From Cold Calls to Carpool Closers: How Insurance Producers Can Build Trust with Educational Content

Trust

Trust is no longer built solely through in-person meetings, networking events, or polished brochures. It’s earned digitally—often before a prospect ever takes your call. As sales dynamics shift and competition tightens, the producers who will thrive are those who understand one thing: educational content is the new handshake.

In a recent episode of the Power Producers Podcast, I had the opportunity to sit down with Ema Roloff of Roloff Consulting to dive deep into this exact topic. 

We explored how producers can break away from traditional outbound methods and start building authority and trust by consistently showing up with value-first content. This blog post distills the best lessons from that conversation—and provides a blueprint for producers ready to lead with insight, not just insurance quotes.

Why Trust is the New Currency in Commercial Insurance Sales

It’s no secret that commercial insurance sales has evolved. COVID accelerated what was already happening: a shift in how prospects learn, build relationships, and make buying decisions.

Where trust used to be built through handshakes and lunches, today it’s being built in silent scrolls through LinkedIn, short-form videos, and blog posts that make a complicated concept simple. Buyers want education before engagement. In fact, recent data shows that over 60% of buyers choose to work with the first person who educates them during their journey.

This is a massive opportunity for producers. You don’t need 10,000 followers or a Hollywood-level production team. You just need to be the first voice of value someone hears. And in this digital-first environment, the fastest way to establish trust is to teach—freely and consistently.

The Favorite Teacher Framework: Teaching Over Selling

Ema’s concept, the Favorite Teacher Framework, is rooted in a simple but powerful idea: the best producers act more like educators than salespeople.

Before joining the insurance space, Ema was a high school teacher. When COVID hit, and face-to-face sales disappeared, she leaned into what she knew best—teaching. That decision launched a journey into content creation that completely reshaped her career and led to the launch of her consulting firm.

The framework focuses on creating educational content that builds trust and positions the producer as an authority figure—not a pitch machine. When your content answers real questions in real time, prospects feel like they’re already learning from you—and that makes them far more likely to want to work with you.

This teaching-first approach is especially powerful in insurance, where complexity breeds confusion and confusion breeds distrust. If you can be the one who simplifies the complicated, you instantly rise above the noise.

Authenticity Wins: Why Your Real Voice Beats Polished Perfection

Trust

One of the biggest roadblocks producers face is perfectionism. They overthink video backgrounds, script every word, or wait until their logo animations are just right. Meanwhile, prospects are simply looking for someone who can explain things clearly and show up as a real person.

Your first video might be clunky. Your first post might not get much engagement. That’s okay. As I shared during the podcast, “Did a baby gazelle run as gracefully the day it was born? No. But give it time, and it gets fast—and so will you.”

Authenticity is your competitive advantage. A producer with a shaky video who’s clearly passionate and informed will always outperform a cold, polished, AI-written post. And here’s the kicker—your audience wants to hear from you, not ChatGPT.

So forget the filters. Forget the buzzwords. Focus on adding value with your real voice and you’ll attract people who trust that voice.

Stop Overcomplicating It: Content Creation is Easier Than You Think

One of the biggest myths in content creation is that it’s time-consuming. The truth is, you’re already doing the hard part—you’re educating clients every day. All you need to do is hit record or take notes.

Every prospect call, every email response, every Zoom meeting is a potential piece of content. Here’s how:

  • Record your Zoom prospect meetings (with permission). Extract clips where you explain coverage concepts.
  • Jot down common questions clients ask and create one video per question.
  • Take your recorded sales calls, turn them into quote graphics or audio snippets, and post them with a caption that explains the situation.

As I mentioned on the show, “It’s not that you don’t have time. It’s just not a priority yet.”

Choose Your Lane: Creating Content You Actually Enjoy

Not every producer needs to be on camera every day. Some are better writers. Some love audio. Some crush it with infographics. The key is to find your content voice—and then lean in.

If you love video, TikTok and YouTube Shorts are great platforms to build trust fast. If you’re a writer, LinkedIn articles or a newsletter might be your home base. If you enjoy conversation, start a podcast or video interview series.

In my case, Carpool Closer—a daily video series recorded while driving to the office with my son—became a content goldmine. We created 365 micro-episodes that turned into:

  • Short-form videos
  • Blog posts
  • A daily sales reader
  • A podcast series
  • A library of training for producers

Your content doesn’t need to be perfect—it needs to be you. Do what feels natural, and consistency will follow.

Beware the Trap of Automation and Vanity Metrics

Trust

Let’s talk about what doesn’t work.

Too many producers rely on automated social media platforms that post pre-written content with zero personality. These templated posts don’t reflect your expertise, voice, or values—and they rarely convert. If you wouldn’t say it to a client in a meeting, don’t post it on LinkedIn.

Also, stop chasing vanity metrics. Ten likes won’t pay your mortgage. But one message from the right buyer will.

As Ema shared, “I’ve had videos with less than 2,000 views that converted 70 people into leads. That’s better than a million-view meme that gets no business.”

The metrics that matter? Clicks to your profile. Website visits. Inbound DMs. Everything else is noise.

Using AI the Right Way: Tools to Organize, Not Replace You

AI tools like ChatGPT, Munch, or Synthesia can be incredible assistants—but they should never be your replacement.

I use AI to:

  • Summarize transcripts from community calls
  • Organize ideas into newsletters or blog post outlines
  • Help structure my Learning Management System courses
  • Repurpose content into video scripts or slides

But the words? The stories? The analogies? Those are mine.

Because nothing will kill a sale faster than a blog post written by a robot that doesn’t match the voice of the producer on the other end of the phone.

Use AI to scale, not substitute. Let it speed you up—not replace your brain.

Final Word: Create, Share, Repeat—And Be Yourself

There’s no silver bullet to building an online presence. But there is a formula:

Create. Share. Repeat. Be yourself.

You don’t need viral reach. You need resonance. If your content makes sense to your ideal buyer, that’s all that matters. And over time, your digital reputation will compound.

As I shared during the podcast, I can walk into a conference halfway across the country and have people say, “I feel like I already know you.” That’s not because of luck. It’s because of consistent content delivered in my authentic voice.

You can do the same—whether you’re a new producer or a seasoned pro. Don’t wait to be perfect. Start today. Don’t stop. And let trust lead the way.

Trust

From Cold Calls to Carpool Closers: How Insurance Producers Can Build Trust with Educational Content

In the modern commercial insurance landscape, trust is no longer built solely through in-person meetings, networking events, or polished brochures. It’s earned digitally—often before a prospect ever takes your call. As sales dynamics shift and competition tightens, the producers who will thrive are those who understand one thing: educational content is the new handshake.

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