The Ryan Hanley Show - RHS 166 - The One Question You Must Answer in 2023
Episode Date: December 22, 2022Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.comYou MUST answer only one question in 2023 to maximize your success.Are you building a lifestyle or growth agency?There is no right or wrong an...swer. The only mistake is not taking the question seriously.In this special episode of The Ryan Hanley Show, we break down why this question is so important and how your answer creates a filter for all decisions you make about your agency.Don't miss this one...Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In a crude laboratory in the basement of his home.
What's up guys? Welcome back to the show.
And a very Merry Christmas and holiday season to all of you.
Depending on when you're listening to this, this is being recorded the week of Christmas
and hopefully Cass and his amazing team can get it out this week for me.
I'm sure they will because they are the best.
And if you're listening to this, just want to quickly say I love you.
I think that it's amazing that you spend time with me
between your ears. You have a lot of shows, a lot of content. You can read, you can watch video,
you can listen to podcasts. And if you choose to listen to podcasts and you choose to listen to
this podcast, I just appreciate the hell out of it. And it's why I work so hard to deliver value
to you guys. Lots of great stuff coming in 2023. Finding Peak is growing every week.
That was a cool rhyme.
Didn't mean it to be.
So if you're not subscribed to Finding Peak, go to findingpeak.com.
You're going to get articles on content marketing,
what we're doing to drive lead gen, inbound insurance stuff. You're also going to get a lot of the stuff that I like to write about
that is very cathartic to me around personal development, peak performance, and business life and insurance is
what it's all about. So go to findingpeak.com. Great community over there. We're well over
1,300 members and growing all the time. Appreciate the hell out of you if you're subscribed there.
Most of the content is free. There is a small paid section, but that's only for you nerds that want to go
deep diving on what we do at Rogue to drive inbound business and create that foundation
that is our lead flow. Okay. I want to give a quick shout out to a new sponsor of the show,
brand new sponsor of the show, sponsor alert, sponsor alert, Tivoli, formerly known as commercialinsurance.net. Tivoli is the rebranded,
renamed version of commercialinsurance.net, and they are part of the bedrock of how we create
consistency in our lead flow at Rogue Risk. They deliver warm, qualified, live phone call transfers
for the industries we want, the class of business we want, the size companies we want, and the geographic regions that we want. And what I love about Tivoli Leads
is that you're talking to the business owner, like literally the person who you want to get
on the phone with, right? We work so hard. We do all this cold calling. We do all this content
marketing, inbound marketing. We do Google ads and all the stuff that we do. And Tivoli delivers those people
to you live on the phone. And we have a very high close ratio. The last time I looked, it was north
of 60% on Tivoli leads. Obviously, you're paying for those leads. I mean, that's how they make
money. But if you're thinking about return on investment and lifetime value, Tivoli is a
tremendous, tremendous place to get that ROI that you're looking for,
to get activity.
I love it too when we get new producers
driving those Tivoli leads into the new producers.
It just, it gets them at bats right away, right?
Right away, they're talking to people.
I can see how they respond.
I can see how they deal with customers,
all that kind of stuff.
Tivoli is a sponsor of this podcast.
And if you go to tivly.com,
tivly.com, that's tivly.com, you will find Tivoli and you can sign up, become an agent,
and I highly recommend that you at least check them out, right? I never say that you should absolutely do one thing or another,
but we use Tivoli.
They get our highest recommendation, and I hope that you'll check them out.
With that, guys, let's get on to today's show.
So for today's show, it's a solo episode.
It's going to be just me today.
Didn't have anyone else on purpose because I wanted to talk about the number one lesson
that I learned this year growing Rogue Risk.
And this is a lesson that I think talked about a lot.
Cass and I have talked about it for a long time.
Unfortunately, that's not a beer.
It's a bubbly.
It's too early in the day for a beer.
And it's not a weekend, so that's just a bubbly.
So all you that like to give me crap for drinking beers while I podcast, today you're getting sober, Ryan.
That being said, this lesson is a hard-fought lesson. It takes a lot of introspection.
It's something that seemingly is in my own DNA in the way I'm pushed,
right? There's no right or wrong to this decision. Absolutely no right or wrong. So
please take everything that I'm going to say in the rest of this podcast is not a judgment
one way or the other. There is no right or wrong. but I do think that when we find ourselves at crossroads,
we find ourselves faced with obstacles that are seemingly very difficult to make a decision
on, oftentimes, it is because we have not answered this particular question, this very
specific, very specific question about our business. We have not answered that question yet and when we do,
everything changes. Everything about the way we operate changes. Everything about the tools we
use, the people we hire, how we market our business, how we brand our business, the associations that
we're part of, the networks we join, the agents that we surround ourselves with, the agents and
the thought leaders that we follow both in the industry and outside the industry, everything changes
when we make this one singular decision, when we answer this one very specific question.
So with all that buildup, what is that question? All right. The question is,
are you building for personal wealth or are you building a business?
In your insurance career, are you building for personal wealth or are you building a business?
And for those cheeky out there, the cheeky people that are listening to this,
you're probably saying, well, Ryan, I can do both. I'm building a business that provides me with personal wealth.
If you're building a business, personal wealth may be a byproduct, maybe, right? But you're
probably not going to necessarily maximize your personal wealth and certainly not in the short term.
And I'll get to what all this means. But if you don't know the answer to this question,
then you are most likely or have in the past made decisions that may have seemed right,
but ultimately felt off, didn't connect with what you were trying to do.
And let's break that down. So what I see in the industry is what I call lifestyle agents
or growth agents. There's really two types. Lifestyle agents tend to have smaller agencies, three, five, seven people. They tend to be very owner
centric. The owner is also probably the biggest producer at the agency. The owner's name is also
most likely on the outside of the building. And everything is kind of geared around the way that the owner likes to operate.
That is a lifestyle agency.
They're not, you know, things like automation, things like digital, remote, ease of business,
connectivity, APIs, integrated systems, paperless, touchless, these types of concepts that we talk about
a lot on this show, especially when we're talking to InsurTech founders and stuff like
that or when Cass and I get on and we riff or rip or Bradley Flowers or whoever.
You know, when those conversations to a lifestyle agent don't really mean as much and or certainly shouldn't mean as
much and I and I oftentimes where I see lifestyle agents go wrong is not in their decision to be a
lifestyle agent I mean trust me there are many days where I say to myself shit I wish I was just
there are there are definitely days if I'm being all candid you know it's it's Christmas time so
we can we can we can be honest right if you can't be honest during Christmas, then when can you be honest?
There are definitely days where I wake up and I'm like, shit,
I wish I just had like a four-person agency and I was out working, you know,
middle market accounts and had some personal lines and had a nice little book go in
that I could carve out a good salary from and, you know, wouldn't that be nice,
right?
Wouldn't that be nice to not have 10 bazillion things happening all the time and have to,
you know, be looking to scale and grow and, you know, but the truth is I'm not a lifestyle agent.
I'm not geared that way.
It's not in my DNA.
I am a wartime general. I am, uh, I'm the guy who looks at the well, well laid, you know, uh, uh,
well paved, well manicured, wide trail that everyone uses to get from A to B and goes,
well, what happens if we climb this mountain over here? Right? Like that's just how I'm wired. I
don't know how else to be. And look, it probably got me fired from trustedchoice.com. It definitely was part of the issue that I had, you know,
why I was never really a great fit at Bold Penguin. It's also most likely the reason that
there was some friction at the fitness place. I don't know how to fit in. I don't. I don't know
how to just like fit into a nice little box and show up every day and check that box and do my job and stay out of other people's lanes and not push. I want to go
all the time. I just want to go. You know, I think seemingly part of that or what has helped me a
little bit is understanding that I now, like in the last few months, have kind of been diagnosed
with ADHD, which is fine.
To me, it's a superpower.
It's not like it changes my life.
It's nice to know.
And what it has helped me do is communicate with people a little better because I understand that the way my brain works and the contextual or tangential way in which I communicate or
think is not the way that everyone else thinks and that I have to sometimes rein myself in or try to be very succinct or concise in an
effort to get my message across. If you've listened to this podcast for any amount of time, I don't
try to do those things on this show. Obviously, we go in 10 million directions, which is where
I'm on right now. But my point in saying all that to you is I have realized about myself that I'm not a lifestyle agent. I am never going to be content having my place, maximizing my personal wealth,
taking things brick by brick, step by step.
That's just never going to be my way.
There are days when I wish it was.
And I have all the respect and everything for someone who says,
hey, I want to get my agency to seven people,
like to make a million in revenue, and just be happy.
And just that's what we're going to be, and we're going to be great,
and I'm going to have a lake house and coach the kids' teams.
And I think those things are amazing.
And trust me, I like want those things, except I'm not wired to be that thing.
I can't help not wanting to push. I can't help not wanting to find a bigger deal. I can't help
wanting to add another employee and bring them into the team and scale to the next level
and find that trick or hack or even not finding that process that just done repeatedly generates
more income. Like I can't help but want to follow those things and I
don't have patience. I wish I had patience. I just read a great quote today on investing.
I love investing and reading about investing and a lot of my non-insurance content is either
in, I do enjoy personal development, I can't help that. But it's either in like in personal development or it's in like investing because I'm just very interested in that. So I read this great. Yeah.
And the key, and this is a Warren Buffett quote to the effect of investment success is the result of patient
people taking money from impatient people or something like that, right?
And I read that and I was just like, shit, I'm screwed.
I'm screwed.
How am I, you know, I'm just so impatient, which is why I try to surround myself with patient people,
process people, brick by brick people, because those people are amazing compliments.
And I would like to think I'm an amazing compliment to them in the right scenario,
because together we can get where we want to be.
And I know that about myself. So my reason for this big, long,
seemingly 10-minute diatribe is to say, if you have not answered this question,
I hope that as you're doing your planning and you're thinking and you're going into 2023,
that this will be the first question that you have to answer. Like I would, you know, when young agents, new agents,
agents that are struggling, when they call me these days, right?
When they reach out or DM me or whatever,
one of the first things that I ask them is,
are you building a lifestyle agency or a growth agency?
Because a growth agency is a completely different monster.
And a life agency is more of the classic traditional model, which I think can be incredibly successful.
But again, not a judgment. It's what makes you happy? What fulfills you, right? What puts you
in a position to live the life that you want to live, right? Where do you want to be? And both are incredibly important, incredibly respected
paths. There's no wrong answer, but you need to know the answer. If you're a lifestyle agent
and you start chasing growth-focused tools or processes or listening to people who are giving advice that's for
growth-focused agencies, but you're a lifestyle agent, you're going to find yourself wasting
a lot of money, a lot of time, creating frustration, creating friction in your business that's
unnecessary because you don't need, you know, find some super, you know, let's talk about
carriers, right?
So let's get into, let's get past it.
So hopefully you will answer this question.
Guys, I'd love for you to
tell me the answer to this question. If you're listening to this, DM me on LinkedIn, right?
Hit me up on LinkedIn and just put lifestyle or growth. I'd love to know. I'd love to know
what your path is, understanding that regardless of what your answer is, I know what my answer is,
and I'm not saying that that's right for you. I'm saying I just, I know what my answer
is. I'm not a lifestyle agent. There's a big part of me that wishes that I was because I love to do
things like ski and I love to fish. And I feel like if I had a lifestyle agency, I'd be able to
build more of my life into it. But being that I can't not be who I am, which is someone who is always out over my tips, who's always
pushing, leaning in, who sees this big, huge path to success and decides to climb the mountain.
I don't understand why I do that or why I'm built that way, but I am, right? I know that about
myself and it's taken 40, almost 42 years to get there. So, you know, whatever.
It just is what it is.
But it's okay.
DM me on LinkedIn or just hit me up on LinkedIn or if you want to be super froggy because
it's Christmas time and we're going to share this podcast on LinkedIn and just put as the
comment lifestyle or growth.
So I know I'd love that.
Just ping me or whatever, You know, just because hopefully this
helps. Now let's talk about breaking down some of the decisions that we have to make and what I've
seen over this past year and what I see coming that you can, you know, when you make this decision.
So whether it's lifestyle or growth, when you make this decision, some of the things in our
business, some of the key ideas and how they break out.
So the first one is technology, right? Let's go to technology. That's an easy one.
Alright, everyone talks about technology, InsurTech, all this kind of stuff. Love it.
I obviously love InsurTech. I do,
one of the really fun things that came out of this year was,
you know, with the acquisition, I had a little extra cash and I was able to do some angel investing.
Took With the acquisition, I had a little extra cash and I was able to do some angel investing. Took four positions, small positions in InsurTechs in the industry,
companies that I believe in, really founders that I believe in, missions that I believe in,
and very, very thankful to be part of those in a small way.
And I love it.
I love watching the growth.
I love learning from the founders.
I love reading their monthly or quarterly reports.
I love following the business and watching what they do
and hopefully, you know, someday,
one or two of them hit big and I make some cash,
which would be sweet.
But really, I just love supporting the industry
and I love being part of some of these companies
and I like kind of, you know,
maybe this sounds weird, but I'm buying access to founders to just, not necessarily from
a like I'm going to call them perspective, but just watching the way they operate, seeing
the behind the scenes and getting to learn from them.
It's almost like I'm buying a mentorship to a certain extent, if that makes sense to you.
So I've gotten to do that.
So I obviously love tech.
I love insure tech.
Believe in it.
But if you're a lifestyle agent, you don't need all this bullshit.
Guys, you don't need all of the nonsense if you're a lifestyle agent.
You need three to five solid carriers, the majority of which should be
regionals who actually are there for you as a smaller, local, most likely geographically
oriented single state agency.
You know, if we're in New York, that's a merchant or a Dryden Mutual or a Leatherstocking or
if you're on the purse line side, a New York Central Mutual.
Maybe you get an Acadia, someone like that who I love Acadia.
And then you backfill with maybe one or two nationals,
a Travelers or a Hartford or a Nationwide or someone like that, right?
Like, you know, maybe on personal lines,
maybe you also need a Safeco or something,
but like just a nice tight mix of carriers that are going to believe in you. Maybe one solid E&S relationship.
You know, if you're, you know, if I would, you know, I would probably go with like a RT or RPS
or something like that. Maybe a Pathpoint. I love Pathpoint. I think they're a great company. They
don't have all the markets yet, but their workflow is very, very easy to use.
It makes ENS very accessible.
I really like a lot of what Pathpoint is doing.
They're a former sponsor of the show, but not anymore.
But we still use them all the time at Rogue Risk.
I love Pathpoint.
So maybe one or two solid ENS relationships and five to seven carrier relationships.
And that's it.
Stop chasing carriers.
And as far as tech, you don't need tech, right?
You don't need all the fancy bells and whistles, right?
You need a simple, straightforward agency management system
that's going to allow you to capture the data that you need,
get your downloads, service your customers,
and have a good comm system.
Now, I think what that means is if I had a single location and I didn't need to do all the fancy shit, but I was
trying to build a legitimate agency, I'd look at Applied, right? I'm not, you know, I like some of
the people that I'm starting to see float around Applied. Obviously, I've always been a fan of
Reed Holsworth, who is, you know, kind of tangentially with Applied, with Ivins, and I've always been a fan of Reid Holsworth who is kind of tangentially with
Applied with Ivins and I've always been a fan.
I'm a huge fan of Ragoff and the entire team of Tarmaco that were just purchased by them
and I know a few other people in there but Applied is tough because they seemingly the
data stuff and the control but that being said, I think they're trying to do some of
the right things and this is not like an apology.
I'm not an applied apologist by any regard but I'm just saying if I was, I wouldn't worry
about all the bullshit, right?
All the bullshit that you hear me talk about and different agents talk about with some
of these big agency management systems, like I wouldn't worry about that if I were a lifestyle
agency.
I would get a system that was rock solid, that worked, that I could train my team on,
that would do the job, that I wouldn't have to worry about the nonsense that comes with
connectivity.
Because guys, connectivity creates as many problems as it solves.
Today's technology in the insurance industry, the more connected a tool is, the more connectivity that's involved with a tool, it solves problems for sure, but it also creates problems.
So, and we can get to that in a second maybe, but so I just get something rock solid.
If it can email, it can text, it can capture your phone calls, it does great with download
and captures all the information you need so you can service
your customers.
I don't think you need a lot more than that.
I don't know that you do.
You know, I think if you're a startup startup, like brand new, brand new, I would look at
Better Agency.
Personally, that's where I would go if I was brand new.
If I'm brand new to the business, I would go to Better Agency.
I think the things they're doing are wonderful.
I think they give you a dynamic tool. I think they're they're doing are wonderful. I think they give you a dynamic tool.
I think they're a little behind on accounting. I think they're a little behind on commercial,
but not that far behind and seemingly making huge strides all the time.
I think maybe if I'm steelmanning the other side of the argument against better agency,
I think they came out a little early with some of their marketing compared to some of their functionality, right? So I think some of the disconnect with Better Agency has been that there was a lot of marketing
before all the functionality was in place.
And I think agents kind of got a little disconnected there,
partially because it's so easy to get on Better Agency, which I think is a huge advantage, right?
Like if you want Better Agency, you can like turn it on today.
And it's so easy to train on that you could, you know, have your people up and running.
The flip side is, I think that because it's so easy, people don't give it the time or grace
needed to learn the system and integrate it into your workflows, where they do with something like
on Applied Epic, where it takes months and months to get on the tool. And there's all kinds of
trainings and your trainings on trainings and all this kind of stuff. And we just like set our mind
to a longer timetable. And I think seemingly that's a big part of the
difference, but pick a system. Don't overthink it, commit to it. It's just an agency management
system. Don't overthink it, right? Don't overthink it. And you know, a few other tools that you could
pick from depending on what you're going to do. If you're going to go commercial, get something
like a wonder, right? Right. Just, just a simple form. I wouldn't want to say simple because I think
WonderWrite is a great tool. We use it. But like get a form tool, get your agency management system,
and you know, if it were me, maybe get like a Loom. Get Loom so you can do some cold video
outreach. And then get to work. Like what else do you need? You need a phone system, an agency
management system. If you're doing commercial, you're going to need forms, supplemental forms, which I really like
WonderWrite for, especially at the price point. And maybe something so you can do some video
replies and video outreach, which I think is a huge part of business today. That's just me
personally. And how much more do you need? Get to work, right? That's it. Don't worry about all
the other crap. Don't worry about the fancy bells and whistles
and the digital bots and the VAs
and all this kind of stuff.
Like, don't worry about that, right?
If you're struggling to get appointments,
join SIA.
And hey, I know I'm biased,
but the deeper I get into knowing
what this organization is all about,
the more I believe it's like a no-brainer to join it, right?
I get there's like a fee
and I get that if you leave, there's a fee. but my God, the access to carriers, the immediate access to carriers
and your ability to maximize revenue day one, it is a no brainer to me. Like, I don't know.
That's just, I don't know why I wasn't part of it before. I think I just didn't know. I think a big
part of it is I didn't know, honestly. And there's going to be more to come out on this. And I'm not
saying I say it's the only network. There may be other networks that are good for you.
I just think that I wouldn't get so caught up in doing it yourself. Get out of that
Facebook group ego stroking bullshit and grow your business in a way that allows you to live
your life if you're a lifestyle agent. That is my best advice. Don't chase rabbits down holes. Write the business that you know how
to write and write it often. Be a person around town. Enjoy the lifestyle of being a local
independent agent. Be that thing. Don't keep chasing nonsense. All the nonsense technology
stuff is a distraction. Now we're going to flip
it and go to the other side. If you're a growth agent, you better get your head in coverage.
You better get on LinkedIn. You better be going to conferences. You better be listening to podcasts.
You better be doing independent research because connectivity is game and ease of business is the
game to a growth focused digital agent. Ease of business connectivity are the game. business is the game. To a growth-focused digital agent, ease of business,
connectivity are the game. That is the whole game, okay? You cannot be a growth-focused,
high growth-focused agency. Now, Grant, if you're writing big $500,000 accounts and you're doing,
got three or four of them and you put numbers on the books, that's great. That's not what I'm
talking about. I'm talking about agents that are looking to put 5 million, 10 million,
20 million in premium on the books that want to freaking grow. And don't tell me you're too small.
You're not. In two and a half years, I've taken this thing from freaking nothing to, you know,
we did what? Just in the fourth quarter, I think we did close to two and a half, almost three million in premium just in the fourth quarter of a two and a
half year old agency. I mean, we're just getting started. So don't tell me that you guys can't do
it. You can do it. Like it's all there for you, but you got to choose to be growth focused and
you can't make lifestyle decisions. You can't, you have to choose. The reason that I would never choose Applied is that their system isn't open.
So for a lifestyle agency, all day, I actually tell people,
I think it's an incredible platform.
I think it is.
But today, that plot, and I'm not banging on Applied.
Like I said, I have tons of friends there, and I'm not knocking them.
But right now, that is not a quote-unquote open system.
And connectivity and ease of use is the game.
So if that's the game, I personally cannot consider them.
So I'm looking, you got to look for platforms that are going to let you build, connect.
You know, we're on Nexture.
I like Nexture a lot.
I think it's highly antiquated that they charge you for API access.
Applied does the same thing, but it's more expensive and convoluted.
Vertifor, in my opinion, is kind of a mess with that side.
There's all kind of like hacks that you do, which are crazy.
I'm not interested in hacks.
But with Nexture, you pay a fee, they open up that spigot, go to town,
build whatever you want, and that's what we're in the middle of doing because connectivity and ease of use and acts, that is the game if you're going to be growth focused.
And that's where your head needs to be. And that is why if you're growth focused, if you're
building a business, right? Lifestyle agencies are for personal wealth. Building businesses
are for growth. And if you're building a business, a growth focused business, you need to grow
because you want the top level contracts.
You want all the special schmuggies. You want all the programs from the carriers. You want attention.
You want, you want APIs. You have to be putting business on the books. That is the game. So,
you know, when it comes to technology, if your lifestyle, get your core pieces, get
to work, go do your job, live your life, make your money.
God bless you.
That's amazing.
If you're going to be growth focused and make that decision, then you need to understand
that you need to stop selling insurance.
If you're an agency principal and you're selling insurance and you're calling yourself a growth
focused agency, in my opinion, you are not growing as fast as you could.
And it's probably making a lot of mistakes and creating a lot of blind spots in your business because instead of being a
business leader, you're being an agent. And to grow a growth focused business, you have to be
a leader or there needs to be a leader. You have to give up control, be the top producer, the big
dog producer, but then hire a president or a COO or
someone else to run the business. Because we're in a lifestyle agency, the producer is the business.
In a growth-focused business, the business is the business. You're just another person in the
business. You just happen to have ownership in it. That is a big core thing. So don't tell me you're growth-focused
if you're not researching, if you're not up on the trends, if you're not pushing the technology,
if you're not thinking about process and execution and access and ease of business and connectivity.
If you're not thinking about those things, then you're not running a growth-focused business
or you're creating a lot of obstacles and blind spots. If you're a lifestyle business,
get your head out of that shit and run your freaking business and make money and take care of your family and live your
life. And that's the technology piece. What's up guys. Sorry to take you away from the episode,
but as you know, we do not run ads on this show. And in exchange for that, I need your help.
If you're loving this episode, if you enjoy this
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stories around peak performance leadership growth sales the things that
are gonna help you grow as a person and grow your business but they all check
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come on.
So as I reach out to more and more people
and want to bring them in and share their stories with you,
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Share the show, subscribe if you're not subscribed.
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I love you for listening to this show
and I hope you enjoy it listening
as much as I do creating
the show for you. All right, I'm out of here. Peace. Let's get back to the episode. All right.
So the next one I want to talk about is carriers, right? I think carrier mix is highly dependent
on whether you're growth focused or lifestyle. For lifestyle, I like regionals. Love regionals
for lifestyle businesses. Regionals take care of you.
Regionals care.
I mean, to all my national whatever, I love you guys.
I do too because I've grown.
I've kind of come back to the table on a lot of the nationals.
I've gotten to know them and whatever, but it's different.
Large national businesses have different priorities.
They, and I don't think I'm speaking out of turn when I say this,
it's not that they don't care about the lifestyle businesses, but when you look at the balance sheet and the income statement and
where they get their money and where, it's big deals, it's big agencies, it's networks,
it's the top 100, that's what's growing their business, right? Not a seven-person, $750,000 revenue agency
that's growing at 10% per year. That is not growing the Hartford. That's not growing Travelers,
right? That lifestyle agency. Not that they don't want them and not that they won't support them.
But you look at, let's just take some of the ones I used in New York. Acadia, Merchants,
New York Central Mutual, Dryden, Leatherstocking, some of my favorites.
There's more, but those are some of my favorites.
Although Merchants unequivocally denied an appointment to us on multiple occasions
because we weren't a good fit, which we probably weren't, but I still like them.
And my buddy Doug Benz likes them, so I like them because he likes them. So, all that being said, those types of regional, super regional, single-state domicile agency
carriers like Dry and Leatherstock and New York Central, those guys, your $750,000 revenue
agency growing at 10% a year, you're growing their business.
They love you.
You're putting profitable, consistent business on the books, and you're helping them grow. And what they're going to do in return is pay you
higher commissions. They're going to give you access deeper into the business from an underwriting
perspective, from a programs perspective. They're going to give you some more leeway,
especially if you're putting profitable business on the books, right? They're going to work with
you, create marketing plans. Like that's the type of relationship that you need for a lifestyle business. For someone like us, who's writing in all 50 states, 250 class codes, what, probably
all, what is it, 15 to 17 lines of commercial insurance that are kind of mainstream, like
we need big national relationships for the most part.
We do have a couple regionals like Acadia.
We are pointing to Acadia.
I love Acadia. We're pointing to Acadia. I love Acadia.
We're going to continue to grow with them.
We do have some regionals that give us some of that leeway and access that we need for
certain accounts.
But for the most part, we need broad appetite, high access, ease of use carriers that are
going to allow us to flow massive amounts of business through them.
That's what we need.
That's a different type of relationship, right? I, you know, we probably aren't a great fit for merchants,
right? As much as I have respect for merchants. And just like a single location, geographically
based, single state agency isn't going to be a huge source of interest or growth for a large
national carrier or international carrier, right?
So we have to kind of consider these relationships.
Probably need a mix of both always, but if I'm lifestyle, I'm skewing more towards my
regionals.
If I'm multi-state, if I'm high growth focused, I'm probably skewing more towards my nationals.
Again, don't chase, this is a huge mistake that I made, huge, enormous mistake that I
made.
Don't chase this is a huge mistake that i made huge enormous mistake that i made don't chase
carrier appointments guys i've made this i took every freaking appointment that i could get early
on because i was just trying to survive and while it allowed me to survive right now i got a lot of
mouths to feed and i it's hard i like all the carriers i can always see the best in what they're
doing there's some that i'm not a big fan of, but for the most part, I can see good in all of them. And I want
to put business with all of them and it's, and it's a struggle, right? I want to have successful
relationships and we're going to have to make some hard decisions in 2023 and pare down our carrier
set to a, to a core group that really allows us to be successful and build and grow. But chasing
carrier appointments is just wasted time a lot. Now, again, there are going to be strategic moments, strategic appointments that you go
out and get because they help you but I just say, you know, be very, very particular.
The carriers are being more and more particular in who they appoint and I think in turn, we
as agents have to be very, very particular in who we take our contracts with.
I think in a hard market like what we're seeing today, in a rapidly contracting market, it is important for us to be diligent
in those contracts that we sign. Not from like an accountability standpoint, like can you hit
the number? But then like it's just time away. It's more distractions. It's another appetite
mix that you have to think about. And those things take up a lot of brain cycles and I would just highly recommend that we get a good, solid, tight carrier mix.
We become very good friends with them.
We feed those carriers and in return, I think we're gonna get a lot back and I think especially
today again, carriers have to survive too in a hard market and the agents that are feeding
them that are putting good business on the books, they're going to move towards those agencies, both on the lifestyle and in the growth aspect.
So just don't take on too many carrier relationships.
I am dealing with that every day.
It's not my favorite.
You do what you can do to survive, but it is what it is. The next one is kind of a tough one because
a lot of you are not going to be, many of you probably won't agree. Most of you probably don't
want to hear this, but commercial insurance on Main Street under $10,000 in premium is 100%
a commodity these days. It's a commodity. It's probably as much or more of a commodity than
personal insurance. I don't really write a lot of personal insurance, but it just is. Maybe the
number's 5,000, maybe it's 10, somewhere in there. But a lot of these, the BOPs, the GL policies,
the workers' comp policies, the commercial auto policies, they're all exactly the
same. Exactly the same. And as long as you are partnering with the large subset of carriers that
do a good job on claims, obviously there's always differences in how claims are handled. But for the
most part, most of the names that you know in commercial insurance on those size accounts are
pretty good about handling claims. I mean, we have not had a lot of problems with carriers paying claims or taking care of our
customers. So I don't have really anything negative to say there. All I can say is like,
it's all the same stuff. A lot of it is pricing and ease of business. So I wouldn't, like if you have a traveler's appointment,
I don't know that I would chase a Hartford appointment.
I don't know why you would do that.
I think Hartford's a little easier to do business with maybe.
But Travel's a great company.
Pays claims, does a good job.
I know they've messed around with commissions on the personal line side.
I haven't seen too much of that on the commercial line side.
But, you know, we're talking commercial lines
because that's what I know.
You know, Hartford's incredibly easy to do business with.
Employers on the worst comp side, easy.
Pi's easy.
I think ease of business is a big,
ease of business is a big part of the decision these days
because it's all the same stuff.
And frankly, it's like mindless.
I mean, if you work our process,
the Rogue Risk inbound lead process,
if you work our process,
I mean, you should be closing 90% of all the qualified leads.
It's just mindless stuff.
It's just the problems are all the same.
The products are all the same.
The companies, for the most part, are all the same.
Now you get into contractors, a little different, right?
Anything that deals with transportation is a little different.
I'm talking mostly Main Street, you know, the majority of classes down the middle.
It's all the same.
So my point in telling you that is, just kind of maybe goes back to the carrier thing a little bit.
One, understand that that stuff's going to be automated away with AI in the next five to ten years.
So just be aware that that's coming.
Two, you know, these don't chase for that type of business.
Don't chase carrier appointments thinking you're going to get something better.
You're not.
Unless your carrier set is so incredibly difficult to deal with from like a quoting and binding perspective
that you're like literally struggling to do it,
which today most people are, I don't think,
especially if you're a lifestyle agency
and you're doing, you know, 10 quotes a week or something.
Like, you know, you should be able to plow through any system
10 quotes a week.
I mean, that's like nothing.
So, you know, like just don't be chasing carriers.
That stuff is commoditized.
You're not getting really anything less from one carrier to another within reason, right?
As long as you're in an A-rated national or regional carrier.
If you're in New York and you're with one of the mutuals, just make sure that their BOP lines up.
But their GL is going to be great usually.
Make sure they don't have any special exclusions. But outside of that, a lot of the productss, just make sure that their BOP lines up, but their GL is going to be great usually. Make sure they don't have any special exclusions.
But outside of that, a lot of the products are exactly the same.
So what that says is it's process, process, process, process, process.
That is the whole game.
It's not my specialty.
It's what we've had to do a lot of work on.
But with every new process, with every new, I will say system, not from the technology standpoint but from the actual like working a flow that we put in place,
that we commit to, we watch our production go up.
And so don't get too caught up in that business, the commercial business under five, ten thousand
premium that is processed.
Not that you shouldn't write it, you should.
I mean those are business owners, those are real people, your community it's great business love that business i mean that's
that's our but that is our business i love those people that's not knocking the consumers i'm just
telling you the products are all the same so just don't get fucked up over the products the products
are all the same they just are you can see a little bit of difference in some of the professional
line stuff maybe but like where's comp it's all the same. It's just pricing.
You're not, you know, it's all just pricing.
Bops, pretty much it's all pricing.
GL, pretty much all just pricing.
It's what it is.
Commercial auto, pricing, really.
I mean, if they're willing to write it.
So don't get too messed up about that stuff.
Get slick, get, slick is the wrong word.
Get standardized, consistent processing in place.
Do a really good job, but churn it and burn it.
Because one, it's tough to make money on, and two, all the products are the same.
So, all right, wanted to share that.
Hope that came across the way that I wanted to.
I have no idea.
Sounded better when I wrote it down.
You know, just a couple other thoughts in this particular vein here.
Whether you are a lifestyle or a growth-focused agency, you have no competition.
Get the idea of competition out of your head.
Directs aren't your competition.
Your carriers aren't your competition.
The agency down the street isn't your competition.
Captives aren't your competition.
Insurtechs aren't your competition.
There is no competition. There is only brand. I'm going to say that one more time. There is
no competition, there is only brand. It is your competition is you. It is do people trust
you and do you do a good job? Because if those two things are true, you're going to run a
ton of business regardless if you're growth or lifestyle focused. I continue to see, and I'll be honest with you, I'm like this, you can't see me,
my fingers are really close together. I'm like this close, very close to just getting off of
Facebook because I find Facebook to be such a waste of time. But I do jump in these Facebook
groups and I look at them and it's just like, oh my God, people focused on what I believe are all
the wrong things.
This company did this.
Did you see that these guys did this thing over here?
This carrier's advertising director, you know, do you see what the latest goosehead, you know, recruitment campaign says about this or that?
Who gives a bleep?
It doesn't matter.
There's so much business out there for everybody, regardless
of your geographic lifestyle or your national high growth focused embedded insurance, whatever.
There's so much business to write that the only competition is you. Are you creating trust? Are
you easy to do business with? Do you do a good job? That's it. That's the whole game.
That's the whole freaking game.
And to get caught up in any of this other nonsense is just a waste of fucking time.
And one of the things that I've loved about Rogue Risk is that I've been so caught up
in growing this thing and creating systems and processes and putting leads in the top
of the funnel and figuring out how to shake them out and maximizing our revenue and cross-selling
and hiring people and all these things i haven't thought about competition in years
and i just was like woke up one day and i i woke up one day i was reading a facebook group one day
and like the thought popped into my head and i just was like oh my god all these people think
that they have competitors they don't have competitors there's no competitors like you take
business from this comp agency they take but that's not they don't choosing you over the
competitor it's do they trust you do they believe that you're going to do the job are you properly
setting expectations and do you meet those expectations when it's time to take action
and if you do those things you're going to win more than enough business than you could ever
want regardless if you are growth or lifestyle stop worrying about the competition now if you do those things, you're going to win more than enough business than you could ever want, regardless if you are growth or lifestyle.
Stop worrying about the competition.
Now, if you are in the marketing function or you're trying to figure out new things,
I'm not saying don't do market research.
I'm not saying that you should just forget that they exist completely, but just understand
that every second that you waste thinking about or worrying about your competition is exactly that. It's wasted time, right? Being in the space for 17 years now, two and a half,
these last two and a half, almost three years as an agency owner, there's no competition.
It's only how good is your brand. And I don't mean brand in like the hack marketer,
like bait and switch kind of way.
I mean, do people believe you do what you say?
And if that's true,
you will write an absolute mess of business
and that's the whole game.
So stop worrying about the competition.
I can't read another freaking Facebook post
about one of the carriers
that works with independent agents going direct.
They all want to go direct. I hope we're not blind to that. They all would cut us all out in a heartbeat if
they could, but they can't because we're really valuable. So they have this constant tension. We
have this constant tension. It's just part of life. Get over it, move on, get back to growing
your business. To that end, this business takes experience. So for you younger agents or for
people who are dealing with younger in the business agents, don't necessarily have to be
young in age, understand you can either buy experience or you can earn experience. Those
are your only two options. But to be successful, you have to have experience. I learned this the
very hard way in growing Rogue Risk. Even though I had tons of experience selling, that part isn't
really where I needed the experience. I needed experience learning how to run an agency. And for, you know,
up until basically November of this year, I had to earn every bit of that experience because I
didn't have someone working inside my agency who had the experience. And even though I have tons
of friends who've been absolutely amazing and share so much
and masterminds and groups.
And I gotta give Gordon Coyle another shout out
for all the advice that he's given me
and Paradiso and Carruthers and Cass and everybody,
Doug Benz and all my friends, all of them.
And if I'm forgetting you, Namoli, right?
Just all my friends, like just all of you.
Thank you so much, right? But it's not in the my friends, like just all of you. Thank you so much,
right? But it's not in the day-to-day experience. And so you have to earn that and you make all kinds of bad decisions, which I've made. My God, I could do four hour podcast on all the bad
decisions that I've made, learning how to get to where we are in Rogue, right? I mean, that's how
you get better. So you can either earn or you can buy it. And what we recently did was bring in two consultants for one position.
They're kind of tag-teaming it.
It's our head of revenue position.
We brought in the guys from Insurance Labs, Michael Blake and Kevin Kelly,
and they are acting as our head of revenue.
Technically, it's a consulting position, but it's full time split between the two of them. And so we, we essentially bought their experience to go along with the earned experience that I have.
And just in one month, the results have been absolutely phenomenal. So my point in telling
you that is you, you, any experience that you haven't earned that you need, I'd consider go
buying it. And that's exactly what I did. I don't have these two guys' experience. I don't have Michael's experience. I don't have Kevin's experience.
They have twice the experience, two times as many years, both of them in the business,
in different aspects of the business with different specialties than I have. And versus
me continuing to bang my head off the wall, continuing to grind and make mistakes
and be frustrated with things that just I'm not great at, right?
I went out and bought that experience and they've been phenomenal.
And a big part of the success and growth that we're going to have in 2023 at Rogue Risk,
which is a very big number, is going to be because I made the tough decision,
right? I mean, this is, I only have so much, but I mean, obviously we were acquired by SAA,
so I have more budget than if I were still bootstrapping. So I probably couldn't have
afforded them in my previous iteration. I still have a budget that I have to maintain. Like this
isn't like a, I don't have like an endless pool. This is a real business. And I chose versus other things to allocate the money to buying this experience.
And it has just been a decision that I, it's been absolutely phenomenal.
And I want to say thank you to those guys.
And I just wanted to share with you that lesson that, you know, the only way you can be successful
is you either buy or earn experience.
That's our business.
You do not get to come in and win at insurance without that.
You just don't.
I don't know anyone who has.
I know nobody who has just popped into this business
and been immediately successful without earning the experience.
I just don't know anyone who has.
And if you know an example, I'd love to hear of them.
But seemingly, you either have to make every mistake
and trip over every branch and fall down every
hill and pull yourself back up and keep going or you need a guide.
And I'm very happy that I made the decision that I made and combined with my own earned
experience and Michael and Kevin and the team that we have.
I mean, when I say mine, please understand I'm talking about my entire team's experience,
not just me personally.
Although I do have the most experience on our team without Kevin and Michael.
So I want to share that lesson to you, share with you.
And then I want to reiterate, and this is kind of in the same vein,
something that I said a few podcasts ago.
I think it was the one about being uncomfortable, that I think it is incredibly
important that while I love to push and I love to bang on boomers in our industry and stuff and all
that, and Michael is a boomer and seemingly gives me crap every time I talk smack, understand that
it is incredibly important to have respect for where we came from in
this industry.
And while, yes, do I love to give all the old fat white guys in our industry shit, for
sure I do.
Because one, it's fun.
And two, seemingly, they have been around for too long.
I wish they would start passing the torch.
Not because I don't want them around, but because it's time. Like our industry needs them to do it. And it's time to do it. It's time for,
for this, for the next generation to, to start to do these things. And granted, that doesn't
mean sacrifice your personal wealth or the, what you've built. I don't mean any of that. I just
mean like leadership positions in associations or councils
and, or, or create a mentoring program that allows people to get there. That kind of stuff
is really what my point is on all that. But at the end of the day, if you are struggling to be
successful, surround yourself with people who walk with a limp. And what I mean by that is to,
to, to kind of building off this idea of experience, is this business is going to beat the absolute shit out of you.
It just is.
I experienced it firsthand this year, all over again, right, from my previous experience.
I've had many business, many career moves where it just gets the absolute shit beat out of you.
And that's a good thing.
That's a good thing. That's a good thing.
Because if you can take the abuse and keep ticking, keep walking, keep learning,
keep growing, keep fighting, keep connecting, keep going,
you deserve your place, right?
Which may sound a little counterintuitive to the boomers need to get out of the way thing.
Like, I don't mean it to be.
I mean, there needs to be more people
with less experience at the table
to learn from the people who are there
who've had the perseverance,
who've had the guts, the gumption, the grit
to fight through and survive. This is a tough business.
A lot of people don't survive. There's an incredible amount of money made, incredible
lifestyle to have, but there's a lot of people that don't make it because this business will
beat the ever living shit out of you and it doesn't care. It doesn't care. Life doesn't
care. The universe doesn't care. No one cares. Go out and get beat up. Go out and get beat up. You should want at the end of your career to be
walking with a limp because what it shows is that you came and you played the fucking game.
And guys, that's what I hope for you for 2023. All of this that I shared with you,
all these notes and nonsense that I just shared with you is I hope for you for 2023. All of this that I shared with you, all these notes and nonsense that
I just shared with you is I hope in 2023 that whatever fear you have, whatever hesitation,
you go out and you play the game. Go get your head bashed against the wall and for God's sakes,
get the fuck back up. Because we need you.
It's a hard market.
Shit's tough.
Business owners need you, right?
We got Democrats in power.
They are fucking with our small businesses.
They're fucking with our lifestyle.
Inflation is off the hook.
Anyone who says that inflation isn't bad
hasn't bought their own groceries.
Play the game.
Get the crap kicked out of you.
Feel it.
Feel.
Feel what it feels like to lose right it sucks
pisses me off i hate losing but you know what i rarely lose twice and i think that comes from
getting back up and playing the game so i hope that whatever holds you back in 2022 say fuck it get back up and beat it in 2023
and if i can help i'm always here i love you guys merry christmas happy holidays i'm out of here
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