by d's insurance store on Thu Jan 24, 2008 10:35 am
For much of the market, the Direct Writing route is a limited opportunity for a scratch agency.
All of the 4 or 5 direct writers have no problem saturating the market with multiple locations, all designed to allow a Darwinian survival of the fittest. They all operate in a very controled environment that mimics a franchise, but without the protection of franchise laws. They all demand financial product sales in addition to quotas for P&C, and the agency owner is at the mercy of where the pricing department in home office decides to put the competitive markers.
And, they all pretty much demand some degree of financial input by the new agent to get things going.
If you're stuck in the 'old' days, where agents were employees, nurtured by experienced managers in offices with sales and product support and minimum salary guaranties that allowed for a gradual building of a profitable book of business, those days are long gone.
Any of us in the independent world, either from our own experience of starting out as captives, or knowing direct writing peers can tell stories of carriers that are in the market one day, ready for growth, and the next day a memo or meeting announces a change in market direction or product availability, leaving the direct writer with no place else to go to protect the clients. Think Allstate, State Farm and Farmer's, all of which have turned on their agents, clients and markets with hot and cold growth initiatives at the drop of a cat(astrophy).
My feeling is that the direct writing route for a newbie is a dead end, with far greater odds for failure than success, and that there are NO good Direct Writer environments any longer.