I grew up the second of three brothers. We were enthusiastic participants in the original Star Wars phenomenon, so you can probably imagine the amount of playtime that included the three of us wannabe Jedis hacking at each other with sticks and various items that we imagined as our lightsabers. While there were occasional bumps and scrapes, just like Mom predicted, we never strayed from our mission: to use the proverbial Force to fight for what was right.
This came to mind when my business partner, David Huss, and I recently bandied about various ideas surrounding our business approach. He had just written an article for this blog titled “Marketing of Renewals – A Discussion Worth Having.” In it, David tackled the various pros and cons for retailers and their wholesale partners when shopping their renewing policies from one year to the next. Before the article was finalized, we kicked around its various points and realized that we needed a follow-up article to discuss the renewal issue as it affects our carrier partners.
At Ethos, we’ve always maintained a rather simple strategy of approaching any renewal with our carriers:
This last point is what usually draws a lot of discussion with our carrier partners. I’ve been in countless meetings with various carrier partners over the years when I’ve been asked to explain – and sometimes defend – our renewal approach.
Admittedly, if you’re a carrier working with Ethos, our renewal approach might seem like a double-edged lightsaber. On the one hand, the incumbent carrier loves the added measure of consideration on their own renewing policy. Yet the same carrier can hate this if they are trying to compete against another placement at Ethos that they don’t currently write. They hate it because they know that Ethos is giving the incumbent carrier a more favorable position on this placement effort. This, of course, makes it harder for a competing carrier to win on an existing placement with Ethos.
However – and this is key – the benefits to the insured, retailer and the meritorious winning carrier are obvious. At Ethos, we take a long view of things and we believe the pros to our approach always outweigh the cons.
When I see the potential frustration that can arise in those scenarios, I usually ask whether there’s a better way. This often leads to some really helpful discussions, most of which end with a general consensus that a consistent approach like ours benefits everyone in the deal because it’s honest and fair.
Of course, I’m always open to more thought and discussion about how insurance “wholesaling” can be done better. I like to think that the Ethos way is the right way: choose the right path and avoid the temptation to go to the Dark Side.
If you have thoughts on this or other Forceful subjects (sorry), give me a call. I won’t try any Jedi mind tricks, but I can’t guarantee I’ll be able to resist the temptation to throw some other Star Wars reference into the conversation (or reveal my excitement about the December release of the next installment).