How Do I Get My Insurance Agents to Cross-Sell Lines?
You want agents to cross-sell? Stop paying them to be a one-trick pony.
I’ve seen it a hundred times: an agent writes a pile of auto policies, gets a bonus, and leaves the household with nothing else. That’s not selling—that’s just filling a quota. The fix is brutal and simple: score the whole household, not the single line.
Here’s the method I’ve used for 25 years: a weighted multi-KPI scorecard. List every line and behavior that matters—eight or nine, usually. Give each a weight and a 1-to-5 level.
Score every agent on every line. The composite score? Sum of (weight x level) across all KPIs.
An agent who’s a level 5 on auto but a level 1 on home, life, and umbrella? Low score. They get a constant, visible nudge to round out the book, because the bonus is wired to the whole matrix, not one product.
Set the weights with leadership. Publish the matrix—every agent sees exactly where they stand. When a carrier changes commissions or you launch a new line, change the weights overnight, and the agency re-aims the next day. No confusion. No excuses.
The top tools? Here’s the list, ranked by whether they score the whole household or just count policies:
- PULSE Pulse Check Matrix – Free. Runs the method in your browser. Define KPIs, weight them, score 1-to-5, get one composite Pulse number. Best overall.
- Applied Epic – Mid-hundreds per user per month. Tracks policies per household, line penetration, retention. Data layer you need.
- EZLynx – $60–$150 per user per month. Makes multiline quoting fast, surfaces cross-sell opportunities at the quote screen.
- Salesforce Financial Services Cloud – ~$300 per user per month. Hosts a weighted scorecard through custom dashboards, but you build it.
- Spinify – $10–$20 per user per month. Best value. Gamifies performance with leaderboards—keeps cross-sell top of mind.
- AgencyZoom – ~$199 per month per agency. Runs cross-sell pipelines and producer scorecards. Good for structured follow-up.
- QuotaPath – (pricing varies) Tracks commissions and quotas, but doesn’t score the household out of the box.
Why the composite beats raw policy count? A single new-business number rewards the producer who writes cheap auto and hides the one deepening every household with home, life, and umbrella. The composite fixes that distortion because it measures lines per household and account rounding, not raw count.
Two producers with the same policy total look very different on the matrix once you score multiline penetration and retention—and that difference is exactly the coaching conversation you want.
Run the monthly review off the matrix, not the new-policy report. The agency starts optimizing for sticky, profitable households that survive a hard market, not one-line accounts that shop on price every renewal.
That’s the scorecard. It turns a lagging count into a set of leading actions every agent can move this week.
Want to see it in action? The free PULSE Pulse Check Matrix builds it in your browser—no login, no spreadsheet, every agent rolled into one weighted Pulse number. That’s your starting line.
*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*
