On Point with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan, Episode 21: The Definition of Retirement Has Changed

June 24, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

“On Point, with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan” is an audio conversation with insurance industry leaders who champion change and challenge all of us to think.

This podcast is an interview with Sharon Emek, President and CEO of WAHVE.

Listen to Sharon as she shares here vision for this new company with Rick and Peter.

“The definition of retirement has changed. Consider two trends:

1) People who are “retired” from the insurance industry in the traditional sense (no longer going to an agency or a carrier to work in a management or professional position) still want to work, but under different working arrangements.

2) Those who are hiring in our industry now consider “retirees” as a prime market to fulfill their demand for a quality workforce for their businesses.

Matching up vintage workers (those people who have left the traditional workforce but want to work from their homes) with hiring managers is what this innovative new company is all about. The acronym “WAHVE” reflects the focus in placing “Work-At-Home Vintage Employees” with insurance organizations such as independent agencies.

As an insurance producer, I came to learn how vital agency staff people are to selling and servicing insurance clients. As an agency principal, I came to appreciate how precious quality performers are to running an insurance agency. Now, as the founder and CEO of WAHVE, I’m pleased that we can offer employees and principals the only remote domestic staffing option for insurance agents and brokers.” – Sharon Emek

The podcast was published Friday, June 4, 2010. Run time is 22 minutes 6 seconds.

Does a Good Brand Really Make Dollars and Sense?

June 14, 2010 by · 1 Comment 

By Laurie Donohue

Brand can be a “squishy” subject — it’s not concrete like product or overhead. With those you can attribute a certain cost and a definite return on investment. If you hire a new producer in an insurance agency, you know you’ll have overhead, but you expect that producer to bring in enough new business to cover the costs, and more. If you offer a product, you know what you’ll make in commissions.

With brand, you can see some of the costs — training, marketing, advertising, etc., but it’s often hard to quantify the impact on your bottom line.

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What Agents Want

June 10, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

By Kevin Jenné

Movie lovers may remember Mel Gibson’s gaining the ability to read women’s minds in “What Women Want.” And we market researchers sometimes wish for this kind of direct insight. Living in the real world, when we want to know what people want, we turn to our research tools: surveys, interviews and focus groups.

And in a recent survey of 1,498 independent insurance agents, we validated what many industry leaders already know: among all the important factors that agents consider when choosing their “go-to” carriers for personal lines, claims service quality matters most. Not technology, not their own agency compensation – but the service their clients get from insurance carriers.

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On Point with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan, Episode 20: It’s No Longer An Experiment

May 26, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

“On Point, with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan” is an audio conversation with insurance industry leaders who champion change and challenge all of us to think.

Ryan Hanley, is an independent agent with the Guilderland Agency in Albany, NY.

Just two short years ago Ryan started his insurance career and at the same time started to “dabble” with the social Web. While the agency wasn’t yet ready to jump “head first” into social networking they gave Ryan the freedom to do so.

Being new to the industry he started researching insurance issues, and then writing about his experience on his new blog, Albany Insurance Professional. Ryan also set up Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and LinkedIn accounts.

Has it been a valuable and profitable experience? According to Ryan, “social networking is how he builds and strengthens relationships and generates new business – it is no longer an experiment.”

Listen to Ryan as he shares his experiences with Rick and Peter.

The podcast was published Monday, May 24, 2010. Run time is 24 minutes 7 seconds.

On Point with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan, Episode 19: Having Fun Growing Business

May 11, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

“On Point, with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan” is an audio conversation with insurance industry leaders who champion change and challenge all of us to think.

Linda Rey is a second-generation agent and owner of Rey Insurance in Sleepy Hollow, New York. Frank Rey founded the agency in 1978 to serve bilingual clients in the local community.

Linda discusses how she has incorporated the use of social media into the agency’s marketing strategy. For Linda, it was an “effective way to be present, visible, and increase awareness and exposure.”

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On Point with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan, Episode 18: Blogging Tips & Other Online Ideas

April 28, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

On Point with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan is an audio conversation with insurance industry leaders who champion change and challenge all of us to think.

Social media expert Amber Naslund is Director of Community for Radian6. Her job is to steward the Radian6 brand on the social Web—monitoring what the community is saying about company.

There’s no perfectly right way to blog, Naslund says. “I tell people if they are going to start blogging, it is kind of a commitment; something that will take some time.” Blogging a couple of times a week should keep you in the habit, she says. Her blog is Altitude Branding.

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On Point with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan, Episode 17: Integrating the Social Web in a Large Agency

April 13, 2010 by · Leave a Comment 

On Point with Peter van Aartrijk and Rick Morgan is an audio conversation with insurance industry leaders who champion change and challenge all of us to think.

So, how does a large independent agency with multiple offices approach new marketing and communications opportunities on the social Web? They apply it first inside their own firm.

Peter and Rick spoke with two representatives in IT and communications at a forward-thinking independent agency, Holmes Murphy Insurance. Based in Des Moines, Holmes Murphy has 13 offices in 11 states, 500 employees, and 77 years in the market. Read more

What I Learned at Brand Camp

October 7, 2009 by · 2 Comments 

Laurie Donohue

Last week was a great week. I spent three days in Chicago with some of the best people I’ve ever met.

Where was I??? At Brand Camp. What’s that you ask? It was a conference put on by Aartrijk to explore the world of social media and its impact on insurance branding.

Sure, I learned a lot about how social media can be utilized effectively, how to “Tweet” and how important blogging can be. But what really struck me was the energy of the group. The people who attended were really excited about the prospects, willing to learn and energized about their agencies. It’s probably the first time I didn’t get a sense of “quiet desperation” about the future of the independent agent and the power of the direct writers.

  • I learned that independent agents have some huge opportunities because their business is based on building and maintaining relationships–a perfect match for social networking.
  • I learned that there are some amazing young agents and their staff that have great new ideas to reach “Generation Y,” and that they should be listened to.
  • I learned that the agents that adopt this new way of marketing and sales will be the ones to succeed.
  • I learned that listening is as important as talking, whether it’s face-to-face or on the Web.
  • I learned that being open to new ideas and new ways of doing business is critical to long-term growth.

Yes, we did discuss how to find “fans” on Facebook and “followers” on Twitter. We talked about effective Web site design. We talked about search engine optimization. But they were secondary to the new attitude that was circulating in the room. I wish we could capture that and sell it over the Internet!

– Laurie Donohue, vice president, I-Marketing Management (a partner firm of Aartrijk)

Visit I-Marketing Management: http://www.imarketingmanagement.com.

Follow Aartrijk on Twitter: @Aartrijk. Follow Brand Camp conversation on Twitter using hashtag #ABC09.

Beginner’s Guide to Social Networking in Insurance

April 30, 2009 by · Leave a Comment 

Peter van Aartrijk

Peter van Aartrijk

Check out what might be dubbed a “Beginner’s Guide to Social Networking in Insurance.” It’s an audio podcast published by Insurance Journal featuring Peter van Aartrijk, managing director, and Rick Morgan, senior associate of Aartrijk.

Noted van Aartrijk in the podcast: It’s becoming urgent for independent agency owners to experiment with social networking, if they’re not already. Some agencies are using social networking portals as a way to do business.

“What they [independent agents/brokers] do — dispense advice, solve problems … It’s incredibly important what they do,” commented van Aartrijk in the podcast. “This new social media … is incredibly powerful to really bring to light what they do.”

Check out the podcast, Agency Management Done Right, Episode 2: Social Media, at: http://www.insurancejournal.tv/videos/2434/

The “Agency Management Done Right” audio podcast is hosted by Mitch Dunford of Insurance Journal and explores insurance agency management.

April 30, 2009

Web Site: “Busiest Storefront” for Agencies

April 30, 2009 by · 1 Comment 

Peter van Aartrijk discusses the social Web with Mike Wise of IdeaStar.

Peter van Aartrijk discusses the social Web with Mike Wise of IdeaStar.

Agent Web sites are an agency owner’s “busiest storefront” — or at least they can be.

That’s one of the thoughts that Peter van Aartrijk, managing director of Aartrijk, shared during a recent podcast with Mike Wise of IdeaStar. In one of Mike’s “InsuraTech” audio podcasts, Peter discussed the social Web, agent Web sites, and how they can work together for an agency:

– The social Web is “not something to be feared. It’s something to be leveraged.”

– “You’re either LinkedIn or locked out.”

– “We like to think of the Web site as the busiest office for the agency … their busiest storefront.”

–  ”I’m worried about the calls agencies aren’t getting” because their Web sites cannot be found by people who get a word-of-mouth referral to the agency and then search for the agency via a search engine.

– “Convert that knowledge [of dispensing advice to consumers about risk management] … into text on a blog.”

– ”There’s a lot of general information out there. But what we bring to the table is the knowledge of how agents andd brokers and carriers can take advantage” of social networking.

Check out the podcast at: http://tinyurl.com/clmo5.

Or visit: http://blog.insurance-technologies.com/2009/04/insuratech-podcast-episode-28-peter-van-aartrijk-on-agent-websites-a-conundrum/

April 30, 2009