The Ryan Hanley Show - RHS 132 - The Power Brokers on the Future of Insurtech
Episode Date: February 3, 2022Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.comThis is a special multi-guest episode of The Ryan Hanley Show with a "Who's Who" lineup of technology power players including Steve Anderson, ...CEO of Catalyit, Peter MacDonald, Co-Founder & CEO of Wunderite, and Andrew Wynn, Co-Founder & CEO of Ascend.We get after all things independent insurance agents and technology.You don't want to miss this episode...Episode Highlights: Peter explains how they came up with the idea of talking about the future of insurance technology. (7:44) Steve explains the Catalyit concept and what they do. (9:33) Andrew introduces himself and what Ascend does. (12:10) Peter shares his background and Wunderite’s concept. (14:17) Steve discusses how technology is becoming more accessible to the general public. (17:53) Peter believes that insurance agents have always had a perspective on customer service and that it has always been a high concern for agencies. (24:46) Andrew discusses his thought process for launching his own company. (29:07) Peter mentions that their company's health insurance was recently changed this year and how technology was integrated into the sales demonstration. (36:38) According to Andrew, they wanted to create a solution that was more than just premium finance and gave a much better customer experience. (45:07) Peter explains how he came up with the idea for Wunderite. (47:36) Peter talks about the need for an ecosystem to support the tools that we want as agents. (1:02:00) Key Quotes: “It's not about technology, it's about meeting the customer where they want to be.” - Steve Anderson “The future of InsurTech is really about empowering independent agents.” - Peter MacDonald “We wanted to build a product that delivers that better customer experience, while staying competitive on the rate.” - Andrew Wynn Resources Mentioned: Steve Anderson LinkedIn Peter MacDonald Andrew Wynn Catalyit Wunderite Ascend. 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. an absolutely tremendous episode for you. And it's a multi-guest show. I don't do a lot of
these because sometimes when you don't have a good flow, they can be a little distracting.
But today's episode is just wonderful. Two former guests, Steve Anderson, CEO of Catalyt,
and Peter McDonald, co-founder and CEO of WonderRite, as well as a first-timer,
someone who we are going to have on
for his own solo episode at some point. But this is the first time he's on the show, Andrew Nguyen,
co-founder of Ascend. And you've heard me talk a little bit on the show about Ascend Payments and
how they've been a big part of our success here in the second half of 2021, moving into 2022.
And really, these guys reached out to me and said, hey, we really want to have this conversation. We'd love to do it on your show. We want to talk about the future of
InsurTech. And that was just music to my ears. Excited that they would think about this show,
my audience, you guys as a group of people that they would want to speak to and have
this conversation in front of. Such an honor. It's a wonderful conversation. You're going
to learn a ton, get a bunch of really cool ideas, and hopefully get your brain spinning here as we continue to
run into 2022 on our collective and individual paths to world domination. All right, before we
get there, I want to give a quick shout out to the sponsors of this show, the people that make
this show possible. Pay the bills. And that is Podium. Podium, if you go, you want to see Podium
in action
go to rogrist.com check out the web chat uh we use a couple different features of podium but the one
we use the most is the web chat and the reason for that is we get like a 95 plus response rate
to people who use that web chat because they fill out the web chat on their phone or or whatever
online and then when we respond, it hits their text message.
So text response is way, way higher than anything else, phone, whatever.
And for that reason, this allows us to get in front of people.
And really what we're able to do is vet people quickly on the fly through a few questions in the chat, the podium chat,
before we move them into
our pipeline. We're able to either send them to, you know, refer them out to where they need to go
or put them into our process and start working them through Rogue. So love Podium, big fans,
very happy that they've chosen to be a part of our show here. And I want to give a quick shout
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All right.
With that, let's get on to this absolutely tremendous episode,
The Power Brokers on the future of insurtech.
I'm so sick of COVID.
I know, dude. I'm so done with it.
At this point, even if I were ever actually scared of it, which I wasn't,
I just can't take it anymore. I couldn't take anything.
I couldn't take anything this long.
I was definitely a little scared in the beginning there in like March.
It was like, I was like, think of that Matt Damon movie.
I was just like, Oh my God, we're all going to die.
I think you get to like, I think you get to like the end of June.
If you were scared to like the end of June, like real scared,
I think that's legit.
But, you know, at this point, it's just.
That was a year and a half ago.
Yeah.
Now it's just a business model.
I mean, now we're like, now there's going to be like MBA classes on like,
hey, want to set up an annuity?
Here's a really cool business model.
What I'm scared about now is like just mutations.
It's like, yeah, you you know we don't have vaccines
going out and whatever I don't know but like just gonna keep mutating it's just weird I don't know
yeah but I don't know I won't I won't get into all that I know I know I know I follow you on
Twitter so I between your football commentary and weight lifting and. I just can't help it. I think I said to my wife the other day, I was like, I was like, I tried so hard for so long to not have an open opinion on this. And I
just, I can't handle it anymore. Like I can't take it. Like, like it's gonna, I'm going to
explode if I don't have one channel that I can voice my feelings on this particular topic and um so i
she's like it's like my wife is a badass she's like fuck it let's do it who cares what do i what
do you care i'm like all right all right sorry steve you woke it you walked into me me pontificating about the vid.
So what's up?
What are we talking about here today?
Again, this is like a powerhouse show that we got going on here.
I can't hear you, Steve, by the way.
Are you talking?
Yeah, Steve, your mic's not working.
I love when i get emails who sent me the original email was it you andrew that was like hey we want to do this show i got all these guys together
can we use can we go come on your podcast i'm just like this is my favorite yes
like why would i say no to this that would be crazy
so what are we uh what are we talking about here fellas
yeah and wanting to wait to see it we can hear steve oh see oh steve
steve this does not look good for catalytic this does not play well
exactly first tool of cattle is going to be a IP phone system.
How about now?
Yeah, now we got you.
There we go.
There we go.
It's amazing when you actually turn the microphone on what happens.
Yeah.
I have to leave mine.
And I figure I just got people snowed about catalytic so you know no big deal so oh yeah you know that's actually the advantage of being around us so long you know it's
just like hey you know it is what it is yeah i got this thing i well i've been snowing people
about my understanding of insurance for about 16 years now. So I'm right with you. I feel like,
um, I feel like I know one. Um, so, all right. So, so, so, so guys, what, what are we, uh,
what are we talking about today? You got three complete power brokers on the show. And, uh,
and I have literally no idea what we're talking about, which is, makes me very happy.
I think Andrew had approached, you know, we were chatting about something.
We had connected about a year ago and we were chatting recently with Steve and with each other. And we're like, you know,
it'd be great to do a podcast kind of discuss the future of insurtech.
I think there's been a lot of thinking and agents in the beginning about,
you know, where's my place in all this.
There's all this sexy stuff happening.
All these companies like Lemonades of the World are happening and what's happening with us.
And I think that we wanted to kind of set the record straight that, or, you know, people are
already on board, obviously, but the future of insured tech is really about empowering
independent agents. There's a future there. And I think where, you know, Steve's unique
background and experience of knowing all the different tools out there comes into play is he can talk to that. And also,
you know, it's an interesting conversation point for, you know, for Catalyst, which is,
I think, having a big year this year, talking about how to help agencies, you know, simplify
and understand. Yeah, we are having a big year. Actually, literally today we signed another state on board. So congrats. They're dropping like flies. That's awesome. So let's do this for,
for those listening at home who, who may, you know, let's do like, again, and no grandstanding
here. I know we're all proud of the things that we do, but let's do just quick, quick soundbite
on whatever your thing is we'll start with steve
we'll go in reverse so we'll go reverse for me steve andrew finish with peter um just quick
you know what's the thing what is what is catalytic where can people get more and then
obviously we'll we'll do all that at the end and stuff too but for people listening right now like
hit them hit them hit them with your the elevator pitch just so we can level set everybody.
Sure. I can probably do that. entity formed by seven big I state associations, along with a growing number of other states that
have partnered with us to provide technology resources and information to their members.
The way I describe it is we help agents discover, evaluate, select, and implement the technology
they need to continue to thrive.
Gotcha. I love that. It's like a trusted source for all their tech concerns.
Questions, problems, who's out there? Who should I pick? How do I do it? How do I not make a mistake yeah yeah good well good cost me what what what ryan cost you 500 000 2000 multiple thousands of dollars if you make the wrong choice and the time and the brain cycles
that's the part that time is the biggest yeah yeah the cost is like i mean i think the cost
is the easiest thing to feel frustrated about, but like it's the
time and, and the, and, you know, I always think in terms of brain cycles, like, like
how much energy do I have to give to this thing to do it?
And like, when you change a big system, man, it takes a lot of focus and a lot of attention.
And if, you know, if you end up making a mistake or get something you're not happy with or
something that can't solve your need, man, that is a killer. I mean,
you just want to, you know,
that's when I popped the bottle of Buffalo chase behind me.
Exactly. Well, and the message, the message we'll have this year, frankly,
is we are a fractional CIO for the normal independent agency.
So large brokers have one or multiple positions that their full
time job is to do that. You know, the traditional normal, you know, agent doesn't have the resources
to do that. We become that for them at a very reasonable monthly fee. That's great. I love that.
I love it. That's a great. Okay, cool. Well, good.
So, uh, Andrew, onto you. What the hell do you have? Thank you. I'm Andrew. Is this your first
time on the show, by the way? I don't think it is. Yeah. Oh, that kind of funny because these
guys have both been on, Steve's been on a ton of times. Talked to him too much. So, uh, uh, okay.
Well, so that we got to do an individual show too, but okay.
We'll do that later, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, thanks for having me for the first time.
Looking forward to the others.
I'm Andrew Nguyen, one of the co-founders of Ascend.
Ascend is the first modern insurance payments platform.
We're an all-in-one payments platform
for independent agents.
So we allow you to do premium finance,
digital payments, automating payables,
things like that.
To Steve's point earlier,
it's really about saving you time
and helping you do what matters to you,
which is sell insurance
and help people find the right coverages
and not worry about all this other paperwork
and stuff associated
or traditionally associated
with selling insurance. Yeah. And guys at home, you've, you've, you've heard me talk about Ascend
a little bit. Obviously Adrian has been on the show yet. So we'll do, we'll do a solo episode
coming up and do a deep dive. But Rogue is a, is a Ascend client. And we, I processed a payment
with them today. It's to me, there is no easier system on the market for capturing payments.
And the fact that you can do the payment, like just a straight payments, you know, kind
of standard payments or do the premium finance.
That to me in the ease of it, right.
The, the, just send out a link and you guys kind of take care of the whole thing.
Like, I don't even have to send the email anymore. There's like a button where once it's all set up,
I just click go. And then you guys take care of the email and the reminders. And, um, you know,
I, I have, it's been a game changer for us and, uh, you know, I, I appreciate it. And then you
obviously pay the brunt of that in terms of all the Slack messages that I send with different insights that I have.
We'll call them.
No, no, we appreciate it.
We appreciate it.
But yeah, I mean, that's, that's really just want to take that, that muscle memory away
of deciding, Hey, should I offer premium finance?
If so, blah, blah, blah.
Let me get a quote.
Let me go to the systems.
We push that to the customer so they can decide on the fly.
Hey, do I want to finance this or not?
If so, you know, I'm going to choose and you as the agent don't need to be in the loop of that and we handle
the rest. So really saving you a ton of time. Yeah. Very cool. Very cool. Okay. Peter, you're up.
Yeah. So my name is Peter McDonald. I'm one of the co-founders of Wonder Rites.
We built what I think is the best experience to fill out applications with your
customers. So quick background, I was an agent for seven years. I wish Steve that Catalyst existed
five years ago. We were literally looking for a fractional CIO. And Andrew, I love the concept of
Ascend and knew I had a use for that in my own life as an agent, as I did for an easier way of filling out applications, because I used to fill them out with pen and paper.
It was literally the fastest way to do it. And it drove me crazy to think that I would work so hard to win deals and then fill out apps with paper or Adobe Acrobat or whatever.
So best, easiest, fastest way to fill it out collaboratively, invite your customers, you know, click a button to send them an email, et cetera. Yeah. Uh, I will also give another disclosure that we are a paying client
of wonder, right? Neither one of these guys or any of these guys are sponsors of the show. Um,
and this is, this is a real story and appears anything I'm stroking his ego, but it's not.
Um, so we hired a new account manager for our team to call him client success associates.
And, um, she'd come from a
standard agency and she needed to do something with a cord form. And she's like, can I get a
login to Adobe Acrobat to manipulate this form or whatever? Right. And I said, no, no, you don't
need to do that. And she goes, what do you mean? I go, so I, we zoom and I do a screen share and I
go, we use this tool called wonder, right. To do that. So we get about two minutes in the thing.
And she literally goes, ah, and she has like a, a, a, a reaction, like a physical and audible
reaction. And she goes, holy shit, this is so easy. And I said, well, you know, use the tool
and, you know, make sure or whatever, but, but yeah, this is what we use now. And it's crazy
how, um, quickly people take to that, to that process. And we've, we've, we've enjoyed, we use
it every day, uh, pretty much. So, um, so I just, I just want to put that out there that when people
hear me talk about it, I do, you know, none of these guys are sponsored. I use their tools. Um,
so cool. All right. So now that we've gotten all that nonsense out of the way,
let's talk about the future of InsurTech. And I want to start with Steve because
Steve's the oldest, has the most experience. Only by a couple of years though.
Well, I also... A couple of digit years.
Steve's also probably the smartest out of all of us. So let's start. For sure. Yeah. So Steve, you know, you, you have, you know, uniquely have this breadth
of experience in our space, really starting from when tech really first started to infiltrate into
the, into the industry to now where you've kind of lived through multiple iterations of everyone's
going to go away and there's not going to be agents anymore. And, you know, and then we cycle
through that kind of phase and, and then come back and, you know, it does feel like we're in
a fairly unique period in that technology is starting to be built, like the two guys that we have on the show, it's starting
to be built with agents in mind from the very start, not trying to disintermediate them, but
strictly trying to take them to the next level outside of the standard kind of technology players
that we all had to use for so long. So it's kind of a really interesting, innovative time. And I'm
just interested in your
take and kind of how would you kick this conversation off? What's going through your
coconut? I think the phrase is kind of hitting me right now is the democratization of technology.
So when I started literally in the 80s, you know, there were few options.
They were expensive and were not at all customizable.
And again, like you said, Ryan, I mean, even presentations I would do in the early 2000s,
you know, really was agents, you need to get a website.
You need, I mean, this is what's coming.
There were a lot of people talking about,
you know, not needing an agent anymore. And I think perhaps one of the most interesting aspects of today is the fact that I want to say, this may not be accurate. You can fact check me
on this, but I feel like every direct to consumer player all of a sudden has
recognized that, oh, agents are there. And I actually think there's a very specific reason
why that's happening. Cause I've been trying to figure out for a while, you know, a year,
whatever, 18 months, kind of what was the change or why does that mindset, why is that mindset changing? And then
I think also, and again, like, you know, Peter and Andrew, platforms, processes, procedures,
you know, tools coming out specifically designed to help the agent, you know, move forward. And
it's not about technology. It's about, it's about meeting the customer where they want to be.
So I kind of stopped there.
I've got some stories and things like that I could talk about.
But I feel like democratization of technology, meaning even some of the smallest agents today have tools available, if they're willing to think differently,
they can do amazing things today. And I think that's part of what's different.
Yeah. You are our fact checkers. So the fact that you said it means that it must be true.
Just and no, I think I think you're right I, I have loved secretly considering how much of a jerk he was to all of us when
he first came in watching lemonade and their CEO start to placate to agents
now being that they can't crack 40, what is it?
43% retention or whatever I think on their last quarterly, you know,
to me, I find that hopefully humbling to him,
although he's probably on some yacht in some Caribbean island at this point.
But that to me is interesting because they were really the case study for an app, a personified bit of what they called AI, which was really just CSS code.
Could this replace the interaction that someone has with a human, and they have proven the case that it just doesn't.
And that to me, I, you know, I'm not a behavioral psychologist. But to me, it's how many, how many
of these case studies do we need before we all start to realize that it's some way to different degrees,
humans have to be part of the process. And it just, there hasn't been a case study to the former.
Other point. Yeah. And again, I always like to be careful too, that agents can't just sit back and
go, Hey, you know, I've been successful. I don't need to make any changes either. So that that's
sort of the interesting kind of balance act there that,
that I think we need to keep in mind.
Yeah.
Yeah. I was just going to say that, you know, that point,
the lemonade point was proven with arguably the,
the simplest insurance product, right?
So if you can't do that in renters,
how are you going to do homeowners auto commercial
right it just gets much much more complicated and you definitely need a human in the loop
um but but i i agree with you steve like there i think we're actually in a really great
time for technology inclined agents and customer experience, or maybe even customer obsessed agents to come and capture
a ton of business, right? Because people are going to be a lot more efficient and effective than they
have been able to be historically using technology. And if they're willing to adapt, they're going to
be, you know, we're going to have these super agents, people like Ryan, right, who are going
to be able to come and clean up a ton of business.
And I think it's going to be a really special time for folks moving forward.
Yeah. I I'll tell you what in particular wonder,
right. And ascend as tools have done for us is open up the EMS market, right. For so I was told from the beginning, don't go out for small business.
There's too much EMS. There's too much EMS. You can't make money doing EMS.
It's unprofitable, but on and on. I mean, I must have heard from two dozen agents when I explained about a year and a
half ago, about six months into Rogue, I did a solo episode where I kind of said, hey, we got
our butt kicked by COVID. We're pivoting. This is what we're doing. Here's what we're doing going
forward. And I just kind of shared that idea. And I got a ton of feedback. And everyone said,
that sounds great, except for E&S is going to destroy you. You're not going to be able to have a business.
And, and what is exciting is that with, you know, we now have eight people, but for most of
our history, you know, except for the last three months, we had only three people, right? We've
added five in the last three months, but for most of our history, we've only had three people
and almost 50% of our business is E&S. And it's because of
tools like Ascend and WonderRite that are so accessible, even to a small agent that now E&S,
which has been this thing that no one wanted to touch has, I mean, I'll take an E&S account just
like I'll take any other account. It means nothing to me. I mean, literally we don't go in our head,
ah, E&S. No, we're just like, oh, this is what we do. Bing, bing, bing. We put it in here.
We get the accords.
We send them into this company.
We use this for payment.
It means nothing to us.
And I think those are the kind of opportunities that today have opened up for even small agents
that were really only accessible to bigger agencies who had a workforce to handle all
that stuff.
And that's what, to me, is a game changer.
Absolutely. I think you look at Ryan,
some of the biggest companies that have really verticalized in the space and you're like, what is, what is the best version of this company look like? And I don't know, I kind of think about,
it's like watching a football game, you know, the play, I was going to the playoffs. It's like,
is there going to be a playoff game where you don't see an ad for like a big insurance company?
Like, no, they are always going to have ads. These companies have always been around. They're always going to
be around. In some ways are kind of the exception rather than the rule, because a lot of the
business that independent agents are writing, to your point, it's not standardized. It's written,
it's regulated at a state level. It's written regionally. There's these different niches and pockets.
And I think insurance agents like yourself,
you've always had a take on customer experience.
It's always been a top priority for agencies always.
And I think, you know, a lot of agencies have always known it could be,
it could be better.
It could be way better.
And I think you see this, not just with Wonder, right.
But, you know, with companies like Tarmica,
AgencyZoom or Glovebox was literally founded by former agents who just knew there had to be a better way.
And so I think back to Steve's point of democratization, we're at a point now where the tools that I think some of us agents wanted five, 10 years ago are finally coming out.
And so now as an agent, you have those tools and the barrier to entry is not super high.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, the, the, I know there's a lot of talking,
I was talking with, well, it's probably a couple of months now, but I saw Carrie Wallace down in North Carolina and she was talking about
agency valuations and all this M&A activity and all this stuff is going on.
Right. And she's, she's, you know,
she's doing these valuations and she's like, Oh,
we're going to crest a thousand. And I think we easily crested a thousand, right? We were pushing up
towards like almost 1200. Well, what's really interesting to me is despite that, the number
of agencies has stayed flat or even I've seen a couple of reports where it may have even increased
because the barrier to entry for agents with these types of tools that you can be remote,
work out of your house,
right? Like we don't have an office, right? But we can still provide an incredibly professional
experience. And that's exciting because now you have all these new people popping up and some
of them will be success, some will fail just like anything else. But they get to take this shot that
even five years ago, I don't know that they could have launched these types of agencies are going
after some of these niche markets because the tools just weren't available or,
or to Steve's point,
they weren't democratized enough that they could customize them in a way that
would work for them.
They had to kind of play within the same rules that everyone had to play in.
I've definitely felt that.
Go ahead, Peter.
I was just going to say, I've definitely felt that energy.
I was down at the IAOA in Florida.
And man, Ryan, the energy was awesome.
It was just a ton of like new agents, buildings, building from scratch, starting scratch agencies.
And like, if you want to talk about entrepreneurship, like that is just exciting.
You have people in every pocket of the country starting every niche type of agency
imaginable. First generation insurance agency. It was really a lot of fun and refreshing as a
millennial former insurance agent. Well, my comment was the most recent Future One study
identified approximately 36,500 independent agencies in the United States.
And again, that number has fluctuated not by much over the last number of years.
What was really interesting to me is 14% of those agencies are five years or younger.
Wow.
And I believe the M&A is actually throwing off agents, you know, producers, staff who don't want to work
for a large organization. They like the smaller feel. It's whatever that looks like. And again,
I agree with you. The tools they can utilize today are cheaper, better, more useful,
more customizable than they ever were before.
All right. So I have a question for, I'm going to throw this at Andrew, because he hasn't had an episode on the show. And it's just something I'm interested in. Like when you were evaluating,
you know, starting, you know, starting Ascend, right. And you're looking at the space and you're,
you're looking for opportunities and you see payments is a problem. And payments was a huge
problem. I mean, the fact that premium finance companies got away with operating the way that
they did for so long is absolutely bananas. And I'm glad that they can't operate that way anymore
because you guys, and to be fair, there are a few who have, you know, who've put some improvements
in. So it's not like you're the only game in town, but you know, obviously I'm a big fan. So when, what, what was it when you, when you started evaluating,
was it just, you knew payments? Had you been thinking about payments for a while? Did you do
like an analysis of the industry to find gaps? Like, like what did that look like when you were
trying to find a place where you could add value or build a company? Was it, was it payments were
already in your mind? Did you figure out payments?
Like how did that, how did that come to be? Yeah. So, you know, Praveen and I started from the
place of, I would, I would almost argue like a, uh, the opposite place of, um, Peter, um, where
we were working at a full stack carrier and sure tech where we, you know, we'd sold our last
business too. And we'd actually seen firsthand, like, gosh, like
the agent channel continues to perform the best. We believe that there's a real opportunity to
build. And the, you know, the words we were using at that time was sort of in the infrastructure
for insurance, as opposed to coming and trying to build everything end to end and replace,
you know, from distribution through
underwriting through, you know, the whole stack as a lot of full stack insurance insurtechs are
doing. And we said, gosh, there's a huge opportunity to specialize. So what are areas where there is
a very industry specific problem and payments and insurance are hugely industry specific.
It's not e-commerce, right? It's not, let me collect my money and then it's my money and I
do whatever it's, I have commissions, I have endorsements, I have payables, I have premium
finance, right? Premium finance doesn't exist in other industries. So we know it was very
complicated at the industry level and industry specific, but it wasn't, we were also looking
for something that wasn't a brokerage or carrier or MGA specific. So, you know, pretty much everyone
has the same problems with payments and insurance. It's not like everyone does it very differently.
And so that's how we, we kind of arrived on payments as an opportunity. What's up guys. Sorry to take you away from the
episode, but as you know, we do not run ads on this show. And in exchange for that, I need your
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Peace. Let's get back to the episode. Did you see, and thank you for that. That was kind of a setup question to what I really wanted to ask you, which is in that
analysis, did you see any other places?
Like, was there, was there other segments, other little dark holes of that, that, that
may exist that you're like, you know, Hey, here's some other things or, you know, that,
that evaluate, I'm always interested in that evaluation process because, you know, I'm, I'm not necessarily one of those
people who would just come up with an idea for, for forms or come up with an idea for payments.
Like, so I'm always interested in the, in when you do find it, like, what does that evaluation
process look like? Because, you know, I'm sure for Steve,
and then, you know, I'll pass over to Steve too, like, you know, you're looking for all these
ideas, Steve, like you're trying to be that aggregator of all this information. So was
there anything, Andrew, else that you saw that you're like, ah, that'd be interesting, but maybe
that's the next business, or we'll start that once Ascend is kind of matured, or is there any other
opportunities that you saw, or maybe, or, you know, and if you don't have any, maybe just throw that out to the whole group.
Yeah, we, I mean, we looked at a bunch of stuff and obviously nothing we thought was as compelling
as, as payments, which is obviously where we ended up. We looked at, you know, I think the TPA space
has a huge amount of opportunity, but the lens by which we look through it is kind of on the
business model and monetization, right?
Like there's a lot of problems to be solved in insurance and not all of them will be able
to sustain a meaningful large business.
And that's kind of, I think, you know, a consideration as people are thinking about
starting in, you know, agency tooling or
insurance infrastructure type businesses. So we looked at a bunch of stuff that we didn't think
would have a, be a sustainable enough business. Yeah. I'm curious what other people think. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. You guys have, you guys, you know, and I don't, you don't need to give away like
your pocket business that you're, it's going to be your next big rocket ship.
But are there any other sectors or spaces that you've just evaluated or come across where you're like, geez, I'm really excited for someone'm kind of, you said, continuing to evaluate kind of where things
are, where things are going.
I think there is a very interesting opportunity, again, for the smaller agent in machine learning.
And I do not very specifically use the phrase artificial intelligence because we don't have
it right now.
That is a term i i'm on a
campaign to eradicate um and we won't have it for probably 30 years so but machine learning pattern
matching um and there's some really interesting again i have a thinking of a slide i have in a
presentation i do again democratization of machine learning between Google
Cloud, AWS, maybe Microsoft, you know, Azure. There are so many tools that, again, are accessible.
It takes a bit more technical something. But just as a simple example, on my website, I have a Amazon tool called Amazon Polly that whenever I post an article, the tool automatically converts my text into voice.
And I get to choose the voice and I get to choose the country and the language and et cetera, and puts a bar on the top of my article that says, click here to listen
automatically.
It also automatically, and it's same kind of process can do a couple of things.
One, it can actually convert that to a podcast.
So again, text to podcast, which I didn't do because, you know, that's not the experience
I want, but it also then can be a skill in Alexa.
So you could ask Alexa to listen to Steve Anderson's tech tips.
Now, are those, you know, are those gee whiz shiny object things or are they worth experimenting with to find out where the right
sweet spot is and so so some of those things and i think machine learning and automated
account reviews i'm working with a vendor right now and developing some stuff for catalyt
there's just some interesting opportunities and And again, you know, staying within the insurance industry for me is key because there's, you know, I always jokingly say to people, you know, insurance is a great world goes oh yeah we did that you know x years ago
yeah um so i probably sound smarter than i actually am just because everybody else is
farther behind come on steve steve um follow question to that is uh what accent did you
what did you choose i did a male um uh u. S but you could do British. You could do Australian.
You could do. And by the way, the other thing I do is I actually translate that article into
four different languages. Yeah. Now, I mean, think about that depending on where you are in the
country, you know, it could be Spanish, could be Vietnamese, could be Polish, could be, I'm
thinking of different areas of the country that have larger populations that speak a different language and you're
could be, yeah, could be Southern drawl. I saw something like this in practice. Actually,
recently we changed our health insurance for our company this year. And, um, I went onto the portal,
they give you a free Fitbit because they want to track your data or something,
make you healthy, make sure you're getting your steps in.
But there was a video review of your insurance policy.
And it was like, hello, Peter,
here are your family members.
And it put their names on the screen.
And then it's like, here's your coverage
and here's the terms.
And it was like a whole video customized to me.
And it was definitely cool.
I've heard about this.
I've thought about it in our own sales demonstrations. But it was really cool to see like an insurance company
actually implementing that, you know, for the first time. So I, yeah, definitely interesting.
You know, what's, what's funny is so we use neoteric agent, which I love Grant Botma,
but that's the worst name of any tool that exists in the industry. And Grant, I love you,
but your tool has a terrible name.
But I love the tool and I use it almost every day.
So it's a video proposal tool.
There's a couple of these out here.
It's just, it's the one we use
and I like it.
And we do a simple thing, right?
We set an expectation before we sell.
We say, hey, the next,
after I gather the next thing
that's going to happen
is I'm going to figure out
what company program coverages I recommend.
I'm going to send you an email.
The email's got three parts. It's got a high level overview. It's got, you're going to get the download,
the PDF right from the company. So you can see exactly what I see. I'm going to do a quick video,
right? Just breaking down why I chose this company and the coverages, whatever.
People lose their minds. And they're like, I've never seen anything like this before. This is amazing. I
can't believe you took the time to do this. Took the time. It was like five minutes. I mean,
literally, that's it. Imagine a normal sales process is 45 minutes across the table and
you're pushing paper and you got like an easel chart that you're doing graphs on and stuff.
And like, this is five minutes of me just
in front of a camera half the time i'm in a hoodie and people lose their mind so when you talk about
like technology that in our industry is mind-blowing that in other industries is like run in the mill
video proposals which is it just to me seems so remedial absolute people lose their minds they
lose i mean i get people that are just like,
I don't even care what the prices I'm in. This is amazing. I mean, the emails that we've gotten
back and it just, it's, it's bewildering to me, but I mean, I guess that's why there's opportunity.
Well, I think that's right, Ryan. It's that, that is why there's opportunities. And I was
going to say, when I was putting Catalyst together and we were doing estimates of what penetration would we have with independent agents, part of what I did was I actually took about 20 or 25 percent of our universe off.
Because I figure that's about the right number of agencies that don't care about technology, never will.
They're not going to invest.
They know they're going to sell.
That's not my audience.
And so, you know, and again, I like to try and convert them,
but I've decided, you know what?
I don't have time anymore to try and do that.
If they don't buy into it, that's not a catalytic ideal agency.
It is the agency who's willing to go, gosh, that sounds interesting. I'm willing
to test that, or I'm willing to try it, or I want help in figuring this out, or how do I do this? So
you know, I think that's, and I think, I'm hoping that percentage will shrink. Again,
M&A, right, all the changes going on in the agency world with that. But frankly, even some of the
bigger organizations that, you know, everybody thinks they have the resources, but they don't
have the mindset to actually be willing to experiment and fail and experiment and get a big hit. So. No, I agree. Andrew, so in launching Ascend
into the marketplace, and Peter, I'm going to ask you a similar question too, if your answer
is different, you can say if it's not. What has been, like, so you're giving people this piece
of technology. It is, you know, someone can say they don't want to use Ascend or maybe it's not
right for them,
but there's no denying that you are saving people time and it's an efficiency tool and all that
kind of stuff. So, you know what I mean? Like, what is the, what has been one of the most
interesting pieces of feedback you got either adoption or, you know, like, has there been
anything that you've been like, geez, I didn't see anyone saying that about this or, or man,
I wouldn't have expected
people to go this path or that path. Has there been anything unexpected about the process of
rolling technology out to independent agents? I mean, that's part of the fun of, of, of doing
this work, right. And like you were just saying, Steve, it's about the experimentation and learning
and readapting. So we've learned a ton as we've, as we've gone to market. And again, not coming
from the insurance, the independent insurance agent background, we've learned just a huge amount
about the process of how, you know, typically client interactions are working and payments
are collected and what that, that generally looks like. And I think we get to bring a pretty unique perspective
because we don't have the sort of fixed mindset
or that this is how it has been done.
And so we're able to sort of mix in the feedback of,
hey, this is how we have been doing things
with a sort of first principles look.
And so I think that's part of the reason Ascend
has come to this, is able to save folks time.
In terms of specific surprising things, I mean, I think, you know, the thing that surprised us most is the highest level, I you will, of putting pay in full or rate plan digital payment collections
alongside premium finance in a single tool. You know, that was pretty foreign to folks in the
market who were working with multiple providers, whether, you know, it's someone who is just for
digital payments or someone who is just for premium finance and putting those two things together.
We had to explain that a few times to people before they were like, wait,
so it's one thing or like, yeah, it's one thing. And that was,
that was pretty fun at the beginning.
How many people get into you guys ask it. So we're, I don't know if,
I don't know if we're in a Slack channel with the team from ascend and we give
them a lot of feedback and we've been on the tool since I think August now.
Right. I think we've been using you guys since August and, you know, in the, in, you know,
we're like, Hey, we'd love to have a button here or something, you know, and whether they do it or
not, we're just giving them feedback. And one of the questions they asked was like,
how does our interest rate line up against others? I was like,
I was like, I couldn't imagine. And I'm sure there are agencies that do this. I just could not
imagine because and frankly, since you asked me that question, I have now pinged some of my like
little networks that I'm in to get feedback on this. And there are literally people who on like
a week to week basis will compare the premium finance interest rates from different companies
as to like, whose is the best and like where they place the premium finance. And I'm like,
you do what you spend how much time on what, what are we talking about? Like I'd said to them,
I was like, it's so easy. I don't even, I couldn't even tell you what your interest rate is. I just
create the link and I send it off. And if someone has a problem, you know, we'll figure it out. I don't even, I couldn't even tell you what your interest rate is. I just create the link and I send it off. And if someone has a problem, you know, we'll figure it out. I mean, they got to
pay the premium. I don't know. Like, it's just, it's funny where we as an industry, to me, it's
funny, the places that we're like, willing to invest time versus like some, you know, the things
that you guys have created and what Steve's been talking about for, for how many years, all these little efficiency finders and tools, but someone at an agency who makes real money, who owns that agency will be like, you know what I'm going to do today? I'm going to figure out which one of my pre-financed companies has the best interest rate. That, that seems like, that seems like a useful, that seems like a useful use of my time. I just, it just blows me away. I mean, what?
Well, yeah, no, I mean, I like, I get it, right?
Because it impacts your customer experience, right?
If you want to be able to provide your customer
the best possible experience
and rate of premium finance
is certainly one of those vectors.
And that's part of the reason, you know,
we wanted to build
a product that was much more than just premium finance and provided a much better customer
experience. We, for two reasons, one, we didn't want to just compete on rate, you know, that's
what premium finance, incumbent premium finance companies to do today. And that's where their
focus goes as opposed to building better customer and product experiences that actually, you know, differentiate. And so
we wanted to build a product that delivers that better customer experience while staying
competitive on rate. And I think, you know, we're happy for people to compare our rate to other
folks. Like, yeah, we're good there too. Right. And it's not that we just don't want that to be
the only reason that people would choose to use Ascent. just couldn't imagine and and i i'm i you know i'm aware that maybe i just think
differently about some of these things but like i just couldn't imagine going through
like the traditional premium fine for like like someone's someone said to me the other day we're
going to be a quarter point lower than whoever you use, no matter what.
You tell us who you use, and we'll be at least a quarter point lower.
That was their pitch to me, a random cold email.
And I just was like, you couldn't have pressed the button that I care about less than what you just said to me.
Because I know that it's not as easy as that.
And my time is worth that quarter point. And if that business owner cared so much
about the rate on the premium that they're paying, they'd pay the thing in full and not be a
cheapskate. So, you know, I don't, I, you know, I don't know. It's just, to me, it's just crazy
where we spend our time. Like if people had just listened to Steve for the last, however many years,
how much freaking further along would we be? But they don't. They think about stupid shit
like finding a premium finance company
with a quarter point less
than the one they currently have.
Like, I don't know.
Peter, what about you, man?
I mean, you're doing the same thing.
You know, people go,
well, why do you use Wonderite?
I had someone ask me the other day,
why do you use Wonderite?
I was like, Accord Forms.
I go, well, yeah, my agency means business.
I go, yeah, but one, it's easy.
Two, it has all the supplementals, which you don't have that that's a game changer for me and three your customer can
fill it out alongside you right those three things that's kind of how i pitch one right people ask me
none of those things really at face value seem like game changer ideas but put together saving
a lot a tremendous amount of time for people. How, like, what have you gotten for feedback? What has been the most interesting thing you've
heard from someone who maybe did or didn't, you know, decide to use WonderRite?
Yeah. I think the top thing is make it easy. And, and the reason I arrived at this is,
you know, I think where Andrew was very thoughtful probably about how he created Ascend,
I think I was an agent and I was like, there has to be an easier way. I was banging my head against the desk or I was having my account manager yell
at me or be angry at me for not filling out applications. And that's how I started about
to create Wondery out of like sheer brute force. Like I'm going to do this. I'm going to teach
myself to code, to build this thing. And I, so I had very opinionated ways about the way that I like to work.
And that's built into the software. I have a lot of insurance designations. I've made cold calls
of sold policies. And so I'm opinionated. And I think we get great feedback from our users.
Sometimes they say nice things to us. Most of the time they say nice things to us and they don't
always tell us the bad things. And so we actually, Ryan, we kind of track how people use the software. We anonymize like
their mouse movements and what they're typing, but we can kind of play back randomly videos of like
when things don't go well for them. Like a user experience software. Exactly. And I didn't even
know this thing existed until our product person was like, we need to use this to make the software better.
We're super tuned into both the feedback we get, whether it's written or recorded video or a Slack message or intercom.
But even more so, it's like, how about when people actually use it?
And maybe they're not like filtering their opinions.
And seeing people get stuck is really painful.
Like you think it's pretty simple. There's like, there's two buttons on the screen and they're like, which button do I click? Um, and so the message is like, there has to be, you know, one button and it has to be right in the middle of the screen and flashing red. I mean, not really, but you know, basically that's what it has to look like because to your point, like you like one, right. Cause it's easy. It's fast. Um, I think in the old days to steve's earlier point people would put up with these softwares where you'd have to onboard
you'd have to take classes there are even coaches you could hire to like you know walk you through
how to do xyz and today my own patients included i have about 30 seconds to a minute of attention span when I'm using a
new thing. And if I can't figure it out in a minute, I'm like, dude, I can order a Tesla in
a minute. Like, why can't I get an insurance policy? Why can't I fill out a form? And so
we just want OneDrive to be so easy. There shouldn't have to be a user manual. It should
be like hit you on the head obvious, but at the same time, really powerful
because insurance gets to be kind of complex and there has to be a lot of complexity behind like
that easy interface. So that's been, I think one of the hardest lessons has just been
seeing people use the software, seeing them get stuck on something that I thought was obvious.
My own dad included, who has an agency and he's a big fan of ours and he uses it. And it's painful when I see him use it and he gets stuck.
And I'm like, yeah, you got stuck there. You know, I probably would have got stuck too. I don't know
how we release this, but we got to fix it. I think the, the important thing to, um, or I shouldn't
say the important thing. One of the things that I think is the most promising and one of the trends from like the 2015, 2016,
like disintermediation or whatever words,
all the words people are using to today
is the openness and transparency
of the evolution of products, right?
Like today, I get to give Andrew direct fee or his team, you know, his team
direct feedback on like, like the other day there was a screen and it didn't have the name of the
account on, right? Just a super simple thing. And I can see if you're building this software,
you just, and I just said, Hey guys, like, it'd be super cool. Like the name of the account was
on this screen. I sent him a screenshot. I said like, like right here, you know, whatever. And
you know, whether they do it, don't put it someplace else, doesn't matter.
But the fact that I can, and I know I'm not the only one,
I'm sure there's a collection of agencies that are getting feedback can now,
you know, right to the source say, Hey,
this would help us do our job better if we could, that was never the case.
Never ever the case with these other, you know, like I'm trying, it took me
two weeks to get Vertifor to add a user to my PL Raider account. I mean, I just add, I'm like,
I want to pay you more money. And it took two weeks and two phone calls to get that done.
And like, you're just like, what is everyone doing? I'm trying to pay you more money and you
won't, you know, and, and and it's like that that mentality of
the openness and the iterative changes and like I love how better agency every two weeks was putting
out this list of updates and you know you're just it was almost hard to like keep up but it was cool
to see both they had a list of like here's what we launched and here's what we're working on the
next sprint and like that kind of transparency really, you like feel like you own, you know, you own the development of
this platform. Like you become emotionally invested in its success. And that has been
an enormous change in our industry that I think is very, very positive.
Yeah, absolutely. I remember being the agent, sending out lots of emails to different technology vendors to fix XYZ thing. And I get it. It's tough. There's been some learnings along the way. It's tough when you're on the other side of the companies and new startups, the most important thing for us is that our users are having a great experience in most cases and they're coming back
and they're telling their friends about it because it's making their lives easier. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. One point on that, which is really, I think, interesting and important to remember is,
you know, Ryan, you're our customer, agents are our customers, but what, and we obviously
hugely value and care about what you think, agents are our customers, but what, and we obviously hugely value
and care about what you think,
but the question behind the question is,
what are the buyers of insurance?
What do they want, right?
And you guys are the conduit for that.
And ultimately we're all working toward you and us, right?
To better serving those customers
because that's how we win business, right?
That's how you succeed.
And then that's as a result's how we win business, right? That's how you succeed. And then that's,
as a result, how we succeed. And so we can't lose focus on that end customer. And I think a lot of,
you know, even some agents, right, some of the, I would argue some of the folks Steve was talking about earlier, and that 25% he cut off, but also a lot of technology providers have lost that focus. And once you've done that, I think it's kind of game over and we all need to really maintain that obsessive focus on that end customer. there's a very big gap between say those 25% that you said just are never going to be Catalyst customers or, or whatever,
versus maybe some of the people at the bleeding edge, right?
Maybe more than most industries. We have a very broad spectrum,
but have you seen,
and this is probably pushing more towards the more technologically advanced.
Have you seen people almost demanding more out of their providers?
Has that been a general trend that you've seen is, is where before we would just be like, well,
this is what it is, you know, this is what we got to do. Now it's almost like, like, like there's,
there's actual demand, there's pushback coming from the agent marketplace as to what they'll
accept from it. Have you seen that at all? Yeah, very definitely. And I actually think first of applied and API and, you know,
open access and, you know, that, that historically have been very resistant to allowing third party
connections. I think a couple of things changed there. One, I do think customers in it, because I
talked to them in some of the big ones, right, push back on
what they're trying to develop and, and wanting more openness. So I think that's one thing that
that helped them. I think the second thing that helped them is their new CEO,
Taylor Rhodes came from outside the industry. And I remember, actually, my first conversation with him was before he took the
position, he was researching it, and I didn't know it. And, you know, and when he actually
became CEO, I was, I talked to him, and I said, like, okay, did I say anything really bad?
But, you know, he said, from that very first conversation, when he took over, it was that he came from
APIs were a no-brainer.
You had to have them mindset, not a we have to protect our walled garden mindset.
And it's taken some time, but that mindset is starting to change.
We'll see how fast, right?
That's always the question. But I think Vertifor too, with their Orange Partner Program, again, is feeling pressure.
And that's trickling down, you know, certainly for other management system vendors. So
I think there's no question that the more agents voice their frustration, and the more I think there's no question that more agents voice their frustration.
And the more I think they demonstrate that they are willing and have the
capability of doing things on their own,
which was always assumed they wouldn't.
And I think that again,
goes back to my first comment on the democratization of technology.
It's, you know,
there are a whole
lot of people that can do things today that never would have considered themselves, you know,
technology focused or friendly or capable that definitely are doing things today.
It definitely seems like the Taylor Rhodes applied is not the applied of the past. I, uh, I haven't had a
conversation with Taylor yet. I've heard some interviews that he's been on things about him.
I do not know him. Um, but not sure I'm ready to trust them yet. Um, but appropriate, right. But,
uh, I do think it's a good thing. I mean, there's so many agents that are on them.
And, you know, people, I get asked the question a lot about agency management systems.
And I'm not an expert, but I certainly have opinions.
And I'm on NowSerts, which I don't want to talk bad about them, but it does seem like they don't understand what they've built, an agency management system that people actually pay them for.
So that all being said, you know,
there is no better agency management system than Epic.
If you want agency management system that works,
that is going to do what it's meant to do.
That's not going to break and blow up and throw all kinds of crazy stuff at
you. The downloads are going to work. That's going to be accessible in scale.
There's no better, in my opinion, agency management system.
That being said, the unfortunate part is
until they change the perception outside of their culture,
digital agencies, which I believe are going to be predominantly
the agencies of the future, are not going to use their system
because you look at it and you go, man, I to plug hubspot into that nope or or yeah sure for a hundred grand and you're
like if i have to pay you to integrate with you when i'm paying you for the system like you know
that was one of the things that you know i said to because i was looking at ams 360 pretty hard
and i couldn't get past the 1987 um font and the way the system set up i I couldn't get past the 1987 font and the way the system set up. I just couldn't
get past that. But you know, the whole like paying for integrations thing, I'm like, I'm paying you
to use your system and I want to send data into your system. And you're telling me I have to pay,
like, I don't, I don't know. I just, to me, it's just completely the wrong mentality. It's still that, you know, you know best, you do what we say kind of mentality.
And I don't think the next generation of entrepreneurs in our industry are going to abide that.
I think that's why you see platforms like Better Agency.
And, you know, you have, there's this woman in Virginia Beach who builds custom Salesforce installations,
and she's like book solid for like a year because everyone just wants, they don't want
to have the rug pulled from them.
And, you know, that's the part that I think is really interesting.
You know, I think I know for a fact, everyone's scared about your two companies.
They're like, they great today, but what happens when applied or vertifor by them?
What are they going to turn into? I mean, that is literally,
you guys have probably heard that from people already, right?
Like every platform that's exciting and young and fun and is growing and
adapting and listening to agents gets to a certain size and then Vertifor
applied, come in with a big check or Zywave. Right.
And then it becomes garbage. And that, like, when does that cycle
get broken? And who breaks it? And how do we break it? Because those three options, I struggle to
believe those three options are the future of our industry. I think they're part of our industry
forever. And I'm not saying they shouldn't be, but like, how, how do we keep independent technology independent? I know the founders got to get paid. I completely believe that. I completely believe that the risks that they took and all that I completely understand. But like, how do we keep independent insure techs independent in a way that allows them to still be customer focused without the only exit strategy being one of the big three. And then the tool that they built and their legacy turns to crap, which has just happened over and over and over and over
and over again. That's what concerns me. Yeah, I think you're absolutely right. And
we've heard this from the beginning. We've thought about it. You know, Nick from Better
Agencies posted about it with agencies, you'm acquisition recently. I mean, it's out there,
right? And it's, it's no secret. I think that with the
amount of funding right now going into InsureTech and the amount of new solutions, I just think
there's a better opportunity now than there's ever been to have real new options. I think with
the creation of BrokerTech Ventures, which we were a part of, it's actual agencies investing in tech because they're like, we want to, you know, in the best possible way, which is, you know, financial based returns on the investment.
But it's, you know, they want to have a say and a control of what's happening.
And I think that's been helpful for us.
And I think that as an industry, we need to have that ecosystem to support the tools that we want as agents.
And so we're excited about the future. And yeah. Yeah, that's good. I think you're right. What about
you, Andrew? You're like, give me that paper. I can't wait. Send me that term sheet, baby. No,
no, I'm kidding. I'm kidding. Andrew's not I think, yeah, like it's a,
there's a lot, a lot, a lot of, of value to be created. And, and that's obviously a huge reason
why some of these big companies snap up in InsurTechs. But I think as more and more folks
continue to adopt technology in a faster way, thanks to things like Catalyst and Steve.
I think some of those teams building InsurTech will actually start realizing like,
gosh, it is worth being in this for the long haul as the adoption increases. And we don't need
to just tack our product onto Applied's existing customer base, for example. We can go and do that
ourselves. And I'm really, really hopeful for that.
And that's certainly the approach we're taking. Yeah, that's cool. I think it's a great,
I mean, look, when you build a great product, it is a great problem to have as to, you know,
you have all these people interested in big platforms. And I think that that's tremendous.
I guess my, you know, when I think about independent agents and I think about where we're going as an industry, I know everybody says the same thing about every new tool, right? They
say it about better agency and Nick and Nick's, you know, Nick puts all that out there. They say,
hey, eventually someone's going to come in with a big enough number, buy them up, destroy the tech.
And, you know, we'll have to wait for the next iteration of the startup agency management system. And that,
um, you know, I think that's sad. I would love, I don't know how you do it. Um, you know, I,
I, you know, I love that. I do. I I've seen agents investing more and, and trying to be more
involved in the, the investor cycle for, for startups and different insurtechs for that reason. But it's just, it's a good problem to have
that we have so many companies
doing amazing things and building.
And hopefully there becomes a path for founders
to reap the benefit of the risk that they took,
which I absolutely positively believe
that they should be able to do
while staying independent from these large conglomerates. And whether it's
just a better ecosystem, a more connected ecosystem where you don't have to be bought,
maybe it's platforms like Steve's who are able to get everyone in the same room and allow for that.
But I think it's a very exciting time. Yeah. One other kind of comment too, and it really is a result of my work with Catalyst and getting that going, but it's interesting to me how many, bigger than I realize, state associations are actually investing in some startups.
Helping them get going, having, you know, again, part of it is financial return, part of it is service and benefit to their members. Part of it. And, you know, I've always seen potentially Catalyst having some kind of role in that.
I don't know what that looks like at this point. We've got to get going.
But, you know, again, it's interesting.
And I think some of those are kind of investments are not as focused on what's the right phrase?
I can't think of it.
Buyouts and, you know, cashing out as much as are we serving our members and are they
getting the help that they need?
And so I think that's another interesting aspect of not just the, you know, the big
boys playing and taking it over. But again,
investment from agents themselves, but also I see it associations too. And there are a handful,
quite a few actually, who are able to, and are making some of those strategic investments.
Yeah. I think, so I want to be respectful of your guys' time
and of everyone listening. I'll just give everyone a final thought here to just comment on. And
if I were to kind of surmise this conversation and the concept of the future of insurtech,
it's that highly valuable products are now becoming downstream available
at cost for agencies of any size
to really build the type of agency that they want,
which makes this one of the most exciting times
to be in our industry that have ever existed.
That's kind of my take.
And knowing individuals like yourselves
and many others who
are playing similar games. This is, it's a lot of fun. I mean, this is, you get to build whatever
you want, you know, and that wasn't the case not too long ago. And that's, that's really,
really fun. So I just want to say thank you to you guys. For everyone listening, I'm going to
have links to LinkedIn's and websites and any other contact or resources that these guys send to me,
you know, on my website, but also just, just Google these guys, you'll find them LinkedIn,
connect with them. If you're not already. And I just couldn't recommend the insights,
thoughts and the, and the tools that you guys are building anymore. And I just want to say
thank you to three of you for choosing the show to come on
and have this conversation with.
It's been such a pleasure.
Ryan, it's been fun.
Yeah.
Very fun.
Thanks, Ryan.
Appreciate it.
Thanks for having us.
Been a great time.
Thanks for it.
And looking forward to the next one.
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