, we, we, we've realized that the
way we used to do commercial where it's like, someone would call us and be like, Hey, you
know, like I have, I need a GL.
I need this.
Okay.
Well, here's some supplementals, which is torture.
Here's some supplementals, fill it out.
We'll talk.
Now we got a phone call for a referral
from, from a lady, an elevator company. She got hit with an $80,000 audit because her,
her agent misrepresented the sales. And we're like, well, we can't help you until you hire us.
You know, before I would have tried to fix it and then hope she gave me the policies.
So I think that doing business this way is way more fun, way more fun and obviously profitable
because I'm not going to work for you until you hire me. Yep. So I think that that's the biggest
piece. I got a call, um, last week I sent an email saying, Hey, I know you probably already
got your renewal, but you're paying 40% more on your comp. Did you know what has your agent told
you? The lady called me crying on the phone. My agent is not helping me. I'm getting non-renewed.
We need help. Can you help us? I got her non-renewal lifted because I wrote a narrative
about them. Lost runs, the mod report, everything, a submission this tall. And I got her non-renewal lifted because I wrote a narrative about them. Lost runs, the mod report, everything, a submission this tall.
And I got her non-renewal lifted and that her agent couldn't do that.
Yeah. That's awesome.
That makes me feel like I saved these people's business.
Yeah.
That warms my heart.
Then I was like, this is what I love to do for sure.
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I think that's awesome. I think that's I love that part too. I love the and I think I think that's awesome. I, um, I, I think that's, I love that part too. I love the,
and I think, I think that's probably why most of the people listening level we do, uh, is,
is when you get to like really be a true value provider, problem solver. It's great. I struck
what I struggle with as a business owner is that I want to help both types of people. So I also get off on building the systems and
processes around helping that person who's like calling you, who's buying their first truck or,
or their car. And like, man, can some of those be a pain in the ass? Like, oh,
it can be such a pain in the ass. But I wrote down really early in Rogue's history, this concept of
no customer left behind that I'd been in so many rooms. And I'm not saying this is what you're
saying by any regards, but I've been in so many rooms where agents would say things like those small accounts, like I don't want, you know, or, you know, excess lines.
We don't do that.
Or, you know, this stuff.
And I completely get it.
Like, I completely get why they say that.
Like, it can be a hassle.
And people who have $500 bops, you're making 50 bucks on it 60 bucks
total remind them for their payments yes and their payments and they still gonna call you and i and i
i get all that and then there's this other part of me and maybe it's a maybe i don't know what it
is maybe it's a personality failing but like the fact that other agents, that agents look at that stuff and don't want it makes me want it because I see opportunity.
Like we're really getting into excess lines big time.
And we're writing a lot of it.
Mostly because other agents don't want to deal with it.
So it's not. So, for example, we don't have to deal with it. So it's not.
So for example, we don't have a threshold, right. And, and I'm not,
we've even scaled down the people that we were going after because we feel like
we can't provide value. Like for example, if they have, you know,
a board that decides I don't feel like I'm useful. Yeah.
Which I probably shouldn't say that about myself.
Yeah, you probably would be.
I probably would be, but I just don't, I don't, I like to help.
Like I said, the, you know, we have a manufacturer here that's from South America.
It's a hundred thousand dollar account, him and his partner.
And they call us for everything because they need help.
That's what, that is what I love that, that, that business owner that has, you know,
has the money to do it and, but really needs some guidance. Yeah. That's really, and it's usually
not, you know, I'm not making, you know, 25,000 in revenue on those accounts, but I'm okay with
that. I'm fine with that. And I'm with you. I, I think that, I think, I, I think there's just a lot of, especially in
small commercial, which everyone defines differently, but I think in small commercial
for, for me, for our agency, we define anything under 150,000 and premium is small commercial.
That's our kind of our space. And then anything over one 50, we would call middle market. I think that's still probably small for some true,
certainly for middle market shops, but for us, that's, that's what.
I would say, yeah, mine's probably lower.
Well, so we, so we have,
what we call select business is 25,000 improvement under that is very
transactional. It is, what's the problem?
Here's the solution.
Do you want it or you don't want it?
We have a very defined process, very defined funnel.
It's like, it's step by step by step by step by step.
It's, you know what I mean? It is get through, get through it fast.
And that 25,000 and under, we call that select.
Anything over 25,000 in premium, we call rogue premier.
And that is what we call true small. That's probably true small business. Anything under
$25,000 is probably micro. I don't know. You know what I mean? I guess micro really is
whatever you define. This is how we define it. But then over that $150,000, we would have to
put some thought into, and we only have one account at
that level right now. We would have to put some real thought today, today's version of Rogue into
whether or not we were willing to take that on only because I would be like you, like I would
be nervous that we're not set up to handle that kind of account today. That's how I feel. Yeah. I'm not,
I'm not set up for it and not saying one day I, I mean,
the goal is to be set up for it right now. I'm not.
And then like how much service comes, especially if they're contractors,
if they're manufacturers, he, the service wise, it's better.
But if it's a contractor that size, the service is heavy. Yeah.
We have one that we charge we actually do a policy fee on
because they do so many friggin i have i have such mixed emotions on on the fees and
i have come around to them i just told them last week i was like you know what maybe i'm just not
meant to make money but i feel bad i feel I feel like it's my job to do that.
So I used to a hundred percent agree with you.
Policy fees are for scoundrels and the whole thing. Like I,
you know what I mean? Like, that's the way I felt like,
why are you feeing this? We get paid a commission. And, um,
I will say, you know, again,
this is not advocating one tool over another, but AgencyZoom released this service pipeline feature, which tracks time per task.
So now I can actually see if we put a task in one of the service pipelines, how long it takes to go through, how many we've had, how many touches.
It's pretty cool.
It's not like Salesforce in depth,
but it's pretty, it's, it's pretty in depth. Yeah. And, um, two things that I saw were
CUI requests and billing where our two biggest time sucks solved a lot of the billing issues
by moving over to ascend, which is just a payment tool, which we like um helped us a lot uh but but for the cois
there's some ways to streamline it and we're working on those but man it's just some of these
accounts we're talking like three four cois a day for one account when i see that i saw that and i
just said to them i said god i said to this because it's you know it's comp, so we're only making like 9%.
And I'm doing the math on this.
And I'm like, we're getting killed.
Like absolutely killed.
So you don't have a portal?
You don't have like a self-service portal?
I don't have one yet either.
We're on now, certs.
Okay.
People have been giving me a lot of crap lately for trashing now, certs okay uh i've been i've people have been giving me a lot of crap lately for trashing now certs i don't want i don't have any so and i have hawksoft as my managing system they have
a portal i guess but i haven't yeah i'm really hoping that something like glove box
is is awesome i'm just i just assume it's gonna take a while because I know they're not there yet.
So I'm not really, there is a thing, it is not great. So we basically, our VA that we have
through agency VA, his number one, two, and three responsibility in our agency is COIs.
So when one comes in, he drops whatever else he's doing, unless he's also doing
a COI at that point. And he does that COI. So we're able to do our right since he's basically,
but that's a full human body task to basically one thing. And then he just backfills some smaller
tasks when he has time. And so we policy feed that account and they didn't even blink at it.
They were like, oh, that makes sense. I was actually waiting for that because we send so many requests to you. Didn't even blink.
It's. And I was like, so am I on the dark side now or am I an idiot? Yeah. I don't know.
I don't know. I, I'm struggling with that. I'm struggling with it.
Bad. Honestly, I just feel, I feel like,
I feel like I could use that against the agency that does charge them.
Now the difference is you, so this, and this is,
cause I thought about that too, cause this is, this is a tough topic. And I, and I get that.
And there's people that are out there that are listening to this going,
I policy fee everything. And there's people out there that are going,
I would never, I'm with, I'm with you. I would never policy feeling. I here's what I would say.
If one of my competitors took this account and didn't charge a policy fee, I would be fine with
it. Cause I would know that they were losing money. They're losing. Yeah. Yeah. They're not,
I just, I've done the math and I just, the reason, and I don't think the policy fee was outrageous.
It's not like I did some crazy number. It just, I did the math on the amount of time and how much we were making. And we are, we were
losing money without the policy fee. So for a rewrite, I understand I'm down with the policy
fee because if you cancel and you're one of those people, you deserve it. I'm down with that. Um,
I feel like it's just, I'm, I'm struggling with it. And you know, I've, I've, the podcast
that you had with James Jenkins was so, so good. The one about like, are you running a business or
are you running an insurance agency? Ever since I heard that podcast, I have, it is a struggle
because I am an insurance agent first. I'm trying to do this side and I'm trying to do this side
better. You know, and like now at renewal time, I sit with my renewalist and
I think, okay, well, what am I making on this account? Is it worth it? I'm thinking in revenue
now, which it's been a shift, but I feel like I just, and it would, it would, it multiplies pretty
quickly too with the policy fees. So it really does add up. So I'm trying to think.
I think you just set a, I think if you can get a close calculation on revenue
for a specific account, I think it's just a calculation. I mean, I would not have, I mean,
in all transparency to everyone listening, I would not have policy feed this account if the
math didn't make it unprofitable. And the, and the, the,
the commission on the policy per the time that it was taking with the number
of COIs we were getting, it just made it unprofitable.
And that's what the VA who, who, you know,
it's not like we're paying a full-time client success person who's licensed in
the U S. So if this was a, this is a client success person,
someone here in the States and we were paying States rates, we would have been getting slaughtered.
I mean, it was, you know I think this is the hardest part of our business is one, the self-awareness and obviously
you already have it of, am I, am I a producer agency owner or an agency owner who sometimes
has to produce? I think that's a really, I think that's very tough self-awareness question for a
lot of people. Um, and, and, uh, I recently had to let a producer,
one of my producers go, um, thankfully I hired another one on the same day who just started
today, who I'm super excited. Shout out to Will. Um, and I, so, so like the last two weeks has
been all hands on deck one. I don't know if you've ever, and you probably have, and many people
probably have, but this is the first time I had to have to look through a producer's email inbox who you had
to let go it's like you you're essentially like knifing yourself in the chest like every 30 seconds
because you're like wow there's a bind order he just never forwarded onto the service team
what the you know i mean you're like as you're chugging freaking whiskey on the side to
calm many things undone yeah you're like how is this how is this person existing like no wonder
that's why yeah that's why i just finished reading traction and i mean there's two of us here you
know so it's a lot where i don't i'm trying to like scale it down to me for what i can implement
right now but that's one of the things too, about like firing quickly. Like if you, if you mess, if you were back and forth about letting
this person go, I mean, how much, how much did you miss of what they didn't do? Yes. Like it's,
here's the crazy part. So I'll just, I'm, I'm candid about numbers, but like, so he was, his goal was like 65,000 in premium. Right. Which to me felt like commercial.
Yeah. It felt like a layup layup. I mean, we have 215 leads a month that come into our agency
inbound. This is a layup. This is like, this is like Michael Jordan putting a perfect pass
right on your hands as you're going up into the, I mean, this is like, it doesn't get any more easy.
This might be Michael Jordan shooting a three and all you have to do is like tap it on the way in.
And if you could jump that high.
And, you know, he was not hitting that number, not even close.
And so whatever, no, no big deal.
You know, I'm training and I i'm trying i'm not the best trainer
so some of this is on me and in whatever and to traction's point i think it was more of a uh uh
a right butt wrong seat kind of situation like i think he's gonna have a tremendous career in
the insurance industry and i would i actually would would give him a glaring a very positive
review just wasn't right for us, but that's okay.
Well, sure shit.
In two weeks, we have our first two weeks of me producing on these leads.
We have our first 100,000 premium month in our history.
So 17 months in, whack, there's six figures in premium just in two weeks of me working.
I'm going, I'm like having panic attacks because I'm like, we could have been doing this for months and months and months and be
how much further along I probably could add another two or three producers by now.
If we had been producing at that level and like now, now I'm having panic attacks. Now I'm like
questioning everything, you know, life decisions. Yeah. Everything, every, what do you do? I mean,
so what's the solution where do you like, do you audit, how do you not use specifically,
but what is the solution? Do you, I think the solution. So it's a really good question. I think
I made a couple mistakes that if I were the consult, a third party consultant, I think
would have been very obvious.
Um, and I, you know, that I just, so one, um, you need to have a regular, you need to
have someone who's a sales access as a true sales manager.
Now that would have had to have been me, right.
Or, or, but someone in your agency has to be a sales manager. Now that would have had to have been me, right? Or, or, but someone in your
agency has to be a sales manager. How many calls did you make today? How did they go? What's going
on? What are you at? Like that really annoying shit that, that sales managers do. It's important
because it forces people to stay on it. And you can kind of figure out what's happening sooner too. I was a poor
mentor. So I take full credit for that. I, I, I'm obviously doing a few other things that not
every agency owner does. And, and, and some of those things, I didn't slow down and be a real
mentor and I should have been that. And I wasn't, and I'll take, I take full responsibility for that.
So I think that those two things.
You know that though, that's good because you,
you have the power to change that aspect of it. And then, you know,
I think those, if I had done those two things,
those two things were different.
I would have caught and or moved,
gone a different direction earlier and,
or possibly been able to right the ship
and everything would have been fine.
So, you know, I think it was a couple of different things.
It was just, it was a really good lesson as a leader.
I'm glad it happened early.
Yeah.
It does make me want to run headfirst into a wall
thinking about, oh my God,
stepping into this maelstrom for two
weeks, I was able to do this much, like, oh my God, but whatever. So you said you had questions
for me. I want to be respectful of your time. So whatever you have, fire away. Yeah. So I have to
book time on your calendar. You told me to a while back ago and I have not about SEO.
Yeah.
And I just, you know,
do you have a crypto calendar?
Do I have a crypto?
Yeah, where I could ask you questions about that.
Is it too late for me to get into it?
Like, what's the deal?
My brother-in-law is constantly telling me,
see, what are you waiting for?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay. So if you want
to get into crypto it's never the cool thing about crypto is it's never too late do you like to go to
the casino no i don't do you bet on sports i don't do any of that don't do any of that okay
all right so all right so the good news is you're not a degenerate gambler
the bad news is you won't be attracted
to the 24-hour nature of the gambling
that is cryptocurrency.
That being said,
so the cool thing about crypto
is that no one really has any idea
what it's going to be.
That being said,
because I think we're in like
the top of the first inning, if this were a baseball analogy for crypto.
We are just, just getting started.
People will be like, oh, well, in 2017, all these things were 100th of what the value is today.
But in 2017, this was such a long shot.
You had to be a crazy person to put any substantial amount of money in.
And the people who you see on like the TV that have gotten these,
like,
you know,
change their whole life.
Like they were living in a gutter and now they're like,
have their own yacht.
Those are crazy people.
Those are legit.
Those people are legit bonkers.
And they just cashed a one in a trillion lottery ticket.
Okay.
But.
Yeah. Today. I today, I think one,
it's a little more stable. I don't think the technology and the networks that are being built
are going away. What they're going to be, how much are they going to be valued at, which ones
are going to be the winners and losers? You can have opinions, and I certainly do. I just
don't know that anyone knows for sure. Bitcoin seems like it's not going away. That feels like
Ethereum. There's a couple others that feel like they're not going away. What they're ultimately
valued at, do they go to a million? Do they go down to $10? I don't know that anyone knows,
but it does feel like they're going to be here.
The technology itself, which I've really nerded out on, is incredibly interesting.
Incredibly interesting.
And I actually had this guy, shoot, I'm going to forget his name, but he's from Steady State DeFi Insurance.
He was on the podcast.
His episode is maybe like four or five weeks ago, somewhere in the last few months.
Yeah. Yeah.
And he,
so he said some really cool shit on the air.
The stuff that he said off the air was even more incredible.
Just,
and I can't really share exactly what it was other than he,
and again,
he's 25 years old,
who the hell knows,
but he did seem pretty brilliant to me. He's just like, we are, we are, and again, he's 25 years old, who the hell knows, but he did seem pretty brilliant to me.
He's just like, we're literally just getting started. So I would say take some small amount of money, very small, whatever that is for you and get a Coinbase account and like buy some Bitcoin, buy some Ethereum, buy some Cardano,
like just buy like four or five of the blue chip kind of cryptocurrencies and just watch them.
And then what's naturally going to happen is you're going to do a little research and then
that's going to turn you on to something else. And then, you know, if something fun happens and one of them goes crazy, you win. But, um, you know, I kinda, I have my bets on the table. I haven't bought in,
in a while. I've kind of just been letting it ride, but, uh, I don't know. It's interesting.
It's just, yeah, I know. I know it's a whole thing, but I feel like I, it's not that I don't
trust it. I just don't, I feel like I don't have the time to dedicate to it. Yeah. That part I get.
You're up at all hours and doing stuff. I guess if you're really heavily investing in it.
I started reading about it probably about this time last year.
It's just been slow, you know, slow.
Like I listened to a couple of podcasts that just, you know, when I'm on the car, I'll
catch 20 minutes of a show talking about something.
And then, I don't know, I just pick it up.
And I also, uh, I have a really hard time personally, uh, when I, when something like
catches my interest, not like completely nerding out on it like it's like uh it's like a tick like
i can't stop reading about it because i what if that next piece of knowledge is the piece of
knowledge that changes everything for me like i don't you know that's a rabbit hole that's a crazy
way to think but i don't know i get it no i get that yeah yeah okay what what other you could be
so close you know just that one more nugget and they could just set it off. I get it.
XRP army for life. Just if anyone's listening, knows what that means.
I still believe in XRP big time. So what, what other, any other,
what other questions? Yeah. I had a question. I wanted to know, like,
give me what's your best piece of advice for the protege.
I'm one of the coaches. What do I, give me some insight.
Yes. So I would say, and I mean this not negatively towards anyone, anyone in particular,
but I would say, figure out who's there to win early. That doesn't mean you can't help everybody,
but I found that there were a couple of people that I invested a couple of substantial amounts of time in who then all of a sudden were like, I don't feel like doing this and just like bailed.
And you're like, oh, wow, that's like that was like three or four hours of my life.
And you just decided to pull the parachute, you know, whatever.
That's kind of the way it is.
But like I would say the time spent with Keating because, cause he took it very seriously from the very beginning was,
was wholly bought in and,
you know,
he didn't end up winning.
Um,
but obviously now he,
uh,
Crothers was awesome and gave all three of the final,
uh,
memberships.
I would,
I,
man,
I,
I,
I really enjoyed being part of his journey,
just the questions and watching him work through things.
And then listening to, uh, who's your,
uh, co-coach. We don't know yet. Oh, you don't know yet. Okay. Okay. So, so, uh, Ricky Hader
was the co-coach for our team and, um, listening to the way I found it very valuable listening to
the way. So, so Ryan would ask us a question or whatever. He'd have a problem. We'd be working
through it and, and Ricky would have a different spin.
And then really trying to think like, how do I feel about that?
And I learned a ton from Ricky as well, which was awesome.
And it was just a pleasure.
The whole experience was a pleasure.
Because David's great.
The community's great.
I think it is well worth investing time into the process.
I guess I'm definitely going to learn like anyone I'm paired with. I'm excited to learn from because
I love to learn. And I, and you know, that's what's great about this industry, right? Is
everyone can achieve success however they want. Yeah. And everyone has a different roadmap to it.
So there's always things that you can learn from anyone else, which is great.
Are you going to IOA?
I wish I was.
I am not.
Oh, no.
I know.
I know.
It is nothing to do with IOA.
I will be there in spirit.
I promise.
I have to go to Arkansas on the 5th for a speaking gig that was supposed to happen in
the spring of 2020. And they rescheduled it for this week on the 5th. So speaking gig that was supposed to happen in the spring of 2020.
And they rescheduled it for this week on the 5th. So that was my primary obligation. And I'm looking
forward to it. I don't want anyone to think I'm not, I'm not like I am, but that, and then I've
been on the road the last two weeks as well. So this will be three weeks in a row. So it was like
the idea of going, you know, two weeks ago, last week, and then going to iowa this week and then parlaying iowa
into this speaking gig at the end it just it was more than i can handle with bringing on a
new producer and blah blah blah but i i'm ah man i am um there was like this little part of me last
night actually where i was like wonder how much plane tickets i mean you can at least go to the
boot camp right i know i know i'm gonna can at least go to the bootcamp, right?
I know, I know.
I'm going to miss, I'm going to miss the bootcamp.
I'm going to miss, yeah, I, it's a bummer,
but no, I am not going to be there.
That should be a tremendous time.
I'm excited.
Yeah, it's about a three hour drive for us.
So we're leaving tomorrow.
What now?
Okay, so you're for Lauderdale.
Yeah, so you go, you're going north and west i'm actually
going to be um right across alligator alley from you in naples uh on the ninth on the ninth yeah
so my wife's family has a house in naples um her dad and uh once or twice a year we go down there and it's i just like it's like this golf
community it's set away from the ocean and and i love the ocean uh but it just it's very quiet
because you know you get closer to the coast it just gets noisier and um you can just kind of like
woosah and like just impress the stress like fall off you.
And how long are you going for?
I actually don't know.
Six, five or six days.
We usually don't go for a full week.
It's hard because I mean, you get it, right? Like my wife owns an agency too.
I own agencies.
It's two separate agencies.
It's not even like we can co-work, right?
It's two separate entities.
And it's just tough to be away from it from that long.
So we try to get the woosah, spend some time,
and then come home and get back after it, I guess.
Yeah, Naples, we went there.
Actually, it was this year for our anniversary.
Our brother-in-law and our friends rented us an Airbnb,
and we went and stayed there it's
it's really nice and very very relaxing and the sunsets are beautiful and you can see dolphins
like in the ocean in marco island is beautiful and yeah what do you drink wine i i i do a little
i guess i'm not really a wine drinker but okay well there's a really good wine shop there i don't
know if you're into like natural wines but there's a really good wine little boutique wine shop there in naples that
we drive to it from here oh really that's yeah and the guy drinks wine so maybe i take her there
it's like funky wines though just i don't know if she likes conventional wines or
they're like sulfate free low intervention i have never guys awesome i have never, I have never referred to my wife as funky before.
Your wife is a beast.
Okay.
I have referred to her as that before.
She is fit.
Yes.
She that's awesome.
She has figured out the optimal way for her to relieve the stress of her day to day life. And she enjoys it. So I just, God,
no matter how hard I work out, I just, it doesn't matter.
I look like a, I look like a slug next to her. Jeez. She's, she's,
she texted me today. I'm going to work out for the second time today.
I worked out this morning and so did she. And then, um,
and then she texted me. She's like, she's like,
you want to go to orange theory?
Cause she has orange theory for like the cardio part.
She's like, you want to go to, you want to go to orange theory, Stephanie?
I'm like, no, she's like, well, I'm,
I'm going at four and I think you should go.
Cause I think it'd be fun. And I'm like, ah, and she's like,
I signed you up. You're going, I'll see you there at four.
I was like, oh shoot.'s like, I signed you up. You're going, I'll see you there at four. I was like, oh shoot, now I gotta go.
Her asking you was just a way of-
Yes, yeah, it was more like she was being polite, I guess.
Yeah, yeah, that's awesome.
That's awesome.
Well, I wanna be respectful of your time.
I appreciate you so much.
I'm glad we did this.
As your agency evolves, the thing goes on,
we gotta have you back on again.
I got a whole series of questions
I wanted to ask you about
your branding and the marketing
and all that.
We never get to any of that stuff.
We didn't even get to it.
That's a great reason
to have you back on the show,
which we'll do in a few months
and it'll be fun.
But I just appreciate you.
I appreciate you coming on.
I love what you're doing.
And just thank you.
I appreciate you sharing.
Thank you.
You know, I had met you at Elevate
and I think that that convention really did. You know, I had met you at Elevate.
And I think that that convention really did, you did such a good job there.
And you've done so much for our industry and agents and, you know, you and Paradiso, the GNN guys and, you know, Carruthers, Jason Cass.
You guys have really made an impact.
And I've seen the, I've been here since I graduated high school.
You know, the agency is shifting in the right, or the industry is shifting in the right direction. I think,
I think that you guys have been working hard to make ripples and it's
happened. And it helps people like us, you know,
that are young and that are coming in with not a lot of support. I mean,
I do have that platform, but for other agency owners, you know,
that don't have that, you know, you guys have been a really good asset to our industry and thank you. And,
um, I'm glad that we've kind of become friends. Yeah. And I hope you enjoy your trip in Naples
and yeah. And the next convention we'll see you at then. Yes, for sure. And I definitely, again,
this is, I'm not not not going for any other reason
that I can't go.
Sometimes people read into things.
Please do not.
This is only because I want to remain married
to my very fit wife.
Because if I travel that much,
she will not.
Also, it's like you're coming here
and then by the night,
you have to be back in Naples.
I mean, that's a lot.
It's a lot.
You're right there.
You're right there to stay.
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