Growing Market Share and Revenue Through Financial Services

For years, property casualty (P/C) agencies have been making the jump into offering personal insurance — life, long-term care and disability — as an adjunct to their traditional products. Brokers have realized that the same people to whom they sell P/C products are perfect prospects for other financial services. By adding these products to their portfolio, they can increase revenue and the more products they provide to clients, the more likely it is that those clients will be retained.

Many successful P/C agencies have taken one step further by offering comprehensive financial services (investments, insurance, financial planning, etc.) to their clients. These agencies have experienced huge growth in revenue and market share by offering these services.

Why Financial Services?

Financial services — investments, insurance and financial planning — can provide a number of benefits to P/C agencies, including:

There are three main ways that a P/C agency can enter financial services: in-sourcing, outsourcing or co-sourcing.

Unlike with the outsource model, under the co-source model, the P/C agency has a business plan and retains control of the client relationship at all times while bringing in separate specialists for each business line. The agency and the co-source partner must have a step-by-step plan designed to appeal to all or most of the agency’s clients, not just those who express an interest in financial services. The co-source model is much less expensive to implement than buying an existing financial services firm and fairly easy to unwind if the cultures don’t fit. It also requires much less training than building the practice in house.

Making it Work

There are two key ingredients to making the co-source model work: commitment from the brokers and client segmentation.

Each broker at the agency who has client contact needs to commit to how many financial services appointments he or she can handle each month without impacting the P/C business. This can be as few as one or as many as practical. Whatever that commitment is, the broker must be willing to stick to it.

The co-source partner needs to go through the agency’s client list and get as many financial facts about them as possible. Then, the co-source partner can rate each of the clients based on how they look as a financial services lead. The P/C agency can then start with the most likely prospects and move down from there. All appointments should be held either at the agency or at the client’s home or place of business. If they are not held at the agency, the broker dealing with the client needs to be present.

As more and more agencies discover the opportunity of starting financial services practices more will join them. As with any business the early movers will most likely be the most successful in setting up financial services practices leaving the competition scrambling to keep up.