Increasing Agent Retention: A Leadership-Driven Approach
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Increasing Agent Retention: A Leadership-Driven Approach
February 2025
The life insurance industry’s four-year retention rate is a critical statistic. However, whenever I ask my course participants about this rate, I only see blank faces.
Here’s the industry’s four-year retention rate from my experience working with agency leaders across Asia, covering Singapore, China, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia and the Philippines:
Assuming a company recruited 100 agents four years ago, 70 remain after one year. Thirty percent of the 70, or 21 agents, are still there at the end of the second year. Sixty percent of the 21 agents, about 13, remain at the end of the third year. Finally, by the end of the fourth year, 70 percent of the 13 agents, about 9, are still in force. Thus, the four-year retention rate is 9 percent in this example.
These rates may vary in different markets and organizations, as well as in their districts and agencies. The differences all boil down to one thing: leadership.
Let’s look closely at factors influencing retention rates in each year:
From my personal observation, approximately 80 percent of managers today are “producer managers.” These are producers who became managers after gaining some early sales success. Many lack the necessary skills to recruit effectively, adding team members without considering qualifications.
Most new agents initially sell to their natural markets: close friends and relatives. Once they reach out to them, they often stop prospecting because they have not earned personal introductions to new people. Consequently, if they stop selling, their income also stops. That’s when many agents feel this business is not a good fit for them, leading them to leave. That’s why, of the four-year retention rates, year two is the worst, regardless of the market and company.
Even if agents survive the first two years, some will still leave in the third and fourth years for the following reasons:
While the story may seem like gloom and doom, it does not have to be this way. There’s a way out of the downward spiral.
Agency managers must make a bold decision to transform their agency business. As Sir Richard Branson once said, “If there’s a great opportunity, grab it, and then learn how to do it.”
Managers need to take a day off, free from any interruptions. They need to find a place where they can be alone and truly themselves.
It's time for introspection. If managers could create their dream agency, what would it look like? They should ask questions they dared not ask before:
Managers must move beyond mere survival; it’s time to thrive!
Candidate Profile — Agency managers create a profile that matches the qualities and characteristics they seek in candidates.
Recruiting Source — Next, they determine the best places to find the “raw materials” needed to build their ideal advisors and managers.
The next crucial step is to train effectively. A simple yet effective framework is KASH:
People in our business, regardless of their level, need to be well equipped in KASH. No KASH, No CASH!
Agency leaders must know the development needs of their agents and use high-tech, high-touch support to bolster their success.
A big part of leadership includes being sensitive to the needs of the organization and everyone in it. Rather than risking burnout, a more sensible approach is “Build the systems; the systems will build the business.” This means agency managers need to automate their business processes through systems. Here are some examples:
Assuming the process outlined above is implemented effectively, the agency should be able to attain a four-year retention rate of about 40 percent versus the current 9 percent average. That’s a 400 percent growth.
Access to time-tested, research-based agency management training is essential for cultivating these effective leadership skills and achieving sustained success in the industry.
The best investment one can make is in oneself. When a leader invests in personal growth, the whole organization benefits and grows.
LIMRA and LOMA provides solutions that empower insurers to support and develop top-quality agency managers. A wide range of programs foster professionalism and give leaders the skills essential to building and sustaining productive, high-performing agencies. With over four decades of expertise in global agency development, our industry-experienced master trainers successfully train more than 3,000 advisors and managers annually.
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