How Insurance Agency Processes Drive Profitability and Consistency
How Insurance Agency Processes Drive Profitability and Consistency
Your agency runs on tribal knowledge, sticky notes, and hope. Agencies that hit $5M+ have one thing in common: documented processes.
Craig and Jason sat down with Laura Harris to dig into this — no theory, just what works, what failed, and what you can steal for your own book.
Tribal Knowledge Is a Liability
If only Sarah knows how to process commercial endorsements and Sarah's out — your agency stops. Processes in people's heads are your biggest operational risk. Fix: document everything. Checklists, not novels.
[INTERNAL: insurance-agency-systems-workflow]
The Documentation Framework
Three most repeated tasks. For each: trigger (what starts it), steps (numbered), output (what done looks like), exceptions (variations). When a new hire can follow it without questions, you have a system.
[INTERNAL: insurance-agency-kpis-metrics]
Five KPIs That Matter
Track weekly: close rate, retention rate, average premium, pipeline value, cost per acquisition. When you know these five numbers, every decision becomes data-driven instead of gut-driven.
[INTERNAL: delegation-control-freaks-agency]
Delegation Math
Nobody does it exactly like you. They'll do 85% as well. But 85% times five people is 425% — four times your solo output. Start this week: one task you repeat that doesn't need your expertise. Hand it off. Coach. Let go.
[INTERNAL: paperless-insurance-agency-workflow]
🎙️ Listen to the full episode: RECAST Surrender, Win, Use Processes, and Profit: Laura Harris Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube
The Insurance Dudes — Separating the real from the BS in insurance sales since 2019.
Listen to The Insurance Dudes Podcast
Get more strategies like this on our podcast. Available on all platforms.
5 Comments
Join the Conversation
This is exactly what I needed to hear today.
Required reading for any serious agent.
Been doing this for 2 years and wish I started sooner.
The accountability framework alone is worth the read.
Real talk from real producers. No guru BS.