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Commercial P&C Insurance Renewal Takeover: Winning the Account from the Incumbent Broker at Renewal β€” a 60-Minute Sales Training

πŸ“– 10,038 words⏱ 46 min read5/21/2026

πŸ›‘οΈ The Pulse Training

Who this is for: Commercial P&C producers, account executives, sales managers, and agency principals at independent agencies, regional brokers, and national-broker middle-market teams competing to take a commercial property and casualty program away from an incumbent broker at renewal.

The target account is a $10M-$250M-revenue business β€” a manufacturer, contractor, distributor, healthcare group, or hospitality operator β€” whose owner, CFO, or risk manager has used the same agency for years and is "happy enough" but has never been shown a real risk plan. Per the Council of Insurance Agents and Brokers, RIMS, the Big "I," and NCCI, top-quartile producers win renewal takeovers by selling total cost of risk, not premium; bottom-quartile producers chase the same accounts on price and lose them back inside twelve months.

What teams leave with: a 5-STAGE RENEWAL TAKEOVER (SURFACE, STRESS-TEST, STRUCTURE, SUBSTANTIATE, SECURE), the 4 AVOIDED CONVERSATIONS (broker-of-record vs re-market, "transactional not bad," experience-mod and loss-runs, "the increase is the market"), verbatim language, two role-plays, a producer-quartile self-diagnosis, an NCCI experience-mod read script, and a total-cost-of-risk build.

Sales manager brings: three recent lost-takeover debriefs; the Takeover Kit (SURFACE discovery scorecard, TCOR worksheet, experience-mod read sheet, carrier-appetite map, broker-of-record vs re-market decision card, renewal-timeline template); and a whiteboard of the last ten takeover attempts by outcome, account size, and whether the producer pulled loss runs.

Direct Answer

You do not take a commercial P&C account away from an incumbent broker with a cheaper quote β€” the incumbent erases a 6% discount with one phone call. You take it by running a 5-stage renewal takeover: SURFACE the economic buyer and the business they are protecting; STRESS-TEST the program against five years of loss runs and the NCCI experience-mod worksheet; STRUCTURE a redesigned program and a forward plan; SUBSTANTIATE it with a written total-cost-of-risk analysis; and SECURE the move on the right legal path β€” broker-of-record letter, re-market mandate, or a hybrid β€” with a signed service calendar.

Layered over the stages are the 4 conversations producers avoid and a producer-quartile self-diagnosis. This document is a runnable 60-minute sales-training meeting: a timed agenda, a teach block, a discussion, two role-plays, a debrief with a commitment ritual, and a leave-behind one-pager.

TL;DR

  • The motion: SURFACE, STRESS-TEST, STRUCTURE, SUBSTANTIATE, SECURE β€” diagnose before you quote.
  • The format: a 60-minute manager-led meeting β€” cold open, teach, discussion, two role-plays, debrief, leave-behind.
  • The core idea: sell total cost of risk, not premium β€” premium is typically only 55-75% of what risk costs.
  • The technical edge: read the loss runs and the NCCI experience mod; a debit mod inflated by open claims with stale reserves is a switch-justifying story.
  • The discipline: start 120 days before renewal, reach the CFO or owner, and know when to walk.

MEETING AGENDA β€” 60 MINUTES

TimeBlockOwnerOutcome
0:00-0:10Intro and Cold Open β€” Producer A quoted a $45M distributor 14 days out, 6% under, and lost the match; Producer B started 120 days out, read the loss runs and the mod, built a TCOR plan, and won on strategySales MgrA takeover is won on a risk plan and a timeline, not a cheaper quote
0:10-0:35Teach β€” 5-STAGE (SURFACE, STRESS-TEST, STRUCTURE, SUBSTANTIATE, SECURE), the 4 avoided conversations, the 3 instruments, the producer-quartile self-diagnosisSales MgrRecite 5 stages, 4 conversations, and define BOR, loss run, e-mod verbatim
0:35-0:45Discussion β€” 8 prompts on incumbent-blocking, BOR vs re-market, when to walk, reading a debit mod, honest expectations, captives, multi-threading, the 90-day timelineSales Mgr plus roomAudit the last ten takeover attempts by quartile behavior
0:45-1:05Role-Play x 2 β€” R1: CFO Dana, $60M precision manufacturer, 75 days out, "send me a number." R2: owner-operator Ray, $14M contractor, 1.28 debit mod he thinks is "just bad luck"PairsRun the 5-STAGE under two buyer archetypes
1:05-1:10Debrief and Commitments β€” 3 questions, 1 lost takeover to re-open, 1 verbatim line, 1 conversation you avoidedSales MgrBuild the proactive-takeover habit
1:10-1:13Leave-Behind β€” Renewal Takeover Script Card, Quartile Self-Diagnosis, Experience-Mod Read Sheet, TCOR Build, BOR-vs-Re-Market Decision CardSales MgrOne-pager in every producer's bag

🎯 Bottom Line

A $60M manufacturer's CFO does not move her insurance program to you because your quote is 6% cheaper β€” the incumbent matches that the day she mentions it. She moves because you started 120 days before renewal, read five years of loss runs, explained why her 1.19 experience mod is costing her real money and how to drive it down, quantified her total cost of risk including the $280K of retained losses her premium line never showed, and handed her a written multi-year plan. Run the 5-STAGE SURFACE / STRESS-TEST / STRUCTURE / SUBSTANTIATE / SECURE plus the 4 avoided conversations plus a producer-quartile self-diagnosis and you win takeovers on strategy and retain them for years.

Skip the loss runs, quote on price, start two weeks out, and over-promise rate relief, and you win the occasional account on a discount and lose it back at the next renewal.


SECTION 1 β€” INTRO AND AGENDA (0:00-0:10)

🟑 Coach Note

Do NOT open with a carrier brochure or a "value proposition" slide. Whiteboard. Say the two-producer cold open, name the four avoided conversations, define the three instruments β€” the BOR letter, the loss run, the NCCI experience mod. Ten minutes. Hard stop at 0:10.

1.1 β€” The pattern, then the story

Lead-in: The pattern. Most commercial-insurance producers compete for renewal accounts the same losing way: they find a business's renewal date, call two or three weeks out, ask for the current premium, run it past a couple of carriers, and come back a few percent cheaper. This is not selling β€” it is bidding.

Bidding has three fatal flaws at renewal. First, the incumbent controls the relationship and the timeline, and the moment the buyer says "I got a cheaper number," the incumbent matches it β€” your discount evaporates and you have trained the buyer to treat insurance as a commodity. Second, you have given the buyer no reason to endure the friction of switching brokers β€” re-issuing certificates, re-introducing a service team, re-papering the relationship.

Third, you have anchored the relationship on price, so the next producer with a cheaper number does to you what you tried to do to the incumbent.

Lead-in: The different motion. The renewal takeover is a different motion entirely. You are not bidding on a policy. You are making the case that the buyer's risk is being *managed transactionally* when it should be *managed strategically* β€” a difference measured in real dollars of total cost of risk, not the premium line.

That case is built on evidence the buyer has never seen: the loss runs, the experience-mod worksheet, the gap between premium and total cost of risk, the carrier-appetite map, and a forward plan with a timeline. An account won on strategy is an account you keep.

1.2 β€” The cold open: two producers, two outcomes

Lead-in: Producer A. Producer A found a $45M food distributor 14 days from renewal. He got the current premium ($310K), took the loss summary the office manager emailed him, ran it past two carriers, and came back at $291K β€” 6% under. The buyer mentioned the number to her incumbent.

The incumbent called the carrier, came back at $289K, and added, "I've taken care of you for nine years." Producer A lost. He never pulled the full loss runs, never read the mod, never met the CFO, and gave the buyer no reason to switch other than $21K β€” a reason the incumbent erased in one phone call.

Lead-in: Producer B. Producer B started on a $60M precision manufacturer 120 days before renewal. Week 1, SURFACE β€” a discovery meeting with the CFO and the operations VP. Week 3, STRESS-TEST β€” five years of loss runs and the NCCI experience-mod worksheet, finding a 1.19 debit mod inflated by two open claims with stale reserves and $280K of retained and uninsured loss the premium line never surfaced.

Week 6, STRUCTURE β€” a redesigned program with a deductible strategy, a better-fit carrier, and a claims-advocacy and return-to-work plan to drive the mod toward 1.00. Week 9, SUBSTANTIATE β€” a written total-cost-of-risk analysis and a three-year plan presented to the CFO and the owner.

Week 11, SECURE β€” a broker-of-record letter on the cleanest path plus a re-market mandate on the lines that needed it, with a signed service calendar. She won the account at a premium only 3% below the incumbent β€” and a projected total-cost-of-risk reduction of $190K over three years. The CFO did not switch for the 3%.

She switched for the plan.

⚠️ Common Trap

*"Producer A lost because the incumbent had a nine-year head start."* (1) The nine years were the weakness β€” nine years of transactional service, never a risk plan, never a loss-run review, never a CFO meeting. (2) A 6% discount is not a reason to switch; it is a reason for the incumbent to make one phone call.

(3) Producer A lost the day he decided to bid instead of diagnose.

Transition: "For the next 50 minutes: the 5-stage takeover, the 4 conversations producers avoid, two role-plays. Go."


SECTION 2 β€” THE TEACH (0:10-0:35)

🟑 Coach Note

Twenty-five minutes. Split into 5-STAGE (12 min), the 4 Avoided Conversations (8 min), the 3 Instruments (3 min), the Producer Quartile Self-Diagnosis (2 min). End-of-section test: every producer recites the 5 stages, the 4 conversations, and defines BOR letter, loss run, and experience mod without notes.

2.1 β€” Part A: The 5-STAGE Renewal Takeover (12 min)

Most lost renewal takeovers collapse at Stage 1 (no real discovery) or Stage 2 (no loss runs, no experience-mod read β€” the producer quoted blind). You do not win a commercial P&C account at renewal with a cheaper number β€” you EARN it by SURFACING what the business is trying to protect and who owns the risk decision, STRESS-TESTING the program against the loss runs and the experience mod, STRUCTURING a redesigned program and a forward plan, SUBSTANTIATING it with a written total-cost-of-risk analysis, and SECURING the move on the right legal path with a service commitment in writing.

StageTiming in the cycleWhat the producer doesOutput the buyer sees
SURFACEDay 1 / 120 days outDiscovery meeting with the economic buyerA diagnosis of the business and the incumbent's actual service record
STRESS-TESTWeek 3 / 90 days outPull and read five years of loss runs and the NCCI mod worksheetThe quantified problem β€” mod surcharge, retained losses, coverage gaps
STRUCTUREWeek 6 / 75 days outRedesign the program across all lines plus the non-premium planA program, not a price
SUBSTANTIATEWeek 9 / 60 days outWritten TCOR analysis with a multi-year projectionA CFO-grade case with a number behind it
SECUREWeek 11 / 30 days outExecute BOR and/or re-market on a controlled timelineThe move plus a signed service calendar

2.1.1 β€” Stage 1: SURFACE (2.5 min)

The takeover starts with discovery β€” with the *right people*. The buyer of a commercial-insurance program is rarely the office manager who emails certificates; it is the CFO, the owner, the COO, or a risk manager. SURFACE means a real meeting in which you map the business: what it makes, where it is growing, what a bad year looks like, what contracts and lenders require, and β€” critically β€” what the incumbent broker has and has not done.

You are not pitching. You are diagnosing.

🎀 Verbatim Script β€” SURFACE

*"Dana, before I talk about a number, I need to understand the business. Walk me through it β€” what you make, where you're growing, what a really bad day looks like. Then your current program: who do you actually talk to, when did they last walk your loss runs with you, when did they last bring you an idea you hadn't asked for?

I'm not here to quote your renewal. I'm here to find out whether your risk is being managed or just renewed."*

Lead-in: Common trap. Talking to the wrong person. The office manager gives you a premium number; only the CFO or owner can tell you what the business is protecting and authorize a change. A takeover built on the certificate clerk is built on sand.

2.1.2 β€” Stage 2: STRESS-TEST (2.5 min)

Now you do the technical work most producers skip. STRESS-TEST means getting the buyer's authorization to pull five years of loss runs and the NCCI experience-mod worksheet, and reading them. You look for: open claims with stale reserves inflating the mod; frequency patterns the incumbent never addressed; coverage gaps and uninsured retained losses; carrier placements that do not fit the class; and contract or lender requirements the current program does not satisfy.

This is where the quantified, switch-justifying story lives.

🎀 Verbatim Script β€” STRESS-TEST

*"Dana, here's what five years of loss runs show. Your experience mod is 1.19 β€” a 19% surcharge on workers-comp premium, roughly $38K a year. Two of the claims driving it are open with stale reserves; get a claims advocate on those and the mod could move toward 1.05.

Separately, you've absorbed about $280K in retained and uninsured losses over five years that never showed on a premium quote. Your incumbent has never walked you through any of this. That's not a price problem β€” that's a management problem."*

Lead-in: Common trap. Quoting without loss runs. A producer who has not read them is guessing at the renewal, cannot explain the experience mod, and has nothing the incumbent does not have. The loss runs are the takeover.

2.1.3 β€” Stage 3: STRUCTURE (2.5 min)

Now you redesign. STRUCTURE means proposing a program β€” not just a price β€” across all lines: property, general liability, commercial auto, workers comp, umbrella and excess, management liability, and cyber. You make deliberate choices on deductibles and retentions, on carrier selection (matching appetite, AM Best rating, and claims service to the class), and on whether a group captive is worth a feasibility look.

You also build the non-premium plan: loss control, return-to-work, claims advocacy, contract review, and a service calendar.

🎀 Verbatim Script β€” STRUCTURE

*"Dana, here's the redesigned program. We move property to a carrier whose appetite fits precision manufacturing β€” better pricing and a claims team that knows your equipment. We take a higher GL deductible because your frequency is low, and put the savings into an umbrella limit your largest customer contract requires β€” a gap your current program has.

We put a claims advocate on the open comp files. And because your losses are predictable and your operation is well-run, I want to run a group-captive feasibility analysis β€” a path to owning your own loss dollars instead of renting coverage. This is a program.

A quote is one page of it."*

Lead-in: Common trap. Re-quoting the same program one carrier cheaper. If your proposal is structurally identical to the incumbent's, you have given the buyer nothing to switch *for*.

2.1.4 β€” Stage 4: SUBSTANTIATE (2.5 min)

Now you put it in writing and make it CFO-grade. SUBSTANTIATE means a written total-cost-of-risk (TCOR) analysis β€” premium plus retained losses plus risk-control spend plus administrative cost β€” benchmarked against industry, with a multi-year projection. You show the mod trajectory, the deductible-strategy math, the gaps closed, and the dollar impact year by year.

A CFO does not act on a feeling that you are "more proactive." She acts on a number with a defensible method behind it.

🎀 Verbatim Script β€” SUBSTANTIATE

*"Dana, here's the written analysis. Today your total cost of risk is about $940K β€” $400K premium plus $280K retained losses plus loss-control and admin. Industry benchmark for your size and class is closer to $760K.

Our three-year plan: drive the mod from 1.19 toward 1.05, close the umbrella gap, restructure deductibles, put real claims advocacy and loss control in place. Projected TCOR reduction: about $190K. That's the case β€” not 'we're cheaper' but 'here is what your risk costs and the plan to lower it.'"*

Lead-in: Common trap. Presenting a price, not an analysis. A spreadsheet of premiums by line is what the incumbent sends. A written TCOR analysis with a multi-year plan makes a CFO move.

2.1.5 β€” Stage 5: SECURE (2.5 min)

Now you move the account on the right legal path and lock the service commitment. SECURE means knowing the difference between a broker-of-record (BOR) letter β€” which transfers a well-priced program to your agency on the same carrier with no re-marketing β€” and a re-market mandate, in which the buyer authorizes you to take specific lines to competing carriers.

Often the right answer is a hybrid: BOR the well-placed lines, re-market the rest, on a timeline that does not let the incumbent block your markets. You also get the service calendar signed: quarterly stewardship, the mid-year loss-run review, the renewal strategy session 120 days out.

🎀 Verbatim Script β€” SECURE

*"Dana, here's how we move. Your property and umbrella are well-priced β€” we take those by broker-of-record letter, no disruption, same carriers, just our agency managing them. Workers comp and auto we re-market, because the analysis says we can do better on placement; I'll need a signed market authorization so two agencies aren't approaching the same carrier.

And here's the service calendar β€” quarterly stewardship, a mid-year loss-run review, a renewal strategy session 120 days out, in writing. Let's start the BOR today and the re-market this week."*

Lead-in: Common trap. Treating the BOR letter as the whole game. A BOR with no plan behind it just moves a transactional account from one broker to another β€” and the next producer takes it from you the same way. SECURE the move *and* the service commitment.

2.2 β€” Part B: The Four Conversations Every Renewal-Takeover Producer Avoids (8 min)

Per CIAB, RIMS, and Big "I" producer-development data, four conversations explain most of the gap between top-quartile and bottom-quartile producers. Producers avoid them out of fear of looking aggressive, fear of technical work, and fear of an unflattering answer.

#The avoided conversationWhy producers duck itWhat naming it earns
1BOR vs re-market β€” the honest path may be slowerFear of looking less convenient than a fast BORTrust that you will tell the buyer the truth
2The incumbent is transactional, not badFear it sounds like slanderA clean reframe the buyer can act on
3Pull the loss runs and read the experience modFear of technical work and an unflattering answerThe quantified, switch-justifying story
4Some of the renewal increase is the marketFear of losing the deal to a more optimistic rivalA renewal you can actually deliver

2.2.1 β€” Conversation 1: "There are two ways to switch, and the honest one might be slower"

Many producers let the prospect believe switching means a painful full re-marketing of every policy β€” or push for a quick BOR that hands them an account they cannot actually improve. Script: *"Dana, there are two instruments here. A broker-of-record letter moves your program to my agency on the same carriers β€” fast, no disruption, but it only makes sense where the program is already well-placed.

Re-marketing means I take specific lines to competing carriers β€” slower, more work, but the only honest path where the placement is wrong. I'll recommend a hybrid and tell you exactly which lines go which way and why. I'd rather be slower and right than fast and useless to you."*

2.2.2 β€” Conversation 2: "Your incumbent isn't bad β€” they're transactional, and that's the problem"

Most incumbents are not negligent; they are order-takers who shop the renewal, email three quotes, and disappear for 51 weeks. Producers avoid naming this because it feels like slander. Script: *"Dana, I won't tell you your broker is bad β€” I don't believe they are.

But: in the last three years, did they ever pull your loss runs and walk you through them? Bring you an idea you didn't ask for? Sit down with you more than once a year?

If the answer is no, that's not a bad broker β€” that's a transactional one, and a transactional broker is fine until the year you have a real claim. That's the difference I'm offering β€” not a cheaper policy, a managed risk."*

2.2.3 β€” Conversation 3: "Let's pull your loss runs and read your experience mod together"

Many producers never pull loss runs or read the NCCI mod worksheet β€” it is technical, and the answer might be unflattering. Yet that is where the quantified, switch-justifying story lives. Script: *"Dana, I need authorization to pull five years of loss runs and your mod worksheet, and I want to read them with you.

Most producers skip this because it's work. But your experience mod is a number you can calculate, it's surcharging your premium, and it's often inflated by open claims with reserves that should have been resolved. Showing you why your mod is what it is, and a plan to move it, is worth more than any quote β€” and it's a conversation your incumbent has never had with you."*

2.2.4 β€” Conversation 4: "Some of this renewal increase is the market, and I won't pretend otherwise"

A producer who over-promises rate relief inherits a renewal he cannot deliver and loses the account in 12 months. Script: *"Dana, I'll be straight about pricing. Commercial property is up across the whole market β€” catastrophe losses and replacement-cost inflation, nothing to do with your broker.

If anyone promises to make that go away, be careful. What I control is program structure, deductible strategy, carrier selection, your experience mod, and claims advocacy β€” and that's where I'll save you real money. I'd rather set an honest expectation and over-deliver than win you on a promise the market won't let me keep."*

2.3 β€” Part C: The Three Instruments (3 min)

Every renewal-takeover producer must fluently explain three instruments. Producers who cannot lose on technical credibility alone.

Lead-in: Instrument 1 β€” the Broker-of-Record (BOR) letter. A short client-signed letter instructing carriers that a named agency now represents the account. It transfers an existing program β€” same policies, same carriers β€” without re-marketing. Carriers honor a valid BOR after a short waiting period and will not let two agencies block or re-market the same account at once.

The BOR is the *fast* path, right only when the program is already well-placed.

Lead-in: Instrument 2 β€” the loss run. A carrier-produced report of every claim on a policy over a period (commonly five years): date, description, amount paid, amount reserved, and status. Loss runs are the factual basis of every renewal. Open claims with stale reserves inflate cost; frequency patterns reveal where loss control is needed.

A producer who has not read the loss runs is quoting blind.

Lead-in: Instrument 3 β€” the NCCI experience modification rate (the experience mod, e-mod, or x-mod). A multiplier on workers-compensation manual premium reflecting actual loss experience versus expected for the class and size. 1.00 is average; below is a credit, above is a debit.

The mod lags experience by roughly a year, is calculable from the NCCI worksheet, and is the single most powerful β€” and most misunderstood β€” number in a commercial renewal.

2.4 β€” Part D: Producer Quartile Self-Diagnosis (2 min)

Every producer self-diagnoses on five behaviors: do you start renewals 90-120 days out or 2-3 weeks out; do you pull and read loss runs on every target; do you reach the CFO or owner or only the certificate clerk; do you present a written TCOR analysis or a premium spreadsheet; do you set honest renewal expectations or over-promise rate relief. The room learns instantly which quartile each producer is in and which behaviors block the next jump.

BehaviorTop quartileBottom quartile
Renewal start90-120 days out2-3 weeks out
Loss runsPulled and read on every targetQuotes off an emailed summary
Buyer reachedCFO or ownerCertificate clerk or office manager
DeliverableWritten TCOR analysis and multi-year planA premium spreadsheet
Rate expectationsHonest market framingOver-promises rate relief

🎯 Bottom Line

5 stages plus 4 avoided conversations plus 3 instruments plus a quartile self-diagnosis equals takeovers won on strategy and retained for years. Stages without the conversations equals a polished producer who still competes on price. The conversations without the stages equals honesty with no plan behind it.


SECTION 3 β€” THE DISCUSSION (0:35-0:45)

🟑 Coach Note

Whiteboard 5 columns SURFACE / STRESS-TEST / STRUCTURE / SUBSTANTIATE / SECURE and 4 rows for the avoided conversations. Each producer audits their last ten takeover attempts out loud. Count to five after each prompt before anyone answers.

3.1 β€” The eight discussion prompts

Lead-in: Prompt 1 β€” "When do you walk away from a takeover target?" When the buyer will only share a premium number and not the loss runs, will not put you in front of the CFO or owner, and the renewal is two weeks out. Sales Mgr: *"If you can't get the loss runs and you can't reach the buyer, you're not on a takeover β€” you're free price-checking for the incumbent.

Walk."*

Lead-in: Prompt 2 β€” "BOR letter or re-market β€” how do you decide?" BOR when the program is well-priced and well-placed and the value you add is service and strategy. Re-market when the placement itself is wrong β€” bad carrier fit, missing coverage, mispriced lines. Hybrid is usually correct.

Sales Mgr: *"The BOR is fast and the re-market is honest. Tell the client which lines go which way and why. Never BOR a bad program because it's easy."*

Lead-in: Prompt 3 β€” "The incumbent is trying to block your markets β€” what now?" A blocked carrier will not quote you because the incumbent approached them first. Sales Mgr: *"This is why timeline discipline matters. Get the signed market authorization early, submit before the incumbent locks the carriers, and where you can't get clean access, use the BOR path.

Blocking is a timeline failure, not a dead end."*

Lead-in: Prompt 4 β€” "How do you read a debit mod without scaring the owner?" Separate diagnosis from blame; the mod is a lagging number an open claim with a stale reserve can hold high. Sales Mgr: *"Say: 'Your mod is 1.28, here's the math, here are the two open claims holding it there.

This is fixable β€” claims advocacy and reserve discipline, not a verdict on your safety.'"*

Lead-in: Prompt 5 β€” "A prospect demands you promise to beat the incumbent's renewal." You do not promise it. Sales Mgr: *"Say: 'I won't promise to beat a number I haven't seen the loss runs behind. I'll promise to show you your true total cost of risk and a plan to lower it β€” I won't win you on a promise the market won't let me keep.'"*

Lead-in: Prompt 6 β€” "When is a captive worth raising?" For a profitable, lower-hazard, well-run account β€” often $300K-plus in casualty premium β€” with predictable losses. Sales Mgr: *"A group-captive feasibility analysis reframes the conversation from 'price of insurance' to 'ownership of your loss dollars.' Raise it where it genuinely fits β€” never as a gimmick."*

Lead-in: Prompt 7 β€” "You only have the office manager β€” how do you get to the CFO?" Use the loss-run review as the lever. Sales Mgr: *"Say: 'I can quote off a summary, but that's the transactional service you already have. To do this properly I need 45 minutes with whoever owns the risk budget.' Earn the CFO with the promise of real work."*

Lead-in: Prompt 8 β€” "ONE behavior change." Each producer names ONE stage they skip and ONE conversation they duck. Sales Mgr: *"Into the CRM. Monday huddle. Ride-along on the next takeover."*


SECTION 4 β€” TWO-PERSON ROLE-PLAY (0:45-1:05)

🟑 Coach Note

Pair producers. Two scenarios, 10 minutes each, 60-second reset between. Listen for whether the producer reaches the economic buyer, insists on pulling loss runs, reads the mod out loud, and presents a TCOR plan instead of a premium. Mark which stage and conversation each producer skips.

4.1 β€” Role-Play 1: CFO Dana Whitfield at a $60M Precision Manufacturer, 75 Days From Renewal (10 min)

Setup: Dana Whitfield, CFO of Calderon Precision (a $60M-revenue precision-machining business, ~210 employees, family-owned). The commercial P&C program β€” property, general liability, commercial auto, workers comp, a $10M umbrella, plus small management-liability and cyber β€” renews in 75 days at roughly $400K total premium with an independent agency used for 12 years.

The incumbent producer is competent but transactional: he shops the renewal, emails a spreadsheet, and is otherwise unseen. Calderon's experience mod is 1.19. The producer is Sam Ortega, a commercial P&C producer at a competing regional agency, introduced through Calderon's banker.

Run the full 5-STAGE and the 4 avoided conversations; the goal is a signed loss-run authorization and a CFO meeting on the TCOR analysis β€” not a quote.

🎀 PROSPECT β€” Dana Whitfield

51, 9-year CFO, CPA, financially literate, time-protective, skeptical of "broker pitches," loyal-by-default to the incumbent until given a real reason not to be.

Deflection 1 (min 4): *"Look, I appreciate the intro from the bank, but we've been with our agency 12 years and they're fine. If you want to sharpen your pencil and send me a number against our renewal, I'll look at it. But I don't have time for a long process."*

Deflection 2 (min 8): *"You keep saying 'total cost of risk' and 'experience mod.' Our premium is our premium. Why would I hand you our loss runs and our whole financial picture when all I asked for is a competitive quote?"*

🎀 PRODUCER β€” Sam Ortega

  • Min 0-3 (SURFACE): *"Dana, I'll respect your time β€” and I won't send you a number today, because a number off a summary is the transactional service you already get. First, help me understand Calderon: what you machine, where you're growing, what a genuinely bad operational day looks like. And honestly: in 12 years, has your agency ever pulled your loss runs and walked them with you, or brought you an idea you didn't ask for?"*
  • Min 3-5 (STRESS-TEST plus Deflection 1): *"I hear you on the long process β€” so here's the short, honest version. I don't want to 'sharpen a pencil.' I want one thing: authorization to pull five years of your loss runs and your NCCI mod worksheet. Your mod is 1.19 β€” a 19% surcharge on workers comp, real money β€” and mods are very often inflated by open claims with stale reserves. If I find that, I can show you a plan to fix it. That's the most useful 45 minutes you'll spend on insurance this year."*
  • Min 5-7 (STRUCTURE plus Conversation 2): *"I won't tell you your agency is bad β€” I doubt they are. But there's a difference between a broker who renews your policies and one who manages your risk. Renewing is emailing three quotes once a year. Managing is reading your loss runs, fixing your mod, closing coverage gaps your largest customer contract requires, matching your property placement to a carrier that knows precision manufacturing, and meeting you quarterly. I'm offering the second one."*
  • Min 7-9 (SUBSTANTIATE plus Deflection 2): *"Fair challenge. Your premium is what you pay a carrier. Your *total cost of risk* is that premium plus every dollar of loss you absorb under your deductibles, plus claims-handling friction, plus your mod surcharge. For a company your size that retained number is often $200K-$300K β€” and it never appears on a quote. I'm not asking for your financials. I'm asking for loss runs, which your carriers release with one signature. Without them, I'm guessing β€” and you already have a broker who guesses."*
  • Min 9-10 (SECURE): *"Two small asks. One β€” sign this loss-run authorization today so I can read five years of claims and your mod worksheet. Two β€” give me 45 minutes three weeks from now to walk you through a written TCOR analysis and a three-year plan. If the analysis shows your program is genuinely well-run, I'll tell you that. If it shows what I expect, you'll have a real decision with 50-plus days on the clock. No quote today. Just the authorization and the meeting."*

4.2 β€” 60-Second Reset

🟑 Coach Note

"Switch sides β€” 60-second reset." Stand up. Read the other role's sheet. Go.

4.3 β€” Role-Play 2: Owner-Operator Ray Donnelly at a $14M Commercial Contractor With a 1.28 Debit Mod (10 min)

Setup: Ray Donnelly, owner of Donnelly Mechanical (a $14M commercial HVAC and mechanical contractor, ~80 field employees). Ray's program renews in 90 days at roughly $520K total premium, heavy in workers comp and commercial auto. His experience mod is 1.28 β€” a 28% surcharge β€” which Ray believes is "just bad luck" from two injuries two years ago.

His general contractors now ask about his mod on bid prequalification forms, and a mod above 1.0 is costing him work. His incumbent is a single-carrier captive agent who has never explained the mod. The producer is Sam Ortega, introduced by another contractor.

Run the full 5-STAGE; the goal is to reframe the mod as a fixable, quantified problem and secure a loss-run authorization plus a re-market mandate.

🎀 PROSPECT β€” Ray Donnelly

58, built the company over 30 years, trusts handshakes over spreadsheets, proud of his crews, frustrated that his mod is costing him bids, suspicious that "insurance guys" all sound the same.

Deflection 1 (min 4): *"My mod's high because we had two bad injuries two years ago β€” bad luck, nothing I can do about it now. My agent says it'll come down on its own. I don't need a lecture, I need a cheaper number."*

Deflection 2 (min 8): *"You're the fourth insurance guy this year. They all say they'll save me money. Why should I let you pull all my claims history and go shop me around when my current guy has handled me fine for 15 years?"*

🎀 PRODUCER β€” Sam Ortega

  • Min 0-3 (SURFACE): *"Ray, 30 years building this β€” that's the business, not the insurance, and I respect it. You mentioned GCs are asking about your mod on prequal forms. How many bids has that cost you this year? That's not an insurance problem β€” that's a revenue problem, and that's the one I want to fix."*
  • Min 3-5 (STRESS-TEST plus Deflection 1): *"Ray, here's the hard part, straight. 'It'll come down on its own' is not how an experience mod works, and a captive agent who told you that either doesn't know or didn't want the conversation. Your mod is 1.28 β€” a 28% surcharge on a comp line that's most of your premium. The two injuries are part of it, but I'd bet those claims are still *open* on your loss runs with reserves set higher than they'll ever pay. Stale reserves hold a mod up for years. A claims advocate can get them reviewed and resolved. That's not luck β€” that's work nobody's done for you."*
  • Min 5-7 (STRUCTURE): *"Here's the plan in plain terms. One β€” pull your loss runs and mod worksheet and find every claim holding that mod up. Two β€” put a claims advocate on the open files to get reserves reviewed. Three β€” re-market your comp and auto to carriers that actually want mechanical contractors, because a single-carrier agent can only offer one. Four β€” a return-to-work program so the next injury costs a fraction as much. Your mod drops because someone runs that playbook."*
  • Min 7-9 (SUBSTANTIATE plus Deflection 2): *"Ray, you're right that we all say 'I'll save you money' β€” so I won't. A mod over 1.0 is costing you *bids*, and bids are worth more than premium. If we move your mod from 1.28 toward 1.05 over two renewals, you stop being screened out on prequals. I'll put that in writing as a TCOR plan β€” premium, retained losses, and the work you're losing. Your guy of 15 years never showed you that math because a single-carrier agent can't fix it. I'm not asking for trust β€” I'm asking for loss runs and a chance to show the numbers."*
  • Min 9-10 (SECURE): *"Two things, Ray. Sign the loss-run authorization so I can read your claims and mod worksheet β€” and a market authorization so I can take your comp and auto to carriers that want your business, without your current agent blocking them. Three weeks from now I sit down with you and your office manager and walk a written plan: the mod trajectory, the carrier options, what it's worth in bids you stop losing. 90 days to renewal β€” enough time to do this right, not enough to wait."*

🟑 Coach Note

Producers will want to (a) match the incumbent on price β€” DON'T; (b) promise the mod drops fast β€” DON'T, set a two-renewal expectation; (c) skip the revenue-and-bids reframe with Ray β€” DON'T, lost bids is the real pain; (d) accept "send me a number" from Dana without the loss-run authorization β€” DON'T, the authorization is the close.


SECTION 5 β€” DEBRIEF AND COMMITMENTS (1:05-1:10)

🟑 Coach Note

Three debrief questions, then commitments. This ritual moves next quarter's takeover close rate, book retention, and the producer-quartile mix on the team.

5.1 β€” The three debrief questions

Lead-in: Debrief 1 β€” "Strongest stage? Weakest?" Producers over-index SURFACE (they like discovery) and under-index STRESS-TEST (technical) and SUBSTANTIATE (a real TCOR analysis is harder than a quote). Sales Mgr: *"Skip STRESS-TEST and you're quoting blind.

Skip SUBSTANTIATE and you've given the CFO a feeling instead of a number β€” and feelings lose to a 6% discount."*

Lead-in: Debrief 2 β€” "Which conversation did you dodge most?" Most name Conversation 3 β€” pulling the loss runs and reading the mod β€” because it is technical and the answer might be unflattering. Sales Mgr: *"The conversation you avoid is the one that wins the account. The loss runs ARE the takeover. Read them on every target."*

Lead-in: Debrief 3 β€” "Which lost takeover do you owe a re-open?" Each producer names ONE takeover lost on price or by starting too late. Sales Mgr: *"Email within 48 hours: 'I never showed you your total cost of risk or read your loss runs β€” I'd like 45 minutes to do that before your next renewal cycle.' Start the next takeover 120 days out, today."*

5.2 β€” The commitment ritual

🎀 Commitment Ritual (Verbatim)

Sales Mgr: "Open the CRM. Four lines. (1) A takeover you lost on price or by starting late β€” name the account, the size, what you skipped.

(2) The stage you habitually skip and the verbatim line you'll use next time. (3) The avoided conversation you dodge and the reframe. (4) One current renewal target where you'll pull loss runs and book the CFO meeting in 30 days.

Read all four aloud."

Coach the vague: *"Which account? Which renewal date? Whose CFO? When's the meeting? Out loud, now."*

Closes: "1:1 takeover ride-along within 14 days. I'm grading whether you SURFACED the economic buyer, STRESS-TESTED the loss runs, and SUBSTANTIATED a written total-cost-of-risk plan."


SECTION 6 β€” LEAVE-BEHIND WALKTHROUGH (1:10-1:13)

🟑 Coach Note

Hand out the one-pager. 30 seconds per section. Digital copy in the CRM. One in every producer's bag, one on the sales-room wall, one in the Monday-huddle binder.

πŸ“‹ Leave-Behind β€” "The Renewal Takeover Script Card" One-Pager

8 THINGS TO BRING ON EVERY TAKEOVER: (1) SURFACE discovery scorecard. (2) Loss-run authorization form. (3) NCCI experience-mod read sheet. (4) Carrier-appetite map with AM Best ratings. (5) TCOR worksheet. (6) Broker-of-record vs re-market decision card. (7) Renewal-timeline template (120 / 90 / 60 / 30 days). (8) Service-calendar template.

THE 5-STAGE TAKEOVER SCRIPT CARD: (1) SURFACE Day 1 β€” *"I'm here to find out whether your risk is managed or just renewed. Walk me through the business, and tell me what your broker has and hasn't done."* (2) STRESS-TEST Week 3 β€” *"Authorize five years of loss runs and your mod worksheet.

Your 1.19 mod is a 19% surcharge; two open claims with stale reserves drive it; here's $280K of retained loss your premium never showed."* (3) STRUCTURE Week 6 β€” *"Here's the redesigned program β€” deductible strategy, better-fit carrier, umbrella gap closed, claims advocacy, captive feasibility look.

A quote is one page of a program."* (4) SUBSTANTIATE Week 9 β€” *"Written TCOR analysis: $940K today vs $760K benchmark; three-year plan projects a $190K reduction."* (5) SECURE Week 11 β€” *"BOR the well-placed lines, re-market the rest, sign the service calendar."*

THE 4 AVOIDED CONVERSATIONS: (1) BOR vs re-market β€” explain both instruments honestly; recommend the hybrid. (2) Transactional, not bad β€” "Did they ever pull your loss runs, bring an unrequested idea, or meet you more than once a year? If no, that's transactional." (3) Pull the loss runs and read the mod β€” the technical work most producers skip is where the switch-justifying story lives.

(4) The increase is the market β€” set honest renewal expectations; never over-promise rate relief.

PRODUCER QUARTILE SELF-DIAGNOSIS: Top-quartile β€” starts 90-120 days out; reads loss runs on every target; reaches the CFO or owner; presents a written TCOR analysis; sets honest market expectations. Bottom-quartile β€” starts 2-3 weeks out; quotes off a summary; talks only to the certificate clerk; presents a premium spreadsheet; over-promises rate relief.

Find your two weakest behaviors and fix those first.

THE 3 INSTRUMENTS: (1) Broker-of-record letter β€” client-signed instruction moving a program to a new agency, same carriers, no re-marketing; the fast path, right only when the program is well-placed. (2) Loss run β€” carrier-produced 5-year claims history; the factual basis of every renewal; quoting without it is guessing.

(3) NCCI experience mod β€” workers-comp premium multiplier; 1.00 average, below a credit, above a debit; lags about a year; the most powerful and most-misunderstood number in a renewal.

NEVER DO: quote off a summary without loss runs / start a takeover two weeks out / talk only to the certificate clerk / present a premium spreadsheet instead of a written TCOR analysis / promise to "beat the renewal" before you've read the loss runs / slander the incumbent (name "transactional," never "bad") / BOR a poorly-placed program because it's easy / ignore the experience mod / raise a captive as a gimmick / single-thread the office manager / let the incumbent block your markets through a timeline failure.

OUTCOME LINE: Full discipline equals takeovers won on strategy, books that retain for years, growing renewal income. Quote-and-pray equals the occasional account won on price and lost back at the next renewal, a churning book, a career spent bidding.

🎯 If You Only Remember One Thing

**You do not take a commercial P&C account away from an incumbent broker with a cheaper quote β€” the incumbent erases a 6% discount with one phone call. You take it by starting 120 days before renewal, reaching the CFO or owner instead of the certificate clerk, reading five years of loss runs and the NCCI experience-mod worksheet, quantifying the total cost of risk the premium line never showed, and handing the buyer a written multi-year plan to lower it.

A takeover won on price is lost back at the next renewal; a takeover won on a risk strategy is a client for a decade.**


The 5-Stage Renewal Takeover Flow

flowchart TD A[Sales Mgr Opens] --> B[Section 1 Cold Open β€” Producer A quotes a 45M distributor 14 days out 6 percent under premium loses when incumbent matches vs Producer B starts 120 days out at a 60M manufacturer pulls 5 years of loss runs reads the experience mod builds a total-cost-of-risk plan wins on strategy] B --> C[Section 2 Teach 25 min] C --> C1[Part A 5-STAGE β€” SURFACE discovery with the economic buyer / STRESS-TEST pull and read loss runs and the NCCI experience-mod worksheet / STRUCTURE redesigned program deductible strategy carrier fit captive feasibility / SUBSTANTIATE written total-cost-of-risk analysis with a multi-year plan / SECURE broker-of-record plus re-market on the right path with a signed service calendar] C --> C2[Part B 4 Avoided Conversations β€” BOR vs re-market honesty / transactional not bad / pull the loss runs and read the mod / the increase is the market] C --> C3[Part C 3 Instruments β€” broker-of-record letter / loss run / NCCI experience modification rate] C --> C4[Part D Producer Quartile Self-Diagnosis 5 behaviors] C1 & C2 & C3 & C4 --> F[Section 3 Discussion 8 prompts] F --> G[Section 4 Role-Play 20 min] G --> G1[R1 CFO Dana Whitfield 60M precision manufacturer Calderon Precision 75 days from renewal 1.19 mod happy with the incumbent send me a number β€” run 5-STAGE secure loss-run authorization plus a CFO TCOR meeting] G1 --> G2[60-sec reset] G2 --> G3[R2 owner-operator Ray Donnelly 14M mechanical contractor 1.28 debit mod costing him bids β€” run 5-STAGE reframe the mod as fixable secure loss-run authorization plus a re-market mandate] G3 --> H[Section 5 Debrief CRM commitment ritual] H --> I[Section 6 Leave-Behind one-pager] I --> Z[End 1:13]

The Broker-of-Record vs Re-Market Decision Tree

flowchart TD IN[Renewal takeover target identified] --> SURF{SURFACE reaches the economic buyer} SURF -- only the certificate clerk --> STALL[Use the loss-run review as leverage to earn the CFO meeting] SURF -- CFO or owner engaged --> LR{STRESS-TEST loss runs authorized} LR -- no loss runs released --> WALK[Likely a price-check for the incumbent β€” walk] LR -- 5 years of loss runs and the mod worksheet in hand --> DIAG{Diagnose each line of coverage} DIAG -- line is well-priced and well-placed --> BOR[Move that line by broker-of-record letter β€” fast no re-marketing] DIAG -- line is mispriced or wrong carrier fit --> REMK[Re-market that line β€” signed market authorization beat the incumbent block] BOR --> SUB[SUBSTANTIATE β€” written TCOR analysis and multi-year plan to the CFO] REMK --> SUB SUB --> SEC[SECURE β€” execute BOR plus re-market sign the service calendar] SEC --> WIN[Account won on strategy β€” retained for years]

The Competitive Landscape: Who You Are Taking Accounts From

A renewal takeover always happens against a specific incumbent, and the producer should know the brokerage market cold. The industry is consolidating fast, and consolidation creates both the openings and the threats.

Broker / bodyTickerRole in a renewal takeover
Marsh McLennanNYSE: MMCLargest global broker; pushing down-market into the middle market, intensifying takeover competition
AonNYSE: AON#2 global broker; the NFP acquisition explicitly targets the middle market
Arthur J. GallagherNYSE: AJG#3 global broker and the most acquisitive consolidator of independent agencies
Brown and BrownNYSE: BROMajor consolidator; a "local agency" may now be a Brown and Brown branch
Willis Towers WatsonNASDAQ: WTWGlobal broker with a middle-market unit competing for the same accounts
Erie IndemnityNYSE: ERIECaptive-agency model; the single-carrier incumbent the independent producer often displaces

Lead-in: The consolidation opening. When Gallagher or Brown and Brown rolls up the independent agency a buyer has used for 20 years, the retiring principal cashes out and the relationship is reassigned to a service team the buyer has never met β€” a textbook takeover opening. Lead-in: The consolidation threat. The same consolidators are buying *your* competitors and can field a national-broker resource set against a regional account.

Know which incumbent you face before you SURFACE.


Sources and Further Reading

The market structure, instruments, and benchmarks in this training are grounded in the industry, regulatory, and trade sources below. Keep the CIAB market index and the NCCI experience-mod methodology especially close when preparing a takeover.

  1. Marsh McLennan (NYSE: MMC) β€” the world's largest insurance broker and risk-advisory holding company. <https://www.marshmclennan.com/>
  2. Aon plc (NYSE: AON) β€” the #2 global broker; its NFP acquisition targets the middle market. <https://www.aon.com/>
  3. Arthur J. Gallagher and Co (NYSE: AJG) β€” the #3 global broker and the most acquisitive consolidator of independent agencies. <https://www.ajg.com/>
  4. Brown and Brown, Inc (NYSE: BRO) β€” a leading brokerage and active consolidator of regional and independent agencies. <https://www.bbinsurance.com/>
  5. Willis Towers Watson (NASDAQ: WTW) β€” global broker and advisory firm with a middle-market commercial unit. <https://www.wtwco.com/>
  6. Council of Insurance Agents and Brokers (CIAB) β€” publisher of the quarterly Commercial P/C Market Index, the most-cited benchmark for commercial-insurance pricing direction by line. <https://www.ciab.com/>
  7. Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America (the Big "I") β€” represents roughly 25,000 independent agency locations. <https://www.independentagent.com/>
  8. NCCI (National Council on Compensation Insurance) β€” the workers-compensation rating organization that calculates the Experience Modification Rate. <https://www.ncci.com/>
  9. AM Best β€” the dominant carrier financial-strength rating agency (A++ to D). <https://www.ambest.com/>
  10. Standard and Poor's Global Ratings β€” a second major insurer financial-strength rating source used in carrier-appetite mapping. <https://www.spglobal.com/ratings/>
  11. NAIC and the 50 state departments of insurance β€” insurance is state-regulated; the broker-of-record letter is recognized across markets. <https://www.naic.org/>
  12. Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I) β€” industry data on catastrophe losses, social inflation, and combined-ratio trends. <https://www.iii.org/>
  13. Vermont Captive Insurance Association (VCIA) β€” the captive and alternative-risk-transfer perimeter. <https://www.vcia.com/>
  14. RIMS (Risk and Insurance Management Society) β€” publisher of the total-cost-of-risk (TCOR) framework. <https://www.rims.org/>
  15. The Institutes (CPCU Society) β€” the professional-education body behind the CPCU designation. <https://www.theinstitutes.org/>
  16. National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies (NAMIC) β€” trade body for mutual insurers writing middle-market commercial accounts. <https://www.namic.org/>
  17. American Property Casualty Insurance Association (APCIA) β€” the primary national trade association for property-casualty insurers. <https://www.apci.org/>
  18. Workers Compensation Research Institute (WCRI) β€” independent research on workers-compensation claim costs by state. <https://www.wcrinstitute.org/>
  19. Marsh McLennan Agency β€” the middle-market retail arm of Marsh McLennan, a direct competitor in the renewal-takeover segment. <https://www.marshmma.com/>
  20. HUB International β€” a large global broker and active agency consolidator in the middle market. <https://www.hubinternational.com/>
  21. Acrisure β€” one of the fastest-growing brokerage consolidators of former independent agencies. <https://acrisure.com/>
  22. USI Insurance Services β€” a national broker with a strong middle-market commercial practice. <https://www.usi.com/>
  23. Chubb Limited (NYSE: CB) β€” a leading commercial P&C carrier in carrier-appetite mapping. <https://www.chubb.com/>
  24. The Travelers Companies (NYSE: TRV) β€” a major workers-compensation and commercial-lines carrier. <https://www.travelers.com/>
  25. The Hartford (NYSE: HIG) β€” a leading small-and-middle-market commercial and workers-compensation carrier. <https://www.thehartford.com/>
  26. CNA Financial (NYSE: CNA) β€” a commercial-lines carrier with industry-specialized appetite. <https://www.cna.com/>
  27. National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) β€” middle-market business sentiment and cost-of-doing-business data. <https://www.nfib.com/>
  28. U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) β€” data on the middle-market and small-business segment the takeover targets. <https://www.sba.gov/>
  29. Insurance Journal β€” trade-press coverage of broker M&A, market conditions, and agency news. <https://www.insurancejournal.com/>
  30. Business Insurance β€” trade publication covering commercial risk, brokerage, and the middle market. <https://www.businessinsurance.com/>
  31. Commercial-insurance buyer-psychology synthesis β€” drawn from CIAB, RIMS, and Big "I" producer-development data. <https://www.ciab.com/resources/>

The Numbers Behind the Takeover

A renewal-takeover producer who cannot speak the quantitative language of commercial insurance loses on credibility before strategy. Treat ranges as planning bands, confirm account-specific numbers from the actual loss runs and the NCCI worksheet, and read the current CIAB Market Index before setting any renewal expectation.

N.1 β€” Experience modification rate: the surcharge math

Experience modMeaningEffect on a $200K WC manual premium
0.85Strong credit modPremium about $170K β€” a $30K discount
1.00Average β€” actual losses match expectedPremium about $200K β€” neither credit nor debit
1.19Debit mod (the Calderon role-play)Premium about $238K β€” a $38K surcharge
1.28Heavy debit mod (the Donnelly role-play)Premium about $256K β€” a $56K surcharge

The mod is a multiplier on manual premium, calculated by NCCI from roughly the prior three policy years excluding the most recent, and it lags actual experience by about a year β€” which is why a genuinely improved operation can still carry a high mod. A claim still open is valued at paid plus reserved; an inflated reserve inflates the mod until the claim closes or the reserve is corrected.

This is the highest-leverage technical insight in a comp-heavy takeover.

N.2 β€” Total cost of risk: the four components

Total cost of risk (TCOR) equals (1) insurance premiums plus (2) retained and uninsured losses plus (3) risk-control and loss-prevention spend plus (4) risk-management administrative cost. For a middle-market account, premium is typically only 55-75% of true TCOR; the retained-loss component is the one the incumbent's quote never surfaces.

In the Calderon role-play, a roughly $400K premium sits inside a roughly $940K TCOR β€” the difference is where the takeover argument lives.

TCOR componentWhat it capturesWhy the incumbent's quote hides it
Insurance premiumWhat the carrier is paid for transferred riskIt is the only line on a quote β€” so it looks like the whole cost
Retained / uninsured lossesDeductibles, SIRs, and uninsured claims the business absorbsNever appears on a premium comparison
Risk-control spendLoss prevention, safety programs, return-to-workTreated as an operating cost, not a risk cost
Administrative costInternal time managing claims, certificates, renewalsInvisible until someone measures it

N.3 β€” Renewal-takeover timeline: the discipline that beats the incumbent block

Days to renewalStageWhat must be done
120 daysSURFACEEconomic-buyer discovery meeting completed
90 daysSTRESS-TESTLoss runs and mod worksheet pulled and read
60 daysSTRUCTURE plus SUBSTANTIATEProgram redesigned, written TCOR analysis presented
30 daysSECUREBOR signed and/or market authorization submitted before the incumbent locks the carriers

A takeover started inside 30 days is almost always a price-check: no time to pull loss runs, no time to re-market cleanly, and the incumbent can block the carriers. Top-quartile producers start at 90-120 days; bottom-quartile start at 2-3 weeks and compete only on price.

N.4 β€” Market-direction and captive discipline

Commercial-insurance pricing moves by line and by cycle β€” read the current CIAB Commercial P/C Market Index before promising anything. Through 2024-2025, commercial property stayed elevated on catastrophe losses and replacement-cost inflation; commercial auto stayed adverse on social inflation; workers compensation continued a long soft run.

A 12-20% property increase may simply be the market β€” promising to erase it is how you inherit a renewal you lose in 12 months. A group captive becomes worth a feasibility analysis once an account carries roughly $300K-plus in casualty premium, has predictable, lower-hazard losses, and is well-run.


Counter-Case: When the Renewal Takeover Playbook Is the Wrong Move

A disciplined producer is as good at *not* chasing a takeover as at running one. Applied indiscriminately, the 5-stage motion burns time, damages reputation, and occasionally hands a client a worse outcome. The Counter-Case is not a hedge β€” it is the half of the training that makes the playbook trustworthy.

CC.1 β€” When the incumbent is genuinely excellent

Some incumbents are not transactional β€” they pull loss runs, run quarterly stewardship, have driven the mod down, and placed the program well. If your STRESS-TEST finds a well-managed program, say so and walk. Telling a CFO her broker is doing real work, when true, builds more credibility than a forced pitch.

CC.2 β€” When a re-market would damage the client's market access

Re-marketing means approaching carriers. In a hard market, or in a niche class with few willing carriers, sending the account into the market clumsily β€” or letting multiple agencies hit the same carriers β€” can burn the markets and leave the client with *worse* options.

If you cannot run a controlled, single-channel process, recommend a BOR or recommend the client stay put.

CC.3 β€” When the only reason to switch is price

If your full analysis surfaces no structural improvement and the *only* lever is a few percent of premium, the takeover is not real. You will win it on price and lose it back on price. A price-driven book churns.

CC.4 β€” When you cannot get the loss runs or the economic buyer

If the prospect will not authorize loss runs and will not put you in front of the CFO or owner, you cannot run STRESS-TEST or SUBSTANTIATE. Continuing makes you an unpaid price-checker sharpening the incumbent's pencil. No loss runs and no buyer access equals no takeover. Walk.

CC.5 β€” When the timing genuinely does not work

A serious takeover needs roughly 90-120 days. Introduced inside 30 days of renewal, the honest move is: *"There isn't time to do this properly before this renewal. Let your current program renew, and let me start the real process 120 days before your next one."* That sentence loses a quote and wins a relationship.

CC.6 β€” When a captive is being used as a gimmick

A captive is a serious, multi-year financial commitment with real exit cost and collateral implications. Raising it to *sound* sophisticated, on an account too small, volatile, or hazardous to qualify, discredits everything else in your analysis. Raise alternative risk transfer only where the loss profile and premium scale support it.

Counter-Case signalWhat it looks like in discoveryThe disciplined move
Incumbent is excellentLoss runs reviewed, mod driven down, quarterly stewardshipSay so and walk; bank the credibility
Re-market would burn marketsHard market or niche class, few willing carriersBOR the program or recommend staying put
Only lever is priceNo structural improvement foundDecline; a price book churns
No loss runs, no buyerOffice manager only, summary onlyWalk β€” you are a free price-check
Inside 30 daysIntroduced too late to do the workDefer to next cycle, start 120 days out
Captive does not fitAccount too small, volatile, or hazardousDo not raise it; protect your credibility

🟑 Coach Note

The counter-case is the discipline that makes the playbook trustworthy. A producer who will walk away from the wrong takeover is one a CFO believes when he runs the right one.


How This Training Sits Inside Your Sales Motion

Monday sales huddle weekly β€” last week's takeover activity plus one verbatim drill. Day 1 SURFACE discovery with the economic buyer. Week 3 STRESS-TEST β€” loss runs and mod worksheet in hand.

Week 6 STRUCTURE β€” redesigned program and forward plan. Week 9 SUBSTANTIATE β€” written TCOR analysis to the CFO. Week 11 SECURE β€” BOR and/or re-market executed, service calendar signed.

The four avoided conversations overlay every cycle. Producer quartile review quarterly, with a 90-day plan to move each producer one behavior at a time.


This renewal-takeover training is one motion inside the broader Pulse Sales Trainings library. Pair this session with the related entries below β€” each is a runnable 60-minute meeting template.

Run st0030 as the industry-specific application; run st0001, st0002, and st0006 as the skill foundations.

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Sources cited
marshmclennan.comMarsh McLennan NYSE:MMC (CEO John Doyle, New York NY) β€” the world's largest insurance broker + risk-advisory holding company ~$24B revenue + ~90,000 colleagues + ~130 countries: Marsh (commercial P&C broking + risk advisory), Guy Carpenter (reinsurance), Mercer (health + benefits + retirement), Oliver Wyman (management consulting). Marsh is the dominant broker for large-cap + upper-middle-market commercial property + casualty + workers-compensation + management-liability + cyber programs; Marsh Connect + Marsh ClearSight RMIS (risk-management information system) + Marsh Advisory total-cost-of-risk analytics define the upper-market broker-of-record standard. Pivotal 2024-2027 dynamic β€” broker consolidation + the upper-middle-market squeeze pushes Marsh / Aon / Gallagher / WTW down-market into the $25M-$250M-revenue commercial-account segment historically owned by regional independent agencies, intensifying renewal-takeover competition; the broker-of-record letter (BOR) remains the single legal instrument that transfers an account between brokers without re-marketing the policy.aon.comAon plc NYSE:AON (CEO Greg Case, Dublin Ireland + London UK) β€” the #2 global insurance broker + professional-services firm ~$15B+ revenue + ~60,000 colleagues + ~120 countries; Aon Commercial Risk Solutions + Aon Health Solutions + Aon Reinsurance Solutions + Aon Wealth Solutions; Aon's "Aon United" cross-sell model + Aon Business Services delivery platform + the 2023-2024 acquisition of NFP (~$13B deal closing 2024) explicitly to push Aon into the middle-market commercial-insurance segment. Pivotal renewal-takeover dynamic β€” Aon + NFP integration creates both opportunity (incumbent-broker service disruption + producer attrition during integration) and threat (NFP roll-up of regional independent agencies removes local-relationship competitors); the middle-market commercial P&C account ($10M-$250M business revenue) is the contested ground where national-broker analytics + scale collide with regional-agency relationship + service responsiveness.ajg.comArthur J. Gallagher & Co NYSE:AJG (CEO J. Patrick Gallagher Jr, Rolling Meadows IL) β€” the #3 global broker + the most acquisitive consolidator in the independent-agency channel ~$11B+ revenue + ~55,000 employees + ~70 countries; Gallagher completes 30-50+ agency acquisitions per year (tuck-in mergers of regional independent commercial-insurance agencies) and the 2024-2025 acquisition of AssuredPartners (~$13.5B) further concentrates the middle-market. Gallagher's "Gallagher Way" sales culture + Gallagher Drive analytics + the producer-validation + book-of-business economics model are the industry reference points for commercial-insurance producer compensation; pivotal renewal-takeover dynamic β€” Gallagher's roll-up means the "independent local agency" a business owner has used for 20 years may now be a Gallagher branch, and the incumbent producer may be a recently-acquired retiring principal whose service has decayed during earn-out β€” a classic takeover opening at renewal.ciab.comCouncil of Insurance Agents & Brokers CIAB (Washington DC) β€” the trade association of the largest commercial-insurance brokers + agencies; the CIAB Commercial Property/Casualty Market Index Survey (quarterly) is the most-cited benchmark for commercial-insurance pricing direction. CIAB Q-by-Q index tracks average commercial P&C premium rate change by line (property, general liability, commercial auto, workers comp, umbrella, cyber, D&O, EPL). Pivotal 2024-2027 market context β€” after the hard market of 2020-2023 (broad rate increases across property + casualty), commercial property remained elevated into 2024-2025 driven by catastrophe losses + reinsurance cost + replacement-cost inflation, while workers compensation continued a long soft streak; commercial auto stayed persistently adverse on social-inflation + nuclear-verdict loss trends. The renewal-takeover producer must read the CIAB index to set accurate renewal expectations and avoid promising rate relief the market cannot deliver.independentagent.comIndependent Insurance Agents & Brokers of America (the Big "I", Alexandria VA) + Applied Systems (Epic agency-management system) + Vertafore (AMS360 + Sagitta agency-management systems) β€” the independent-agency channel infrastructure perimeter. The Big "I" represents ~25,000 independent agency locations; the independent-agency channel writes the majority of US commercial-lines premium. Applied Epic + Vertafore AMS360 are the dominant agency-management systems (policy, client, accounting, and renewal-pipeline systems of record). Pivotal renewal-takeover dynamic β€” the independent agency competes on carrier-market access (an independent agency represents many carriers and can shop the account), local service, and claims advocacy; the captive-agent channel (a single-carrier agent, e.g. a State Farm or Allstate commercial agent) and the direct-to-business digital channel are the structural competitors. The "broker of record" instrument and the renewal date are the two facts that govern when and how an account can legally move.ncci.comNCCI (National Council on Compensation Insurance, Boca Raton FL) β€” the workers-compensation rating + data organization for ~35+ states; NCCI calculates the Experience Modification Rate (the "experience mod" or "e-mod" / "x-mod"), the multiplier applied to a business's workers-compensation manual premium that reflects its actual loss experience versus the expected loss for its class code and size. An experience mod of 1.00 is average; below 1.00 (a "credit mod") earns a discount; above 1.00 (a "debit mod") is a surcharge. Pivotal renewal-takeover dynamic β€” the experience mod is the single most powerful and most-misunderstood number in a commercial-insurance renewal: it is publicly calculable, it lags actual loss experience by roughly a year, and a producer who can read an NCCI mod worksheet, identify reserve-driven mod inflation, and build a claims-advocacy + safety + return-to-work plan to drive the mod down is delivering a quantified, defensible reason to switch brokers that the incumbent never showed the client.ambest.comAM Best (Oldwick NJ) β€” the dominant insurance-carrier financial-strength rating agency; the AM Best Financial Strength Rating (FSR, scale A++ to D) and Issuer Credit Rating measure a carrier's ability to pay claims. Most commercial-insurance buyers, lenders, and contract requirements specify a minimum carrier rating (commonly "A- VII or better"). Pivotal renewal-takeover dynamic β€” carrier financial strength, appetite, and stability are part of the program a broker is responsible for; a renewal-takeover producer demonstrates value by mapping which carriers in their agency's appointment roster have the best appetite, pricing, and claims service for the prospect's specific class of business, and by flagging where the incumbent has placed the account with a carrier that is non-admitted, surplus-lines, or rating-stressed without explaining the trade-off to the client.naic.orgNAIC (National Association of Insurance Commissioners, Kansas City MO) + the 50 state departments of insurance β€” the US insurance-regulation perimeter. Insurance is regulated at the state level; the NAIC coordinates model laws, the surplus-lines framework, producer licensing, and market-conduct standards. Pivotal renewal-takeover dynamic β€” the broker-of-record letter is recognized across state markets as the client's instruction to a carrier that a named agency now represents the account; carriers honor a valid BOR, typically with a short waiting period, and will not allow two agencies to "block" or re-market the same account simultaneously. A renewal-takeover producer must understand the difference between (a) a BOR move on the existing program (no re-marketing, same carrier, new broker) and (b) competing for the account by re-marketing it to new carriers at renewal β€” the two paths have different timelines, different risks of an incumbent "blocking" the markets, and different ethical and disclosure obligations.iii.orgInsurance Information Institute (Triple-I, New York NY) + the broader commercial-insurance loss-trend perimeter β€” Triple-I publishes industry data on catastrophe losses, social inflation, litigation funding, and combined-ratio trends. Pivotal 2024-2027 context for the renewal-takeover producer β€” "social inflation" (rising claim costs driven by litigation funding, broader liability theories, and larger jury awards / "nuclear verdicts" of $10M+) materially elevates commercial auto and general/excess liability loss trends; replacement-cost inflation elevates property values and therefore property premium; the renewal-takeover producer must frame the renewal honestly: a 12-20% property increase may be the market, not the broker's failure, and the producer who explains the macro loss environment, then shows what they will control (program structure, deductible strategy, carrier selection, claims advocacy, loss control), builds more credibility than one who promises to simply "beat the price."vcia.comCaptive insurance + alternative-risk-transfer perimeter β€” the Vermont Captive Insurance Association (Vermont is the largest US captive domicile), the Self-Insurance Institute of America (SIIA), and the group-captive managers (e.g. group captives for middle-market commercial accounts). A captive is an insurance company owned by the business(es) it insures; single-parent captives, group captives, and cell captives let a middle-market business retain underwriting profit and investment income on its own predictable losses rather than paying it to a traditional carrier. Pivotal renewal-takeover dynamic β€” for a profitable, lower-hazard, well-run middle-market account (often $300K+ in annual workers-comp + auto + general-liability premium), a group-captive proposal is a sophisticated, differentiated alternative the incumbent transactional broker likely never raised; presenting a captive feasibility analysis at renewal repositions the conversation from "price of insurance" to "total cost of risk and ownership of your loss dollars."rims.orgRIMS (Risk and Insurance Management Society, New York NY) + the "total cost of risk" (TCOR) framework β€” RIMS is the professional association of corporate risk managers; the RIMS-published TCOR framework defines the true cost of risk as the sum of (1) insurance premiums, (2) retained losses / deductibles / self-insured losses, (3) risk-control and loss-prevention spending, and (4) risk-management administrative cost. Pivotal renewal-takeover dynamic β€” the transactional incumbent broker sells "premium"; the advisory takeover producer sells "total cost of risk." A business with a $400K premium and $250K of uninsured retained losses, claim-handling friction, and an inflated experience mod has a TCOR far above its premium line; the producer who quantifies TCOR, benchmarks it against industry, and presents a multi-year plan to reduce it gives the buyer a CFO-grade, defensible reason to change brokers that has nothing to do with shaving 5% off a quote.ciab.comCommercial-insurance buyer-psychology + the four conversations every renewal-takeover producer avoids: (1) the broker-of-record vs re-market conversation β€” a producer afraid of looking aggressive lets the prospect believe the only way to switch is a painful full re-marketing of every policy, when often the cleaner first step is a BOR on a well-priced existing program plus a forward plan, OR conversely lets the prospect sign a BOR that hands the producer an account they then cannot improve; the honest producer explains both paths and which one actually serves the client. (2) the "your incumbent isn't bad, they're just transactional" conversation β€” most incumbents are not negligent, they are simply order-takers who shop the renewal, email three quotes, and disappear for 51 weeks; the takeover producer must make the case for proactive advisory service without slandering a competitor, which feels risky and so gets skipped. (3) the experience-mod / loss-run conversation β€” many producers never pull and read the prospect's loss runs and NCCI mod worksheet because it is technical work and the answer might be unflattering; yet the loss runs are where the real, quantified, switch-justifying story lives. (4) the "this renewal increase is the market, not me" conversation β€” a producer who over-promises rate relief to win the account inherits a renewal they cannot deliver and loses the account in 12 months; the disciplined producer sets honest market expectations up front. Per CIAB + RIMS + Big "I" producer-development data, these four avoided conversations explain the majority of the gap between top-quartile producers (high close rate, high retention, growing books) and bottom-quartile producers (low close rate, churning books, competing only on price).
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