Here are 12 lessons for success in the insurance industry. (Photo: Shutterstock) Here are 12 lessons for success in the insurance industry. (Photo: Shutterstock)

Congratulations on making a good career choice in the insurance industry. Now it is time to figure out what you need to do to succeed as an insurance agent or broker?

Lessons for success

  1. Understand the business. It's a sales job. You need to ring the cash register. This means gaining new clients and deepening your relationships. You help people. This involves helping them manage their risks.
  2. It's never too early to start prospecting. Tell everyone you know about your new job. You want to hit the ground running the day you are licensed.
  3. Never stop prospecting. It's easy to think of prospecting like a fraternity or sorority initiation. Once you are in, that ordeal is behind you. You must always keep the pipeline filled.
  4. You need both a short- and long-term prospecting strategy. You have numbers to hit. Yes, social prospecting puts you into the right circles befriending the right people. It doesn't ring the cash register now. You also need a short-term strategy, something you can do daily— a strategy you can ramp up by increasing your efforts.
  5. Be proud of your firm. When you talk to friends, they will know you are new to the business. They might want you to get your "sea legs" first. Sell the firm. They are becoming clients of a great firm. You are their friend on the inside, bringing the resources of the firm into their living room.
  6. Go after your natural market. This means family and friends. They will want to be supportive. Selling the firm should overcome most concerns they have about your experience.
  7. Always be ethical. The firm's secret police (compliance) are smarter than you. "You said this was guaranteed, a sure thing" is something you never want your clients to say to you.
  8. Get on the right lists. Your firm has a strategy. Your manager runs a business, yet they are paid based on how well they execute the strategy. Advisors are an independent bunch, preferring to do business their own way. Driving the strategy gets you on stack ranking lists. Managers have ways of rewarding workers who do the right things.
  9. Let your manager see you are working hard. It's ideal if you are in a line of sight to your manager's office. Arrive early. Leave late. Always be on the phone. They will have ways of measuring activity. They will see you are committed to your own success.
  10. Find a mentor. Your office has experienced successful agents and brokers. Find one. Learn from them. Ask when it's convenient to talk. Have questions prepared. Be a good listener. Ask for advice. Ideally, they will become invested in your success.
  11. Go to lunch every day. You need a change of scenery. You want to vacuum your head. Either go to someplace likely clients might frequent, or eat alongside successful coworers with upbeat attitudes. You will return refreshed.
  12. Push paperwork to either end of the day. Delegate when possible, too. You should be looking after clients and getting new clients during the day. Paperwork can be done when your clients are sleeping or commuting home from work.

Years ago, I thought a good analogy for an insurance advisor new to the business was this simple example: Walk into the office. Sit down. Pick up the phone. After two or three years, put the phone back down. If you are still employed at your firm, you are successful.

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Bryce Sanders

Bryce Sanders, president of Perceptive Business Solutions Inc., has provided training for the financial services industry on high-net-worth client acquisition since 2001. He trains financial professionals on how to identify prospects within the wealthiest 2%-5% of their market, where to meet and socialize with them, how to talk with wealthy people and develop personal relationships, and how to transform wealthy friends into clients. Bryce spent 14 years with a major financial services firm as a successful financial advisor, two years as a district sales manager and four years as a home office manager. He developed personal relationships within the HNW community through his past involvement as a Trustee of the James A. Michener Art Museum, Board of Associates for the Bucks County Chapter of the Fox Chase Cancer Center, Board of Trustees for Stevens Institute of Technology and as a church lector. Bryce has been published in American City Business Journals, Barrons, InsuranceNewsNet, BenefitsPro, The Register, MDRT Round the Table, MDRT Blog, accountingweb.com, Advisorpedia and Horsesmouth.com. In Canada, his articles have appeared in Wealth Professional. He is the author of the book “Captivating the Wealthy Investor.”