We have been encouraging insurance buyers and agents, over the past few years, to seek out new ways of looking at the insurance buying process. We have found that things are changing for the better in regards to the agent buyer relationship. We invite you to be part of the change that can impact our industry for years to come.
These are the values to which we continue to aspire to in 2018 and beyond.
The customer relationship involves face to face time. It takes regular contact over time to build trust and create a valued based relationship.
Knowing your client’s needs, concerns, and issues is the first step in creating a value-based relationship.
Educate your clients on how to identify, treat, and manage risk. This allows for informed decisions.
Work to become a trusted advisor. A trusted advisor becomes someone who helps with business decision and issues. A trusted advisor comes to the table with resources to help the business with legal, accounting, marketing, and human resources strategy and issues.
Find a balance in the use of technology to communicate. We understand that the modern communication technology can have its benefits, but, face to face communication is the foundation of your relationship.
Believe that there is inherent good and value in being an insurance agent. This noble profession involves protecting society from devastating losses that in the absence of insurance could not sustain itself.
Work to understand the difference between consultative and transactional. The agents value proposition is that we know and understand risk. Our true value is to help others evaluate risk and provide meaningful solutions. It goes way beyond an insurance policy.
Understand what customers really want. Your customers want creative and different ideas. They want you to have client services standards. Customers desire more, and better, communication. Finally, they want you and your team to be constantly learning.
We are making progress, but be vigilant. Don’t get sucked into the old way of thinking. Don’t be fooled by Madison Avenues selling the idea that complex risk and insurance topics can be boiled down something simple.
“Progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything.” George Bernard Shaw
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks and provide solutions. Every employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
Perk Reichley and Bob Lilly
#insurance #riskmanagement #customerservice #busienssinsurance #selling #educating
What Is Your Value Proposition?
/in Agent, Customer Service, Insurance, RelationshipsHere is what has become the “industries” value proposition
A value proposition is what makes your agency unique and explains why someone would want to do business with you.
One way an agent can help is to develop a value proposition. Your value proposition should go beyond the product pitch and go deeper into the why and how you are an agent. When you build your unique value proposition, you need to start with answering a few questions
These are not value propositions
Here is our value proposition
The benefits of redefining your value proposition are that clients will see it and it will enable you to build longer more valued relationships.
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks and provide solutions. Every employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
Perk Reichley and Bob Lilly
#insurance #riskmanagement #customerservice #busienssinsurance #selling #educating
Make This Year Even Better Than Last Year
/in Customer Service, Insurance, RelationshipsThese are the values to which we continue to aspire to in 2018 and beyond.
The customer relationship involves face to face time. It takes regular contact over time to build trust and create a valued based relationship.
Knowing your client’s needs, concerns, and issues is the first step in creating a value-based relationship.
Educate your clients on how to identify, treat, and manage risk. This allows for informed decisions.
Work to become a trusted advisor. A trusted advisor becomes someone who helps with business decision and issues. A trusted advisor comes to the table with resources to help the business with legal, accounting, marketing, and human resources strategy and issues.
Find a balance in the use of technology to communicate. We understand that the modern communication technology can have its benefits, but, face to face communication is the foundation of your relationship.
Believe that there is inherent good and value in being an insurance agent. This noble profession involves protecting society from devastating losses that in the absence of insurance could not sustain itself.
Work to understand the difference between consultative and transactional. The agents value proposition is that we know and understand risk. Our true value is to help others evaluate risk and provide meaningful solutions. It goes way beyond an insurance policy.
Understand what customers really want. Your customers want creative and different ideas. They want you to have client services standards. Customers desire more, and better, communication. Finally, they want you and your team to be constantly learning.
We are making progress, but be vigilant. Don’t get sucked into the old way of thinking. Don’t be fooled by Madison Avenues selling the idea that complex risk and insurance topics can be boiled down something simple.
“Progress is impossible without change, and those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything.” George Bernard Shaw
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks and provide solutions. Every employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
Perk Reichley and Bob Lilly
#insurance #riskmanagement #customerservice #busienssinsurance #selling #educating
Communication Is key to Any Relationship
/in Customer Service, Insurance, RelationshipsLet us start by asking and answering the following question, “What kind of communication and service are you getting from your agent”? If all your agent does is send you a policy and an invoice, then your agent is way overpaid. There is so much more that an agent should be doing to educate and serve you. Here are a few examples of what our agents at Reichley Insurance do:
Recent J.D. Powers & Associates.com score study found consumers find agents easier to use than a black-box 800 number or a website, and still prefer to finalize their purchase through an agent whom they can visit or call. In today’s cyber world, an agent should provide that desired personal touch.
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks and provide solutions. Every employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
Perk Reichley and Bob Lilly
#insurance #riskmanagement #customerservice #busienssinsurance #selling #educating
Insurance Is Not the Only Answer
/in Customer Service, Insurance, RelationshipsMy insurance agent friend John and I had another conversation about how agents can, and need to differentiate themselves from other agents. Last month we talked about how John uncovered an uninsured exposure and how John’s advice helped his client recover about $450,000.
John holds to the belief that the agents job should be to help the client understand and uncover risks, then design a plan to treat or manage these risks. The agent should not be quick to suggest insurance in every situation. In fact, in some cases, insurance may not even be the best option. Agents need to get out of the selling business and into the education business.
John’s most recent example involved a manufacturing business that had a small fleet of three delivery trucks. John asked the client about the costs associated with the three-vehicle fleet, which included the vehicles, maintenance, three drivers, related benefits, and finally the cost of five recent accidents over the past three years. The client identified a number of costs they were having trouble managing, these included; workers’ compensation claims, high driver turnover and a number of auto accidents.
John asked the client to consider outsourcing the delivery (mostly small packages) around the community and region. John led the client in a review, or risk analysis, of having their own drivers compared to using contracted providers. The results showed that the business would save about $12,000 annually by contracting delivery services. John worked with the client to make sure all contracts and agreement had the proper insurance language, including additional insured wording.
In this case, John actually lost revenue as the business sold their trucks and let the drivers go. However, John showed the client how a trusted business partner could add true value.
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks, and provide solutions. Every Reichley employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
“Try not to become a man of success. Rather become a man of value.” – Albert Einstein
How an Agent Can Go From a Vendor to a Trusted Advisor
/in Customer Service, Insurance, RelationshipsMy goal in these articles is to create a dialogue among agents and insurance buyers about the differences between being a vendor and becoming a trusted advisor. This concept starts with how insurance is viewed. Insurance cannot be viewed as a product, but rather a relationship. Insurance buyers need to understand that the insurance relationship consists of the agent, the buyer, and the insurer. The insurer does not really care about the buyer; they offer a set of products. The agent is the one who should care about the buyer, and develop a relationship through education, not selling.
You will not move from a vendor to trusted advisor overnight. Here are the stages that include a process from: vendor, credible source, problem solver, then trusted advisor. To go through these steps an agent must consider the following.
What Are the steps an agent should consider?
Reichley Insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks and provide solutions. Every employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
“The man who will use his skill and constructive imagination to see how much he can give for a dollar, instead of how little he can give for a dollar, is bound to succeed.” – Henry Ford
An Example of How Agents Are Different…the Rest of the Story
/in Customer Service, Insurance, RelationshipsMy last article had a very good real life example of how agents can differentiate themselves from other agents, and how trusted relationships can add real value to the customer. In the case mentioned in the previous article, the agent added $440,000 of value to the customer!
So where do we go from here? Where we will go is right to the heart of our value proposition. That is, insurance is about building trusted relationships, open communication, identifying value, assessing risk, and developing solutions.
How Do Agents Accomplish This?
Many of my recent articles describe how and why agents can change their own, and their client’s, paradigm from “insurance transactions” to “relationship management.” Here are a few questions that will help get you started in the process of this great shift in thinking. You might be surprised when you start asking your clients and potential clients these questions. Most likely, they have never before been asked these questions by an insurance person. Notice how many times the word insurance is used.
Well you get the idea, these questions are designed to have the client do most of the talking and you do most of the listening. You may even come up with better questions after you read this. If so, please share them with all of us. Remember, one of the goals is not to just recommend an insurance solution, but to understand the risk and needs first, then use collaboration to develop business solutions.
Reichley Insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks, and provide solutions. Every Reichley employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
Spend a lot of time talking to customers face to face. You’d be amazed how many companies don’t listen to their customers. – Ross Perot
An Example of How Not All Agents Are Alike
/in Customer Service, Insurance, RelationshipsMy agent friend (call him John) told me that he recently was hired by a business to help them manage their commercial insurance and risk program. The client had been with their previous agent for ten years, so the change was a big decision for them. John asked the new client why they decided to change, and they told him that they felt like all the previous agent did was renew their insurance. They only saw him when a bill needed to be paid. The client checked around, and another business associate recommended John.
As part of John’s relationship building, at the first meeting he asked a series of questions about the client’s business. One of the questions led to the client telling John that they owned an underground storage tank that had been un-used for about 10 years. The client never thought to tell their previous agent about the old tank. The client said it just never came up. John explained the risks of owning an underground tank, and directed them to various web pages showing the possible fines if there was ever an issue. Obviously, the client became very concerned. However, John suggested a number of solution options and the client decided to have John secure a quote for pollution liability. The client ended up with a $1,000,000 policy at a cost of only $10,000.
This is where the story gets good. About two years later as part of the annual client review meeting, John asked about the tank, and the client said they were removing the tank as part of a plant expansion. Well once the tank came out, there was found to be $450,000 of soil damage and pollution cleanup. That is a $440,000 cost benefit (minus the deductible).
Needless to say, the client now truly understands the value of relationships and the importance of having an agent who provides insurance and risk solutions.
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks, and provide solutions. Every Reichley employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
“People don’t buy what you do, they buy why you do it” – Simon Sinek
Insurance Is About Peace of Mind and Trust
/in Agent, Insurance, RelationshipsFor many people, buying something tends to be both emotional and financial. With insurance, some people may buy a brand or base their buying decision on a TV commercial. While other people may buy insurance with a focus on price, they want the lowest cost possible. Mr. Kelly correctly points out that buying insurance has some of both the emotional and financial elements.
Insurance is a promise from the insurer to perform in the event of a loss, and insurance offers security to the buyer that when something bad happens, all is ok.
We believe that a promise and security are important enough to mandate a conversation with a professional agent who understands the importance of education.
So, why do most people view insurance as a transactional product?—because the insurance industry has trained consumers to view it as such with phrases like:
Insurance companies and agents use these terms and others every day. “They are catchy, easy for the consumer to understand and takes little effort,” according to Mr. Kelly.
The time has come to use new insurance buying terms like:
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks and provide solutions. Every employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
How You, The Customer, Benefits From Hiring A Trusted Advisor
/in Agent, Customer Service, Insurance, RelationshipsOver the past year or so, we have been discussing the importance of looking at insurance as a service rather than a product. One area we have not spent much time on is how this adds value and benefit to the customer.
It would seem to me that every family, business owner, or business manager would want to have the following benefits:
This is a different mindset for the buyer and agent, but when done correctly it can provide real benefits to your family, business, and life.
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks and provide solutions. Every employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.
What Do The Solar Eclipse And Insurance Have In Common?
/in Agent, Customer Service, RelationshipsThe world recently experienced the Solar eclipse. We know what the specific time it would happen and where the best place was to view the eclipse was. Did you stop to think, who figured that out? It was a complex process, someone very smart, (NASA) figured out the exact time of the eclipse and where the best places are to view it. The mathematically calculations involved in developing the information is well behind the skills of most people. But aren’t you glad there is someone who understands this so we can enjoy their detailed work?
If the eclipse were insurance, the independent agent would be NASA, the sun and moon would be the insurance companies and the public are the policy holders. Insurance is complex and the professional agent manages the complex for the benefit of the insurance buyer.
Insurance is about a relationship involving three parties; the buyer, the independent agent and the insurance company. Here is how we see the needs of each party.
The Insurance Buyer. Buyers of insurance want peace of mind and confidence that in the event of a loss everything will be ok.
The Insurance Company. Insurance companies simply want to insure good risks and are transaction focused. Their decisions are financially focused not relationship focused.
The Independent Agent. Agents transform the complex so their clients can make educated decisions. Helping the client to understand their risks and providing a number of reasonable solutions are the goals of the agent.
The person best suited to bring these parties together is the independent agent. The agent knows what risks the insurer desires and can educate the buyer in complex coverage design, safety, and claims management, in order to attract the best insurer option. It is about building a trusted relationship that allows transparency between all parties.
Reichley insurance believes insurance is more than a transaction. Insurance involves a trusted relationship built on a promise to put people before policies. Our promise is to listen to you, identify your risks and provide solutions. Every employee has the heart of a teacher. Connect with us to experience The Reichley difference.