Agent-Carrier Partnerships Need Goal Clarity and Exit Strategy, Not Love

By | December 5, 2005

The carrier executive tried to pin down agents on what they wanted from their insurers. Among the vague responses of exclusivity, underwriting authority, respect and long-term relationships, one complaint stood out.

“When asked about why he wanted to change carriers, one agent said, ‘I don’t feel the love,'” quipped Margaret Zechlin, senior vice president at GE Insurance Solutions.

At a recent meeting of the National Association of Professional Surplus Lines Offices, Zechlin blamed the brief tenure of many agent-carrier relationships on a lack of specificity. Successful carrier/managing general agency relationships don’t rely on the love or any other vaguely expressed needs. Instead, what are essential are goal clarity, objective alignment, communication, codification, performance assessment, and a solid exit strategy, Zechlin said.

According to GE numbers, the average program duration with an agency is a mere five years, and most relationships fail because neither side of the contract sets up realistic expectations.

The first step is to clearly define expectations before entering in a carrier contract. This means establishing “SMART” goals, an acronym for specific, measurable, actionable, responsibilities identified, and tied to timelines, Zechlin said.

For example, agencies that rank underwriting authority and autonomy as a priority can solidify that goal by delineating line versus staff responsibilities; agree on who is doing what and by when; and agree to what are the desirable and measurable outcomes.

Even more important is determining whether the potential carrier partner is a good cultural fit with the agency, Zechlin stressed. “Corporate culture” refers to the shared values and practices of the insurer, and the measurable goal is a partnership that supports profitable growth and meets organizational goals and objectives.

Zechlin recommended four steps in assessing cultural compatibility: Conducting a cultural assessment by examining elements like the insurer’s risk tolerance, management and reward system; Conducting an honest assessment of organizational fit by each attribute; Reviewing each attribute with the insurer; and Establishing a mutually beneficial operating agreement.

After the “honeymoon is over,” an agent must understand that the insurer will be evaluating the agency, added Lois J. Mazza, vice president and sales executive for GE’s Select Markets program. GE compiles a program metric scorecard, shared monthly with its managing general underwriters and closely examining how each program administrator manages its program, portfolio, and business in general. Areas under the microscope include monthly and year-to-date written premiums, price monitor, policy issuance, hit ratio and retention ratio. This system helps both GE and the program administrator determine whether they will meet their goals, how they’re performing compared with the prior year, and if there are any downward (or upward) trends.

Internally, GE conducts an annual review of the program administrator’s business, examining the book of business as a whole, including risks and opportunities, threats to business, and regulatory or legal changes that might impact the business, Massa said.

Underwriting visits, underwriting audits and joint planning sessions, which help keep both the insurer and the agency on track, round out the communication picture.

Topics Mergers & Acquisitions Carriers Agencies

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Insurance Journal Magazine December 5, 2005
December 5, 2005
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2005 Program Directory, Vol. II