Last Updated on: February 27, 2024
shoptalk
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

In this episode of The Power Producers Podcast, David Carothers and Bob Paskins continue their discussion, focusing on the transition from prospect to presentation. They delve into essential strategies and levers to employ during this phase to secure the client’s interest and commitment.

Key Topics:

  • Leveraging three key aspects: program advantages, service benefits, and relationship value
  • Identifying problems with the client’s current coverage or program to highlight areas of improvement
  • Emphasizing service quality and addressing any past service deficiencies experienced by the client
  • Exploring the relational aspect by evaluating the effectiveness of previous interactions with the client’s current provider
  • Initiating conversations about costs versus premiums to shift focus away from price and towards overall risk management
  • The comprehensive value proposition and investment potential of the proposed insurance solution
  • The importance of understanding the client’s needs and presenting tailored solutions to address them effectively

Connect with:

Visit Websites:

The Power Producers Podcast where we are refining and redefining the sales game.

Kyle Houck

Cyber

Why the Soft Cyber Market Is Your Best Opportunity: Protecting Clients, Managing Risk, and Driving Revenue

The cyber insurance market has always been unpredictable. Over the past decade, we’ve seen it move from an emerging line of coverage to one of the most volatile, swinging rapidly between soft and hard market cycles. But today, cyber has entered one of the softest markets in recent memory—and that presents a rare opportunity for both agents and clients.

Read More »
Captive

Captives Have Moved Downstream: Why Middle-Market Producers Must Master the Conversation—Or Get Left Behind

For most of my 20-year career, captives felt like something reserved for the insurance elite—the jumbo accounts, the Fortune-level operations, the companies with multimillion-dollar manual premiums and entire departments dedicated to risk management. If you had asked me ten or fifteen years ago whether a $250,000 account was a legitimate captive candidate, I would’ve laughed. I thought captives were reserved for companies so complex and so large that the only rational way to insure them was to build an insurance company around their risk.

Read More »

Test Message

Killing Commercial Login