If you want your insurance agency to be successful, you have to have a great team of people behind you. So where do you start? Tips for hiring salespeople—especially hiring insurance producers—are a dime a dozen. In this article, I want to break through the noise and present to you several tips and best practices that have worked for me as I’ve grown my agency into one of the most successful in the country—and I hope they may be helpful to you.
I look for only three things when hiring insurance producers or agents for my business:
Does their outlook fit the culture of my business? To me, this is more important than anything else. An amazingly talented producer can destroy your office if they have a negative attitude. No matter how good they are at selling, if the team around them isn’t happy, your culture will suffer—and so will you. (Tweet this!)
It sounds so simple, but this one can be hard to figure out. I can’t afford to hire someone who won’t work for my business like it’s their own business. You can teach someone how to sell or you can teach someone customer service, but work ethic is something that can not be taught. If it’s between hiring someone with sales experience but a so-so work ethic and someone with no sales experience but a great work ethic, I’ll virtually always choose the person with the great work ethic.
I don’t necessarily need people who know insurance. (Usually, that’s not something I look for at all!) What I’m really looking for during the interview phase is a team player who is hungry to learn more about my company, my values, and my products. They don’t need to know everything right now, they just have to be willing to do the work.
Every person who sells insurance needs these three things! I can teach you everything else, but I can’t teach you to have a good attitude, work hard, and be eager to learn. But how do I find people like this? Keep reading to find out.
Before I interview a single candidate, I write up a detailed description of the perfect employee. Most people can’t visualize the perfect employee outside of hitting quotas or producing results, and it’s not realistic because a “perfect” employee doesn’t exist. The truth is, I’m not even the perfect hire! What this exercise does is allows me to brainstorm everything I value in a hire; then I break out the top five to 10 things. Finding the top five things I absolutely require in an employee not only helps me judge each candidate, it also helps me provide the training that matches what I’m looking for in an employee.
Then, in order to find the insurance producers I want to work for my agency, I have a specific interview process:
Sometimes, it’s helpful to have a list of “red flags”—signs someone won’t fit with your agency. This is crucial, because if I hire you, you become part of my agency family—and we can’t afford to bring in someone who will not last. Here’s my list of signs to watch out for.
From time to time, everyone makes a bad hire. (Hopefully, it’s not too often!) Here’s what I suggest insurance agents do if and when the time comes to move on from a bad hire.
It’s a priority for me to pay attention to the interactions between members of my team. I am tuned in to how people are working with each other, what they’re saying, and how they’re feeling.
I evaluate him or her from a both a business perspective and a personal perspective:
This exercise helps me bring order and structure to my thoughts, and can help me evaluate whether or not issues can be solved through solutions like training.
Unless it’s an emergency situation and I have no choice but to act, I typically take about a month to validate my reasons. During this time, I am gathering evidence and proof about why the hire may not be working out.
Training Vs. Termination
One of the biggest conundrums agents run into with underperforming producers is knowing whether to fire them or provide more training. I address this problem by looking through their leading and lagging indicators.
No one can control if a prospect says yes or hangs up on a phone call (a lagging indicator), but we can all control things like doing your work, asking follow-up questions, and asking for referrals (leading indicators). If a producer is performing well in terms of leading indicators, then I am apt to provide additional training or help—not terminate their job.
In a healthy relationship that’s just not working out, instead of offering severance pay or money, I offer to keep the person on my team in a new capacity. I pull them off of sales, but keep paying them to help around the office; I also promise to provide them a letter of recommendation for other job opportunities while they figure out what they need to do. I give them two weeks to help them transition out of my company.
Finding the right people to serve as insurance producers in your agency is fundamental to your success, but it’s not all you should be doing. In addition to training and onboarding your new insurance producers, you should be filling their pipelines with leads to work.
That’s where EverQuote comes in. We provide agencies like yours with qualified leads—people who are actively looking for insurance products—in real-time. Our system works for thousands of agents, and it could be what helps your agency reach that next level of success. You can schedule a call to talk with us about our process here.