Helping insurance professionals adapt in changing times

When you think about change, you have to be secure about the direction you want to go, says AVYST's Chief Growth Officer Kitty Ambers.

Insurance agents need to continually plan for change, not only during a pandemic. (Photo: kenary820/Shutterstock)

PropertyCasualty360 sat down with business development coach Kitty Ambers to discuss the process of change management ― especially in a world in which change is being forced on insurance professionals. Ambers has held several top executive positions with insurance trade organizations, and she is a member of the PropertyCasualty360 editorial advisory board. Currently, she serves as chief growth officer for AVYST, an InsurTech that streamlines policy submissions.

PC360: What is “change management”?

Kitty Ambers: The term “change management” sounds daunting and clinical. So I like to call it “managing change” instead.

In short, to make change happen, you have to do the work. There is no replacement for actually doing the work. It’s no different than starting something new. For example, if I’m going to start an agency, I have to dig in, do the training, attract markets, and read the policies.

PC360: Can you be more specific about what you mean by “doing the work”?

Ambers: I’ve distilled managing change into what I call “The 5 Ds.”

Making time for change

PC360: Why does managing change seem so difficult?

Ambers: Because people are people. They’re too busy on the wheel to step off and look around.

If there is any benefit to the COVID-19 lockdown, it’s that a lot of people have paused and taken an inventory of “Hey, what’s important?” With my businesses, we are now so much more productive when we’re not running all over the country because we’re having meaningful one-on-one conversations on the phone and on video calls. People can actually turn on their computers, have a productive conversation, and make decisions. People are available, they’re listening, they’re connected, and they’re willing to jump on a call. They’re making lemonade out of lemons.

PC360: You’ve said you like the Michael Jordan book, “I Can’t Accept Not Trying.”

KA: His book is really based around fundamentals. He emphasizes, “The minute you get away from fundamentals, the bottom falls out of your game.”

When you think about change, you have to be secure on the direction you want to go. Another quote I like is from Jimmy Dean: “I can’t change the direction of the wind, but I can adjust my sails to always reach my destination.” I can swerve around that pothole, or I can plow right into it because I don’t want to change. People are stubborn.

Are you prepared?

PC360: What about independent agents — how are they managing change these days?

Ambers: Where it becomes most obvious is to ask, “How prepared were agencies to support a remote workforce?” That, in turn, points to something else: How prepared are you for a natural disaster scenario? How quickly can you spin up a support desk for your agency in the event your office is blown away?

This is a great opportunity to test those disaster-recovery plans. A lot of folks have struggled there because it’s been on the back burner. The agents who hadn’t tested their business-continuation plans are having to implement on the fly, which is hard. It’s not as simple as thinking I can just take my laptop and be fine. It might be fine for a snowstorm, but not in a pandemic.

What are some big lessons here? I think it’s critical to think through answers to serious questions we’ve been faced with:

This has been a real test of an agency’s “emergency broadcast system.”

It’s about leadership

PC360: Why is change easier for some organizations?

Ambers: Having a fundamental core value of being agile is key. That’s what change is. It’s being able to pivot.

I also think we should look to other places on how they’re managing change. For example, what are restaurants doing to be resourceful? Many are doing carryout only. Grocery stores are retooling their traffic flow, with one-way aisles. They’re adopting new floor plans. What can we adopt for our firms?

If we look around, we realize the whole idea that change is constant is true. So don’t be so resistant. Go with the flow.

PC360: What is the most important piece of managing change?

Ambers: Leadership.

It’s not that we can’t change. It just gets scary when you have the intentional conversation about how we change. We say, “We’re going to change.” It has to be part of the culture. We focus too much on process versus outcomes. If you do this it’s going to make your life easier. Good leaders do this. It’s intuitive.

We are adaptive people by nature; if you follow Darwin and nature at all. Look at the new species that came about. That’s change. Nobody stopped the world and said, “We have this new thing.” It just evolved. As a leader, if you think of evolution as opposed to revolution, you will have better results in the end. Don’t do the herky-jerky, stop this and start that. It’s just a flow. Why not always keep your eyes out for something new?

Why do we make change sound so punitive as opposed to positive? It all goes back to leadership.

To contact Kitty Ambers, send an email to k.ambers@tealconcepts.com.

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