RHS 130 - John Fohr on Making Compliance Sexy with TrustLayer
This is one you don't want to miss...
Episode Highlights:
John sits down with Ryan and talks about when he started his business. (9:16)
John shares how they started the accelerator broker tech ventures during the pandemic. (14:01)
John shares more about his company, what they do, and how they operate with their clients. (23:05)
John shares some of the challenges they had to face as a start-up company. (29:10)
John tells us that their company and their clients are not brokers instead they work with brokers. (34:22)
Johns explains that their main goal for the broker is to make them earn more revenue because of their services. (39:41)
John shares that the way brokers adapt is by thinking that the value is for the customer and not just for you. (42:22)
John tells us that we should want to focus on building ground truth to build a proof of coverage. (49:41)
John talks about managing integrations in an efficient way. (54:43)
Key Quotes:
"So for us, like, we're the trust layer, right? We're happy to be that middle layer. And if people don't even know that we exist, that's fine, because we can work on just building infrastructure for the insurance industry." - John Fohr
"We are either revenue-neutral, or we are revenue positive. For the broker, We're trying to help you guys make more revenue." - John Fohr
"Remember, this isn't a value just for you. It's a value for your customer." - John Fohr
Resources Mentioned:
John Fohr LinkedIn
TrustLayer
Reach out to Ryan Hanley
Press play and read along
Transcript
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Speaker 7 In a crude laboratory in the basement of his home.
Speaker 2 Hello everyone and welcome back to the show. Today we have an absolutely tremendous episode for you and it is with John Ford, the CEO of Trust Layer.
Speaker 2 Now you may have heard Trust Layer's name starting to be tossed around.
Speaker 2 Definitely one of the players in the InsureTech space from the value add
Speaker 2 segment, right? The real like value added services segment.
Speaker 2 They're doing compliance, they're doing certificate tracking, all kinds of really good stuff.
Speaker 2 I'm not going to do the platform justice by fully rolling out all the list of features that they do, but what I will say is, John is a great guy.
Speaker 2 This is an awesome, awesome conversation, and I am very excited to expose you guys if you haven't been already to Trust Layer. Now, in full disclosure, I'm not a sponsor, and we don't use them yet.
Speaker 2 It's one of those things that is on our 2022 roadmap as we dive deeper
Speaker 2 into, as we dive deeper into how we're gonna add value to all our small business customers Trust Layer is on that roadmap
Speaker 2 you know
Speaker 2 we're growing and we're young and rogue so just not quite ready to roll trust layer out but I'll tell you completely blown away by this tool I've gotten the demo after talking to John it's just something that I'm like I can see it and I can see the companies or the agencies sorry that take the time to put a tool like trust layer in place
Speaker 2 I can I can see it I can absolutely see where that value is going to come from.
Speaker 2 So, just excited to expose this tool for you, but I just wanted to let you know that I'm not using it, nor are they a sponsor. So, I just so you guys knew kind of where I was coming from.
Speaker 2 I just think John's a good guy. I had heard him speak before and had wanted to have him on, finally got the chance, and happy I did because this is awesome.
Speaker 2 So, that all being said, I want to give a quick, quick shout-out to the sponsors that make this show possible, and that is
Speaker 2 Tarmica. Don't call me Tarmica, Tarmica, Tarmica, is changing the game and the way we quote and compare commercial insurance.
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2022 is the year you take small commercial to the next level. And obviously, we're big in small commercial.
Speaker 2 You know, you know, we got Pathpoint, we got Kodaru, we got Propeller Bonds as sponsors. Tarmic is a big part of that.
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On to John 4. Here we go.
Speaker 8 John.
Speaker 7 Ryan. How are you?
Speaker 8 I'm good.
Speaker 7 What's going on? How's life?
Speaker 8 Just, you know, hey, trying to keep the startup afloat. You know, you know, the game, you know.
Speaker 7 Yeah, strikes and gutters, man. That's
Speaker 8 the startup life. That's, that is the deal.
Speaker 8 That constant tension of someone was, someone asked me a question the other day and I was like, well,
Speaker 8 I kind of feel like I'm in a biplane
Speaker 8
and I'm flying through like the Rocky Mountains. And at certain times, I'm like well above the peaks and life is good.
And other times I feel like I can just
Speaker 7 at any point. Yeah,
Speaker 8
don't know. You're not exactly sure where you are.
You're kind of hoping there's not a big mountain coming, but you just don't know.
Speaker 7 That is
Speaker 7 a very accurate and very, that's a very accurate way of describing
Speaker 7 describing it. How long have you been on your entrepreneurial journey?
Speaker 8 I start, I officially started the agency on March 9th, but I guess
Speaker 8 technically,
Speaker 8 March 9th of 2020, but I guess technically I'd say from from about 30 seconds after I was fired from my last job, which would be October
Speaker 8 6th of 2019.
Speaker 7 Oh man.
Speaker 7 Yeah. So you started, you started in the pandemic.
Speaker 8 I started seven days before it hit New York, before New York State shut down.
Speaker 7 Holy shit. Yeah.
Speaker 8 So we
Speaker 8 so basically from the moment I got fired from my last job, which is a whole story, which I won't go into, but,
Speaker 8
you know, 8.36 a.m. on a Monday, I think I'm walking.
I was, you probably don't, I was a CEO of a fitness frame.
Speaker 8 I left the insurance industry basically because I had a family member who was sick and I couldn't travel anymore.
Speaker 8
And at the time, I was a CMO for Bold Penguin and that required me to be on the road every single week. So I had this family member get sick.
I had to be home.
Speaker 8 My wife, you know, basically said, I need you home. We got little kids, whatever.
Speaker 8
They would not allow me to continue my current position and not travel. There just wasn't, it wasn't part of the job.
So I'm kind of separated from them, which whatever.
Speaker 8 And there's just not a lot of insurance work in the insurance
Speaker 8 in the Albany area. I live in upstate New York.
Speaker 8 And
Speaker 8 at the time, you know, now I could have found. I think a great position post-COVID, but pre-COVID, you know, everyone was still, you got to be able to show up.
Speaker 7 Here, you got to be here. You got to be here.
Speaker 8 So
Speaker 8 I've tried, the net, I tried to figure out like what's the next best thing I could find. And I like to work out a lot.
Speaker 8
And this gym that I've been working out at, the founder came to me and said, hey, we've kind of stagnated a little bit. We're stuck at 2,000 members.
They had six locations.
Speaker 8 They're like, we really want to grow, but I'm a gym guy, not a business guy. So he actually brought me in as the CEO, which was great.
Speaker 7 Oh, really?
Speaker 8 Yeah, it was great. You know, I loved it.
Speaker 8 You know, he kind of kept working on the routines and the gym stuff. And I grew the business and we grew, I doubled the size of the business in nine months, and which was awesome.
Speaker 8 And at that point, he realized the business was profitable again and growing, didn't need me and showed up at 8:30 in the morning to a, I'm in like Lou Lemon workout clothes.
Speaker 8 Cause as a CEO of a fitness, I mean, now everyone's in jail clothes, but you know, right, back in 2018, being able to wake up every day and put like sweats on to go to work was pretty cool. And
Speaker 7 was, was this like a box?
Speaker 8
Was this like a yeah, so it was a really, it was actually a pretty cool concept. It was this, uh, it was strength-based metabolic training.
So you were doing strength-based exercise at a pace.
Speaker 8 So you were constantly, you were out of breath and getting that cardiovascular workout that was, that you really need, but you were doing strength-based exercises. And man, it was, it was changing.
Speaker 8 I was really bought in.
Speaker 8 I'd seen some people have ridiculous transformations and just overall people being happy and healthy. It was great.
Speaker 8
But yeah, I'm sitting there there in my sweats, 8.30 a.m. meeting.
We have every Monday, just kind of like state of the union. And he showed up in a suit with his attorney.
I knew something was wrong.
Speaker 7 That's not good. Yeah.
Speaker 8 So it was basically from that moment, I figured the universe was telling me it's time to start your own thing. So I did.
Speaker 7
Cool, man. Wow.
That's incredible. And then.
Speaker 7
And then you launched in the middle of the pandemic. We launched as well.
Yeah.
Speaker 8
Yeah. No, I know.
I think you launched February or was it April?
Speaker 7 No. well, technically, we launched like we started the year before, but when we
Speaker 7 into the pandemic, we had,
Speaker 7 I think we had four people
Speaker 7
that were full-time. Yeah.
And I think we just hit 50 yesterday. It's awesome.
So like, we like that, you know, when it was four people,
Speaker 7 including my co-founder, who's awesome. Yeah.
Speaker 7 Like
Speaker 7 you're constantly, like you know what everyone's doing like it's it's you're working like hand in glove right
Speaker 7 uh and i don't know about you but like once we hit like
Speaker 7 once we hit like 15 20 people things are like i don't especially in a remote environment right yeah
Speaker 7 like i don't actually know what's happening to some of these teams anymore like it's like you're not you're not able to check in with everyone every day and uh or like you know in the same way you were before it was a tiny team uh and again everyone's remote, right?
Speaker 7 And so,
Speaker 7 you know, just like a lot of the, like a lot of the challenges, like a lot of the startups that really grew during the pandemic.
Speaker 7 But
Speaker 7 yeah, it was a hell of a time.
Speaker 8 Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 8 To me, what the,
Speaker 8 I think the, the,
Speaker 8 the pandemic,
Speaker 8 what it,
Speaker 8 it was kind of a proving ground for leadership. I don't necessarily know.
Speaker 8 I think, I think in general, um, I think most people, most white collar jobs basically stayed the same right you just work from home most companies i mean that's a broad stroke but i think for the most part if you were a salesperson you were still selling maybe a little different but you were selling i saw the pandemic as a real proving ground for leadership like i think that there were a lot of lazy leaders that out in the marketplace who when you're seeing people every day when you can walk the floor it's really easy to kind of keep that level of control and and and uh you know kind of
Speaker 8 thumb on what's going on.
Speaker 8 And when the pandemic hit, and now all of a sudden, you're in a remote environment. You're not exactly sure what everyone's doing every minute of the day.
Speaker 8 Your success is based really on
Speaker 8 process, culture,
Speaker 8 having the right people. You know, if this were EOS, kind of like right butt, right seat.
Speaker 8 It's a much,
Speaker 8 to me, it's a to be successful today, you need a much more thoughtful, engaged leadership than you did pre-pandemic and
Speaker 8 um
Speaker 7 i you know i could be completely wrong but that has been my take no of course you do yeah i'm sure there's a lot of crappy like middle managers out there that are like terrified that like yeah they're they're like their teams could like don't need them anymore and we're like they're like yeah just with like some good structure you can now like manage a bigger team or
Speaker 7 the team can work remote um and they don't need you like butting their
Speaker 7 like butting your head in their office every like 30 minutes just to make it seem like you're busy.
Speaker 7 Yeah, I know a lot of times like I'll go to like, when we run into like hiccups or we're running to, you know, we run into challenges like every startup, it's like, that's just like a reminding, like I just remind myself, I remind the team that like there are a lot of companies that were like, like the last couple, like the last year and a half was like a huge like road bump for a lot of companies, for every company, really.
Speaker 7 But like the vast majority of those companies existed before the pandemic.
Speaker 7 To actually have it, you know, to
Speaker 7 there are very few companies that have grown up entirely during the pandemic, especially dealing with all the like complexities.
Speaker 7 Because if you were a salesperson before, like, and you're a customer success person or whatever, like before,
Speaker 7
your job was, to your point, pretty similar. Like during that, it's just like, well, it's like the office, I do it at home.
And like, there are some changes.
Speaker 7
I mean, I travel as much, more Zoom, but whatever. But like, more or less, like, you were trained, like the training, the infrastructure you had, everything was like kind of this, can be similar.
Yep.
Speaker 7 But if everything grew up like,
Speaker 7 like from scratch during the prop during the pandemic, it's like, we didn't have any of that momentum going into this thing. It was like completely starting from,
Speaker 7
just starting from scratch. Yep.
Like, uh, really.
Speaker 8 And it's almost like a double scratch.
Speaker 8 I've described it to people as like a double scratch environment where you not only had the fact that you didn't have the momentum, as you said, you also were starting during a time when no one wanted to pick up the phone and everyone had all these personal, emotional, and psychological stresses outside of work that they were dealing with.
Speaker 8 Now you're trying to build partnerships and connections and hire.
Speaker 7 I will say, though,
Speaker 7 I'm going to disagree with you a little bit on that because I will say, I feel like some people were more willing to pick up the phone. So we did this, and this is just coincidental.
Speaker 7
So we did this accelerator, Broker Tech Ventures. These guys, I just realized they're wearing their shirt.
Uh, these guys are awesome.
Speaker 7 Uh, and so we went through the pandemic, uh, did we did the accelerator, it was supposed to be um in person, and these guys like pivoted on a dime, made it made it on virtual. Uh,
Speaker 7 and uh, it was run by these guys.
Speaker 7 Um, and there's like 14 brokers that got together, and then they somehow couldn't like M3 and Holmes Murphy and a few others like got together and convinced all these like competitors functionally to like work together.
Speaker 7 And uh, they did this really good thing, but we were able able to meet with
Speaker 7 the people whose names are on the side of the building in a lot of cases because the CEOs weren't moving or weren't traveling.
Speaker 7
And so, so in that way, we would have never had as much FaceTime. Grant wasn't real FaceTime.
It was like virtual FaceTime, right?
Speaker 7 But it was still way better to actually build direct relationships with, you know,
Speaker 7 10 plus C-level
Speaker 7 people at
Speaker 7 some of the most innovative brokerages in the country.
Speaker 7 So I thought that part was pretty slick.
Speaker 7 But
Speaker 7 all that said, it's also nice to go to get back on the road a little bit. Did you go to InsurTech Connect?
Speaker 8 I didn't. I would like to go next year.
Speaker 8 We just, we've been in a, we've been hiring like crazy
Speaker 8
for us for where we're at. We're kind of in a growth phase I didn't want to be away from.
And I've been to InsurTech Connect before, and I think they do a tremendous job.
Speaker 8
I also know that it can, if mismanaged, be a tremendous boondoggle. And 100%, I was not prepared to navigate that.
I just, I wanted to keep my head in the game. So I skipped that.
Speaker 8
I skipped a couple broker events to IAOA. Again, not that I didn't want to be there.
You just, I don't know, you kind of have to pick,
Speaker 8 you know, right now where we're at.
Speaker 8 you know, I kind of have to be around.
Speaker 7 And
Speaker 7 it just trust me, man. I get it.
Speaker 8 Yeah. So I didn't.
Speaker 8 You always have that FOMO, though, because I love, you know, this is
Speaker 7 100%. I just thought it was interesting from like, it was like the first time where I was like actually around people again
Speaker 7 at scale. And
Speaker 7 it was just, it's funny how like, how quickly people like swing back into it. Hey, what's what's behind you? What's that new?
Speaker 7 Yeah.
Speaker 8 Declaration of Independence.
Speaker 7
No, get out of here. So you're the, you're the guy who bought it from those crypto guys.
Yes.
Speaker 8 That's true.
Speaker 8 yep that is that's because there's a lot of uh bitcoin and eth invested in that right now yeah um no i've had that uh the declaration of independence up in every i've had the declaration and
Speaker 8 um the american flag not always that particular one although a version of the american flag in every office that i've ever worked in since 2006.
Speaker 8 So it just kind of travels with me wherever I go.
Speaker 8 Kind of reminds me of, you know, the, that you have to sometimes you got to do crazy shit uh in order to get things done you know if
Speaker 8 so uh so yeah it's just a good reminder so how are you spending your time right now what do you what like what's like the the biggest like pain points you're dealing with yeah so our just selling insurance really is is what it is you know we we
Speaker 8 um
Speaker 8 So we started, I launched this to be a digitized middle market brokerage.
Speaker 8 And, you know, unlike many of the CEOs that fortunately you were able to talk to, none of the CEOs that I was trying to prospect, you know, in March of 2020 were picking up the phone.
Speaker 7 Well, I think, you know,
Speaker 7 that's a very good point.
Speaker 7
We were engaging brokers then. And to your point, I bet the CEOs, like the reason they were available.
was because their customers probably weren't were not picking up the phone in the same way.
Speaker 8
Yeah, yeah. No, and you know, I completely get what you're saying.
So it was, so for, for that that particular, for trying to prospect middle market from scratch, it was, there was, there was nothing.
Speaker 8
I mean, literally voicemails that said, hey, we have no idea when we're going to be back. Right.
So that lasted,
Speaker 8 well, it for the first three months that Rogue existed, I didn't sell one policy. I had invested all my own money.
Speaker 8 I had bootstrapped the agency on purpose because I didn't want to do a raise until I had hit a place that I actually had something to raise against. Since, you know, we're not like a high tech play.
Speaker 8 All the VCs don't, they don't really get turned on by that. So
Speaker 8 I had to pivot. And that pivot was from middle market into small business.
Speaker 8 Cause while middle market businesses had oftentimes had the bank role and whatever, you know, kind of accounts receivable out far enough that they could weather this storm.
Speaker 8 Small business had to keep operating and they had to be around and as much as they could, depending geographically on where they were located.
Speaker 8 So we pivoted into small business and built a fairly substantial inbound engine for small business, which is what we see today, which is cool.
Speaker 8 The next phase of our business is coming, is swinging back around to
Speaker 8 making that middle market
Speaker 8 kind of vertical based digital agency
Speaker 8 realized. So now essentially,
Speaker 8 again, I think you could either let the pandemic beat you or you can beat the pandemic.
Speaker 8 What it was allowed, what it allowed us to do or what it forced us to do was basically build this really cool base layer of income and prospects, right?
Speaker 8 So we have 250 to 300 inbound small businesses calling us, you know, contacting us, calling us, whatever, every month.
Speaker 8
And that kind of acts as the base layer for our business. And now what, and we've gotten very good process driven at kind of working them through.
And that's awesome.
Speaker 8 And the next phase is now starting to build out the middle market verticals that attack that next tier up, kind of sitting below where like a brown and brown or a Gallagher would play, but above
Speaker 8 kind of your standard local personalized focused independent agency. So we call that rogue premiere like 25,000 to 250,000.
Speaker 8
And building out that is where we're at right now. So it's.
you know, it's a different sales process. There's a little more outbound.
You have to get a certain type of producer who can do that.
Speaker 8
There's a certain type of person who can do outbound and work, work that. So there's some hiring things and, you know, all the stuff.
I mean, we're doing very good.
Speaker 8 Just it's kind of classic,
Speaker 8 classic issues of we're in a scaled process.
Speaker 7 Yeah. How did you end up at
Speaker 7 Bold Penguin? I must have been a rocket show.
Speaker 8
Yeah. So I had known Ilya for, geez, three years.
I knew Mark for four years.
Speaker 8 You know, we I had known them when Bull Penguin didn't even exist, when Mark was still running whatever the company was before that.
Speaker 8 And
Speaker 8 it just,
Speaker 8 you know, I had been at trustedchoice.com. I don't know if you're familiar with them.
Speaker 8 And I built Agency Nation, which is a digital media platform for them.
Speaker 8 And
Speaker 8 I didn't, I didn't work really well inside of national association politics. I'm not a real good
Speaker 8 politician, I found. I don't think that I would make it on the national political
Speaker 8 political scene. So I kind of, I kind of, after four years, I kind of worn out my welcome
Speaker 8 with the national big eye, and it was time to move on. And they were looking for a CMO, and it seemed like a good fit.
Speaker 8 How much of that did you get? Yeah, how much of that did you get?
Speaker 7
No, I think I got most of it. Okay, cool.
Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 8
So, dude, I'm uh, tell me, tell me a little bit about Trust Layer. I mean, I've heard a lot.
I've heard, uh, you know, I've seen a lot of the press. Yeah, I've seen the press releases.
Speaker 8 I follow, you know, I follow along. I've heard some people.
Speaker 8 I know, I think you talked to a buddy of mine, David Carruthers, the other day, or at least maybe, maybe you talked to him, somebody that I know who is saying some good stuff so you know i'm that's awesome yeah you know
Speaker 8 we've spent the first 20 minutes here kind of bullshitting uh in general which is great but i'd love to um let everyone kind of listening in at home just to get a better feel for for what you guys are up to i'm you know and
Speaker 8 what problem you're solving yeah so uh
Speaker 7 again like i'm john uh i'm one of the two co-founders of a company called trust lair uh and so the the pain point we're trying to solve is that right when two companies are working together, there could be a fair amount of friction.
Speaker 7 It could be like identity information. You got to do like, I don't know, KYC stuff.
Speaker 7 You might have to track licenses. You've got a plumber coming on like onto the job side, or you've got like,
Speaker 7 like,
Speaker 7 like for if you're a broker, you need to have ENO coverage or whatever like.
Speaker 7 type of license stuff uh or excuse me you have to have like you have to be licensed um you also need to track insurance so that plumber that's going to go onto a job site you have to validate that they actually have insurance uh if you're a bank and you have borrowers you need to track that those guys whether it's like auto loans mortgages like
Speaker 7 every piece of equipment in the global equipment leasing industry like time and time again companies have to like track and validate this and it's like all done through paper and so companies don't want to deal with this companies are like i want to focus on my actual business i don't want to focus on like tracking insurance of my subcontractors or my vendors or my suppliers or my tenants.
Speaker 7 I just want to like focus on like the actual business.
Speaker 7 And so we have a tool that automates that whole process with like the collection and like we use some fancy OCR and AI tools to be able to extract data from it and really have like a like automated robotic process, what's called robotic process automation RPA to just simply like automate that workflow.
Speaker 7 But instead of me pushing around hundreds of millions of pieces of paper, I'd much rather actually solve this pain point because when you get this proof of coverage, you don't actually know if the information is authentic.
Speaker 7 Like think unfortunately for our first customer, but good for this story.
Speaker 7 We learned that our first customer out of his 40 vendors,
Speaker 7 one of his vendors was just committing insurance fraud, just straight up like lying about coverage.
Speaker 7 And unfortunately for our customer, there was a big problem and our customer, you know, like before they came to us like they had to write a big check.
Speaker 7 And so if we could create a way to have a digital proof of coverage, that would be game-changing because now you actually could allow for real ground truth, not just within the insurance industry, but within like the construction industry, right?
Speaker 7 Within like the property management industry, with banking.
Speaker 7 And so you could actually validate this information in a more real-time basis. And then you
Speaker 7 as their broker
Speaker 7 can
Speaker 7 one, like provide like additional consulting services to them if you want or really be like kind of assist with the this like risk management piece if you want.
Speaker 7 And the nice thing is the robots do the vast majority of the work.
Speaker 7 So you can actually focus on the complex things rather than like the admin pushing papers around, which again, no one really wants to do, especially you as a broker
Speaker 7 don't want to do because you want to be bringing in new customers and you want to help us, you want to retain your customers and provide like a really good service to them.
Speaker 7 And so that's what we're up to. It's a pretty big challenge.
Speaker 7 The platform that's in market today, like I said, automates all the paper-based workflows.
Speaker 7 And then we've got a number of pilots and this digital proof of coverage is a very ambitious thing.
Speaker 7 But thankfully, we don't have to do it alone.
Speaker 7 So we're working with a number of really large carriers and brokers.
Speaker 7 And actually, in the last funding round, as of now, I think we have 24 of the top 100 brokers that actually invested in Trust Layer, as well as a handful of carriers.
Speaker 7 So they've actually invested in Trust Layer.
Speaker 7 So now we have like real buy-in from the industry because tracking coverage or like just proof of coverage is just been a big pain in the ass for everyone in this space for too long.
Speaker 7 And it's exciting to have like the industry get behind you
Speaker 7 and say, we think you are the ones that are going to be able to solve this.
Speaker 8 Yeah, that's tremendous.
Speaker 8 I've seen a bunch of like cert tools and different stuff like that. And I think it's, it's interesting to me, but
Speaker 8 the digital proof of coverage that you're discussing is a, is a much,
Speaker 8 it's a much more dynamic and sustainable way to do it. And, you know, that to me, you know, so our,
Speaker 8 the concept behind our agency. to give you some context to this is
Speaker 8 a term we call human optimized. What that means is, you know,
Speaker 8 through all the work that I've done in my career, 16 years in the industry now, I've probably had 50,000 conversations with everyone from, you know, single person startup, local agencies in Western Iowa to the 42nd floor of travelers and Hartford and all these guys.
Speaker 8 And, you know, what I did, you know, in launching Rogue was kind of take a derivation of what worked and what didn't in all those places and where I saw it go.
Speaker 8 And essentially, what you just described is, is in essence, what we call human optimized, which is
Speaker 8 give your people more time to be what they really are, which is value providers and less time being transactors of nonsensical zero value add activities.
Speaker 8 And the more of these zero value add activities that you can remove from your people's day or the reduction in time that you can put, what that, what, you know, what I think happens, what unfortunately, a lot of independent agents look at that as, oh my God, I'm losing my value.
Speaker 8 This is my value.
Speaker 8 And the way we look at it as all we're going to be able to do is touch more customers, spend more time with each customer, and build deeper connections and relationships with our customers, which is ultimately where more revenue comes from.
Speaker 8 So I absolutely, positively love this concept.
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Speaker 7 there's you know i think i will say we went and we came out of we came out of san francisco and we i think we when i was first i came at this not from the insurance side but from like i felt the pain so we were investing in a handful of real estate projects and I would see some of these real estate construction projects get delayed.
Speaker 7 And I would say,
Speaker 7 why did the plumber not start today? And they're like, well, the plumber couldn't get access to the job site because he didn't have the right insurance.
Speaker 7
And you're like, okay, like, well, he can't simply prove that he has insurance. And then it's like, well, don't worry, it'll come yesterday.
It'll come tomorrow or the next day.
Speaker 7 Well, it's all a day delay.
Speaker 7 Well, the problem is like, if the plumber can't come today and the carpenter's coming tomorrow, he can't like put drywall up if the pipes aren't in the walls today so and the carpenter might not be able to come back for like a week from now so you have these like cascading delays that are just bananas that like this is happening that like
Speaker 7 2022 for god's sakes and like we can't people are paying for their insurance and they're unable to easily share it with someone else that they like that they want to control the data and they can't easily share like that's crazy and as a result, it would cause like a lot more cascading delays.
Speaker 7 So,
Speaker 7 you know, from as a broker's perspective, they don't want to focus on like admin. They want to focus on like the complex tasks where they're really creating value.
Speaker 7 Well, it's the same thing for that plumber. It's the same thing for like every other company that
Speaker 7 has to buy insurance, that uses insurance on a day-to-day.
Speaker 7 And pretty much, I mean, every one of your customers.
Speaker 8 So, like, that
Speaker 7 I want to avoid. I will say, when we first started on this journey, and I was like, oh, like, all right, well, we'll solve that pain point.
Speaker 7 And then I think like every insured tech, you go through this like brief moment where you're like,
Speaker 7 the broker does what?
Speaker 7
Like, that seems so manual. Like, we can totally automate that.
And then once you learn like a monochrome, just like this,
Speaker 7 once you like actually realize what a broker does and the complexity and all of the stuff that a broker has to deal with, you're like, holy cow, like there's no way that like we're going to be able to automate the broker.
Speaker 7 You need a super smart, switched on professional who knows what the heck they're doing.
Speaker 7 We just want to like automate all the crap away and allow for like ground truth for proof of coverage, but like then let the broker be just focused on the complex task and as well as let the plumber focus on the complex tasks that they have to focus on or like whomever the bank focus on their their thing um yeah so that's that's what we're working on thankfully we got uh
Speaker 7 really good feedback also from like like i was saying before like the the industry so like the industry was able to buy you know really buy into this um early on and and and uh
Speaker 8 and and we wouldn't be able to do it without the support from our broker partners and so yeah that that's it's a good time you know that that is the thing that crushes so many um insurance technology startups that hit our space is they come in, they have what is a beautiful vision, and then they realize that every single carrier does business differently.
Speaker 8 Every single agency does business differently, every single agency management system captures data and pushes data differently.
Speaker 8 There's this wacky thing called download, which uses AL3 technology from 1979 and controlled by a monopolistic
Speaker 8 oligarch who
Speaker 8 plays favorites openly.
Speaker 8 You know what I mean? It's like this wacky, wacky system. And you're like, Yeah, this is this is the undercurrent of our entire economy, right?
Speaker 8 So, if you, if it wasn't for insurance, Empire State Building doesn't stand, New York City doesn't exist, right?
Speaker 8 Like, these, these entire, it is the underpinning of the entire economy, yet it is still operated essentially by horse and buggy. And it's
Speaker 8 and done fairly well, which is the crazy part, right? Like, things happen, buildings do get built, new businesses do start, buyers are financially recouped. And that is like the hardest thing.
Speaker 8 How do you manage this is obvious,
Speaker 8 I don't want to say broken, but it obviously is in need of drastic innovation with
Speaker 8 it, is also currently incredibly financially successful. So how do you make that business case of,
Speaker 8 yes, your job is tough. And yes, you probably have more people doing things
Speaker 8 that they shouldn't be doing from all these manual processes, but at the same time, you're basically printing cash.
Speaker 8 So I can't really tell you, you know, it's hard for me to tell you, you're going to make X more if you use this process. That is like the weird
Speaker 8 tightrope that you have to walk to get to a place where you really are implemented.
Speaker 7 And it sounds like you're on the right path, but it is a very easy to do. Well, also, there's a clear difference for us.
Speaker 7
We're an insure tech, but our customers aren't insure tech, excuse me, aren't um aren't brokers. Like we work with brokers, yeah.
But like we think about the customer as the end user of the platform.
Speaker 7 So that's the home builder, that's the that's the that's the property manager, that's the financial institution, that's the franchise that has to like track his franchise or franchisees.
Speaker 7 Like, so that's the, that's the, um,
Speaker 7 uh,
Speaker 7 that's the end, the end customer for us. The brokers and the carriers,
Speaker 7 we want to make them money
Speaker 7 so we've somewhat flipped this on the on its head we're like we want to be a profit center for them uh we're not talking about just saving costs for them we want to we want to make revenue for them uh and which is what which is what we're doing uh with all of our broker partners uh
Speaker 7 then at the same time uh what's challenging when you have like a multi-party workflow We have different stakeholders, right?
Speaker 7 Carriers, brokers, requesters, like your certificate holders, and then like, end insureds. Every one of those parties has like their own objectives.
Speaker 7
It's not the same. So when we first launched, for example, we brought in a bunch of home builders.
They're like, this is great. Like you can, I've got like 50 subcontractors.
Speaker 7 I've got five different subdivisions. Like
Speaker 7
this is a nightmare for me to like track. I'm getting audited every year.
Like what a pain in the ass.
Speaker 7 But is, and so they like, they liked it, but initially they, they then said, if you're already going to reach out to my subs and ask them for information, can you get the W-9?
Speaker 7 I really need that article of corporation, passports, driver's license. And it became COVID forms, OSHA documents, surety bonds.
Speaker 7 So now we can handle any of these additional documents and workflows as well, because it's important that we provide value for carriers, brokers,
Speaker 7 like risk managers or like certificate holders or like what I call them requesters. as well as that like individual plumber.
Speaker 7 And so if you have to make sure that you can add value to each one or else I don't want to use like the platform.
Speaker 7
It needs to be super streamlined. They're already working inside.
I don't know. Let's say, for example, construction companies might work inside Procore
Speaker 7 or you're already inside QuickBooks or what have you.
Speaker 7 And so that's why we want to make sure that we have the best integration possible with Procore, where you can actually have as much of your process work within
Speaker 7 Procore. You're already in QuickBooks, like a seamless relationship with QuickBooks, where like you can stay in the platform as long as possible and you only need to bounce out
Speaker 7 occasionally like when setting up the you're in with setting up trust layer.
Speaker 7 But people don't want to do like con, they don't have context switching with all the different tools that are out there. So really making sure we meet the user where they are is is vital.
Speaker 7
And I think that's another thing. Like a lot of people don't do it.
They like they try to like
Speaker 7 think that
Speaker 7 they're like everyone's going to come to them and they're going to be like the epicenter of everything. And so for us, like
Speaker 7 we're trust layer, right? It's, it's just a layer where we would love to, we're happy to be that middle layer.
Speaker 7 And if people don't even know that we exist, that's fine because we can work on the just building infrastructure for the insurance industry. Yeah.
Speaker 8 So what is the uh talk me through the broker use case? Like if I were oh, yeah, if I were going to use trust layer as a, as a, as a broker, um, and I was going to, like,
Speaker 8 what am I doing? Am I getting my clients to sign up for it? Like, how do I use it? What am I, what am I doing?
Speaker 7 Think about it like you're
Speaker 7
the same way an accountant might use QuickBooks. So I never, we didn't actually pay for QuickBooks originally.
I signed up for a bookkeeper. I found a bookkeeper and she was like, okay, well,
Speaker 7 we'll put you on QuickBooks.
Speaker 7 So I just paid her and then she pays for QuickBooks.
Speaker 7 And she also charges a whole bunch of additional
Speaker 7 money for providing services for us uh and so and that's the same way a lot of brokers are using trustlayer where they will offer trust layer to their customers
Speaker 7 and it's a substantially discounted uh for insurance brokers and then they will have insight into what trust layer is or excuse me the the workflow of their customer tracking all of their subs or suppliers or whoever, whoever they're rideshare drivers, whoever they're working with.
Speaker 7 Gotcha.
Speaker 7
But now like you have clarity into what your customer is doing. So now you have a much like deeper relationship with them.
It's a super sticky relationship also.
Speaker 7 And so
Speaker 7 at the same time, like you also get a whole bunch of leads too, because like you just imagine that home builder that has that sub that has to get access to the job site today.
Speaker 7 Like he would love for you to reach out to that subcontractor and like fix the glitch.
Speaker 7 And so, and so we see that a lot of a lot of our brokers that one, they can make additional revenue and they can get a better relationship with their customer and make it stickier.
Speaker 7 But two, they can get a whole bunch of leads generated for them.
Speaker 7 Yeah.
Speaker 8 That's.
Speaker 7
Anyway, so that's that's how that's how they're used. It's super flexible.
We are either revenue neutral or we are revenue positive for the broker.
Speaker 7 We're trying to help you guys.
Speaker 8 make more revenue and then we'll we take a percentage of that but like that's it yeah yeah the um the the cool part you know this this is one of the the aspects of where i think we have to go as as an industry i think some people will listen to this and you know like you said you
Speaker 8 no one wants to bounce in and out of a million systems right right now that is the life of an independent agent or broker
Speaker 8 right yeah it's there is literally no singular system that you can use that will allow you to do most of the stuff that you even want to do and i don't want to go down the hate spiral of
Speaker 8 our technologists, our legacy technologists in this industry. But,
Speaker 8 you know, that being said,
Speaker 8 if it's a low touch system that allows you to add additional value to your customers, then it's well worth it. Like we use.
Speaker 8 A similar concept would be
Speaker 8 the
Speaker 8
client portal that Zywave has. So we use Zywave's client portal to offer HR solutions.
They have all kinds of safety training, safety manual creations.
Speaker 8 If you need to get one of those posters up in your, you can go in and do kind of like a
Speaker 8 Mad Libs version of that poster, then print it out and hang it in your office. And there's all kinds of cool,
Speaker 8 there's all kinds of cool stuff. The struggle that we have,
Speaker 8 and this is kind of where the question comes from, the struggle that we have is it's another system that our clients have to log in and out of. So
Speaker 8 how are you training brokers? How are you recommending brokers get that adoption from their customers? Because everything you've described seems like a home run to me.
Speaker 8 And I can, I literally wrote down,
Speaker 8 reach out to Trust Layer to get a demo as we were talking here.
Speaker 8 So that's a good thing. 37 minutes in, you sold me.
Speaker 7 But we talked about bullshit for the first like 30 minutes. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 8 So it only took you like 16 minutes.
Speaker 7 Yeah.
Speaker 8 So, no, which is perfect, which is great.
Speaker 8 But I guess my point is like, okay, so I can see it. I'm bought in, but I got a lot of tools that people use or don't use.
Speaker 8 How are you seeing brokers get that adoption that really is meaningful and
Speaker 8 adds the value that you're discussing?
Speaker 7
Well, remember, like, this isn't value just for you. It's value for your customer.
Yeah. So your customer has to deal deal with this.
Speaker 7 So when you're going up for renewal also, and one thing I think brokers kind of get this sense of like when you're going up for renewal, you're going to market and you're trying to put your customer in the best light, especially in a hard market, right?
Speaker 7 Trosslayer is one of those tools that we can easily position your customer so that when you're talking to carriers, that like this is not just a run-of-the-mill customer.
Speaker 7 This is a customer that's actually taking like a proactive stance with their risk transfer.
Speaker 7 And so in that way, like it's just, it's a value add, it's because it's further value add.
Speaker 7 We don't need the broker to do a lot of work. Like most, I would say, I would say the majority of our brokers, like they bring on the customer,
Speaker 7 they're there if their customer has a problem, but it's not just
Speaker 7 like they're not, they're not really offering, they're not really doing that much.
Speaker 7 Because one, it's just like
Speaker 7 a lot of the admins like automated.
Speaker 7 And then
Speaker 7 their customers kind of handling some of the things. But again, like the
Speaker 7
can automate a lot of it. But the broker is there if their customer has a problem.
And so for that, it's like a really slick, like, I don't know, like this guy doesn't have the right coverage.
Speaker 7 Should I waive this requirement?
Speaker 7 I got a broken pipe, right? Like, do I really care if the guy's got workers comp? Like, how big, like, what, what is my liability risk here?
Speaker 7 And so.
Speaker 7 That's that's something where like the broker can hop in, provide like value add,
Speaker 7 and then like pop out where they don't have to do any sort of like admin or pushing papers around.
Speaker 7 Yeah, cool.
Speaker 7 The other challenge is like, those are all tools that are like
Speaker 7 nothing against any of the other insure text, but like, those are all tools that are insurance focused.
Speaker 7 Your customer is not focused just on insurance.
Speaker 7 Insurance is one of the 10 things that they got to deal with today that's, that's, you know, making them get like loser hair. Like, they want something that that can do things other than insurance.
Speaker 7 And so that's where, like, even something as small as like tracking W-9s or like doing surety bonds or like all this other kind of stuff. Like we have one customer that's coming on.
Speaker 7 They've got 30,000 vendors they work with, and they need all 30,000 vendors to like sign some document and to prove they haven't coverage. Where it's like, okay, great.
Speaker 7 Now, like, in our platform, you can just like
Speaker 7 upload it and get 30,000.
Speaker 7 and that has nothing to do with insurance by the way uh and so if you don't provide value beyond just that you're you may be focused on insurance the carrier's focus on insurance that home builder that franchisor is not just focused on insurance yeah
Speaker 8 it's funny um
Speaker 7 and they run into the same thing too we've got to bounce around all this stuff so that's why like the open api structures like the integrations with all these different platforms is really key
Speaker 8 yeah this this is going to sound, this may sound out of left field or whatever, but yesterday I was talking to a buddy of mine and we are convinced that
Speaker 8 the blockchain technology will have a major impact on our industry, but just way longer than we would probably, than it will in other industries in this industry.
Speaker 8 But we were doing some brainstorming over
Speaker 8 mostly because we're nerdy losers who just think about insurance all the time, but we're brainstorming over like, where do we think,
Speaker 8 where do we think a blockchain could, and or the technology, right?
Speaker 8 I'm broad stroking the tech, but but where do we think that type of technology um could drastically improve efficiencies in our industry?
Speaker 8 And one of the places that that we kind of thought of was COIs, right? Like, yeah, like to your point, why in the world do does
Speaker 8 a vendor have to request a CI from a contractor who then sends a request to us?
Speaker 8 Then, unless it's perfectly aligned with his current coverage, we then have to send a request to the carrier, wait for the carrier to approve, deny, change, endorse, whatever, then come back, make sure it matches what the customer actually needs, then produce a CY who we give to the contractor, who then gives that.
Speaker 8 to the vendor, right? So that's like the standard process that you, you know, you kind of have.
Speaker 7 Oh my God.
Speaker 8 Is it just, it's just, it's it's almost laughable just listening to yay that's right so so we what we were what we're brainstorming is imagine if there was just a place that held in real time at all times the current situation right in force not in force
Speaker 8 you know
Speaker 8 coverage level you know whatever like but just that block help holds that at all time and people can just ping that block to say this is my insurance block right This is this block is ABC contracting.
Speaker 8
And if we need to make changes to this, we have a mechanism to do that. And that block gets changed.
But ultimately, this block is ABC construction. And what's in this block is
Speaker 8
proof. And we don't need to have 16 emails and 47 PDFs to get it.
It's what's in this block. And, you know, and there's so many things inside our industry that,
Speaker 8 again, whether it's blockchain or whatever, but that concept of how is there not at this point
Speaker 8 databases that are anonymized, they need to be whatever.
Speaker 8 Maybe Chubb doesn't want Hartford knowing that they're the one on this policy or whatever, but the contractor doesn't care, and nor does the vendor.
Speaker 8 The vendor just wants a green check mark or a red X, right?
Speaker 7 Is it, are we good or are we not good?
Speaker 8 And that, you know, to a certain extent, that's kind of what I hear you describing: is this that kind of green check mark, red X type system where, you know, based on what's in there,
Speaker 8
your customer can ping their sub and go, is it a green check or a red X? And if it's a green check, rock and roll. Let's go to town.
If it's not, you know, then we need to solve this problem.
Speaker 8 And these are those types of,
Speaker 8 so
Speaker 8 because we're fully digital,
Speaker 8 I track,
Speaker 8 not in a draconian or micromanaging way, but I do track the time spent very closely on different tasks. And to me,
Speaker 8 understanding
Speaker 8 the time cost of certain tasks and working to either reduce the cost or just remove that cost is a huge win, even if it's small, because as you scale, those small increments add up.
Speaker 8 And to me, what I hear you describing is, you know, it's not a be-all end-all solution to every shitty non-value add task that exists, but it's a
Speaker 8 really nice reduction in what's probably a heavy time cost in just about every brokerage that exists in the country.
Speaker 7
You talk to almost every broker. Honestly, I'm smiling.
I just like, yeah, you're like
Speaker 7 this whole broker thing, like, you want to roll it up into Trust Layer? Let me know. Cause like, you're like,
Speaker 7 yeah, you're way better than I am than
Speaker 7 synthesizing than pitching this. um
Speaker 7 this is bananas and this is and it's just but you're to your point it it touches so many other things yeah so again our we're dealing with proof of coverage but like really what we're talking about is ground truth yeah
Speaker 7 yes you're that you're that plumber you walk onto the job site you there's something that's off right you need to make this guy an additional insured or i don't know whatever it is like if you have ground truth then in real time you can then have some kick off some workflow for i don't know making someone additional insured.
Speaker 7
Now, we're not doing that, but like, I mean, we can see what we could in the future, but like, that'll be some other startup. Like, that's what we want.
Like,
Speaker 7 we want to focus on building that ground truth for the industry. Yeah.
Speaker 7 And
Speaker 7 you also identified another thing, which was
Speaker 7
travelers doesn't want job to know their business. Of course not.
Like, you don't want your competitor down the street to know your customer list. So
Speaker 7 the North Star of everything that we've done so far has been
Speaker 7 users control their own data.
Speaker 7 And so from that point, like with with for the next time, I'll, I'll, I'll, we can geek out on this a little bit more.
Speaker 7 But like the way we are building this infrastructure, users actually will retain their data
Speaker 7 privately siloed behind their firewall.
Speaker 7 And in a lot of cases, when data is shared, it'll actually be less data than it is now.
Speaker 7 so we have we have companies that that that we know of companies that they they have such little faith in uh certificates of insurance they'll ask for the entire policy yes which is which is a major which is a major a major issue right it's like that's a tremendous amount but why are they asking for that they're asking for that because they know that this like the coi has such little value with like don't even know if it's authentic like like again our very first customer learned that the hard way and they don't know if it's still current, right?
Speaker 7 Just because you had insurance six months ago doesn't mean you have just because you had insurance two days ago doesn't mean you have insurance today.
Speaker 7 So, and then third, it's like it's a pain in the ass to like track all this information when you have to like use.
Speaker 8 I just had a buddy who caught one of his contracting clients just basically Adobe acrobatting COI forms.
Speaker 7 That's funny.
Speaker 8 And it came to him because one of his clients did business with another, another one of his clients who said, Hey, can you just check this cert? And And then he's like,
Speaker 8 you know, now the good news was the guy did have insurance, but he was budging his cert so we didn't have to ping my agency.
Speaker 7 We've, we've run into that a lot. In fact, before, before we even beat, excuse me, before we launched Trust Layer, like when we were still in development, like ideation, right?
Speaker 7 I interviewed someone and he was like, I don't understand the value. I'm like, well,
Speaker 7 it's, isn't it a pain in the ass to like get all these documents? He's like, well, no, because I don't know if you're familiar with this program. It's called Adobe Acrobat, and uh, it's incredible.
Speaker 7 So, I can, I'm like, oh, tell me more about this program.
Speaker 8 And he's like, Yeah, it's incredible.
Speaker 7 I could just go there and change the date. And if the guy needs to be the additional insured, I could add it down here.
Speaker 7
I'm like, stop, hold on. I'm going to press, I'm going to press record.
I want you to repeat everything you just said.
Speaker 8 You've just broken about 17 financial regulations.
Speaker 7 Yeah, you're going to go on our homepage.
Speaker 7 That's funny. Yeah, uh, so anyway,
Speaker 7 this is we're just trying, we're just trying to do our bit, yeah, right. We want to, we want to like build this infrastructure layer.
Speaker 7 We're not competing, we're not a carrier, we're not a broker, we're not competing with uh our partners.
Speaker 7 We want to drive as much business as we can back to our broker and our carrier partners as possible, yeah, and uh, and then have some fun in the meantime.
Speaker 8
Yeah, that's awesome. I think it's cool.
Yeah, now, are you doing anything with blockchain?
Speaker 7 So,
Speaker 7 sort of, I i don't usually say the b word
Speaker 7 make my
Speaker 7 day
Speaker 8 i just want i just love it i'm so bought in i i i just want something in insurance to be blockchain but so so to your point um so actually when we first when we first launched uh
Speaker 7 we it was like during the last uh blockchain
Speaker 7 mayhem when we were first like thinking about this right into into like 2018. um and so when we first came up with this and part of like we thought this part of our infrastructure is built on a
Speaker 7 part of part of our infrastructure can be leveraged using using DLT.
Speaker 8 It's like a distributed ledger type of technology.
Speaker 7 Yeah.
Speaker 7 The challenge though is we found that when
Speaker 7 we had the double spend problem with the or excuse me, the double buy problem. uh where when we would approach somebody and say
Speaker 7
here's this like this is what we're doing. And it would say, okay, great, we're in.
Like, we want to, like, this is a big pain point for me, too. So he's like, great.
Speaker 7
So the carriers and brokers became, like, wanted to get in pretty quickly. But then they would say, I would say, oh, we're going to use this like DLT solution.
They're like,
Speaker 7 okay,
Speaker 7
wait a second. What is that? Like, we don't even have APIs or webhooks.
Like, so it just, it just became like this, like, yeah, this sidetrack of a conversation.
Speaker 7
And then, like, again, it's, it's a very cool technology. There's a lot of really interesting things going on.
And so, we are in a, I think we're,
Speaker 7 to your point, I think it's possibly one of the best use cases I've ever heard for Web3.
Speaker 7 And so, to that point, I think there's this is gonna evolve in the future, and this probably will be the solution that over time evolves into it.
Speaker 7 But for the time being, we don't necessarily need, yeah,
Speaker 7 and part of that is because the use case for
Speaker 7 like if AIG says you have insurance,
Speaker 7 it's unlikely that AIG is going to lie about that, where you then have to go back to it and like say the more likely scenario is that AIG has
Speaker 7 some service, like systems that don't talk to each other.
Speaker 7 And getting data out to actually confirm ever that you have coverage is going to be a bigger problem. Yep.
Speaker 7 And so whether it's like, we don't have APIs, so we're just going to like export data and like put it somewhere.
Speaker 7 So, that's like you don't need blockchain for that. That's the bigger issue is like, just how do you have like integrations in a more like efficient way? Yeah.
Speaker 7 And so, to that point, it's like the connecting the digital proof of coverage with the legacy workflow is going to be the most important. Yeah.
Speaker 8
It's too early. It's, I, I, I joke about this, and my buddy and I do all the time.
We are, uh,
Speaker 8 we're, um,
Speaker 8
we're like, man, let's just, let's form an LLC. We're going to call it a insurance blockchain exploratory fund.
And we'll just go, we'll put blockchain on the first page of the deck.
Speaker 8 We'll go raise a shit ton of money and we'll figure out how to make a business in 10 years off of it.
Speaker 8 Cause, you know, the coolest thing about being part of the insurance industry is all you need to know is about this much about tech.
Speaker 8 and you're officially a technologist where where this wouldn't get you in the front door. Like in, you know, in many other industries, here you're, you know, you're changing the world.
Speaker 8 So it's just, it's just interesting. I, I think that
Speaker 8 I, I think there is so much opportunity in our space to, for, for micro and, and, and, and maybe larger than that, innovations, right? Like,
Speaker 8 you know, nothing against what you're doing, but making the COI process is not a revolutionary to the entire industry, but it's a drastic improvement and a major pain point.
Speaker 8 And there are, and it sounds like you're starting to address some of these as well in probably.
Speaker 7
But the COI process, again, it's like to your point, the COI process is just one part. Like that's not, that's not trust layer.
Trust layer is creating ground truth for the industry. Yeah.
Speaker 8 And that, that to me.
Speaker 8 is stacking up all these different processes in this in in this layer of and i love that kind of term ground truth i think that's a really important concept for people to grab out of this conversation that we're having is
Speaker 8 there is, like, if you were to ask a broker today, and I know we're running out of time and I want to be respectful of that, but
Speaker 8 if you were to ask most brokers today, is the carrier, your agency management system, your CRM,
Speaker 8 your email, an Excel spreadsheet? Like, what is the system of record for where,
Speaker 8 for what that client currently has in place? I think if you asked five people, you'd get five different answers.
Speaker 8 If you asked 50, you'd get 50 different answers because there is no, like if the broker says you have coverage, you have coverage because that goes back, that's essentially goes back to their ENO.
Speaker 8 So is that the point of truth? Is what comes out of your agency management system? Or is your agency management system really just a capture for you? And it's the carrier.
Speaker 8 And then, you know, I mean, so there's all, and then which system inside the carrier is actually the system of record. Is it what the underwriter tells you? Is it what's actually produced that?
Speaker 8 So, for me, this singular concept of getting to
Speaker 8
a place that we'll all agree, this is the ground truth, right? That is an incredibly important project. And I'm super glad that you're taking it on, man.
Thanks.
Speaker 7
Thanks, man. Well, I will say we're not doing it alone.
Like, we have a whole bunch of really great brokers, great carriers, risk managers that are
Speaker 7 helping us. And so, if I can make like the one, the one plug, like if anyone's interested in getting involved, would love for you to reach out to me directly.
Speaker 7
This is a big pain point. We need as many brokers supporting us.
That doesn't mean customers. That means like we need folks that are just passionate about this.
Speaker 7 And because we've got, we're having like conversations with carriers of like, what are the right way to do it? We're talking to the AMSs.
Speaker 7 We're saying, like, what are the policy, like in the policy administration systems? Like, what is the right way for us to really like solve this pain point for carriers and brokers?
Speaker 7 And also like your customer
Speaker 8 just build a Salesforce integration and let's go around those dirty bastards at the policy management system.
Speaker 7 They're just gonna hose you up.
Speaker 8 I bet they're like, Yeah, we love your solution, fifty thousand dollars a year, and we'll love it even more. Uh, um,
Speaker 8 I know how that extortion game is played.
Speaker 7 No, they're all great people, we love them. Apply it at oh, yeah, I love them.
Speaker 8
Um, no, dude, I think I think this is great. So, okay, so to that plug, so some you know, you got 12,000 people listening to the show right now.
Where, where do they go?
Speaker 8 Where do they go to trustslayer.io?
Speaker 7 Are they emailing somebody?
Speaker 7 I want them to email me personally. Okay.
Speaker 7 And we'll get, and we'll get in touch with them and put them in touch with like whoever the right person is. John J-O-H-N at trustlayer.io.
Speaker 7 Let's build something really big, guys.
Speaker 8 Yeah, guys. I, I, for every of you listen at home, you know, I,
Speaker 8
John and Trustlayer are not a sponsor of the show or anything. I don't want you to think that this is a paid plug.
These guys, I just, they've come highly recommended to me by a bunch of people.
Speaker 8 I've done my own research. I think you heard from the call.
Speaker 8 You know, this, this kind of stuff, and you've heard me for a year now, plus, talking about the concept of building a human-optimized agency.
Speaker 8 And while that will be different for every agency, I think this
Speaker 8 this idea of removing valueless transactions from our day-to-day so our people can be can can can hone in on the where they they really add value, solving problems, building relationships, that kind of stuff.
Speaker 8
This is one of those tools that's going to be part of our tool belt moving forward. And it's worth a look.
So I highly recommend reaching out to John and getting involved.
Speaker 8 If COIs and having this is, you know, just if it's about COIs for you, if you're working with contractors, working with manufacturers, uh, habitational, uh, home builders, you know, this is going to be a major solve for you.
Speaker 8 So I highly recommend what they're doing. Please reach out john's been great man thanks man yeah good seeing you
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