By Cyril Tuohy
June 26, 2018
Benefits brokers and voluntary sales brokers
are locked in a battle for business. New data shows the traditional benefits
brokers are gaining on their counterparts.
Traditional
employee benefit brokers continue to make inroads against brokers who
specialize in selling voluntary benefits in the competition for employer
business.
The percentage of
brokers selling or cross-selling voluntary benefits to their employer accounts
climbed to 57 percent this year from 48 percent three years ago, according
Eastbridge Consulting’s latest market survey.
“The days of the
benefit broker and the voluntary broker peacefully co-existing in a case are
waning,” wrote Eastbridge president Gil Lowerre.
Competition among
brokers and increasing employer expectations have forced traditional benefit
brokers to “up their game,” said Eastbridge consultant Erin Marino.
Benefit brokers
used to bring in one voluntary insurer to simplify administration for their
client, but now traditional benefit and voluntary specialists offer
“best-of-breed” products regardless of the number of insurers.
That has forced
many brokers to bring a portfolio of benefits from several insurers to meet
client needs, Marino said.
Traditional benefit
brokers focus primarily on medical or core group coverage, but offer voluntary
benefits as well.
Premiums to pay for
medical or core group benefits can be employer-funded or shared between the
employer and the employee.
In contrast,
voluntary benefits are usually employee-paid benefits, but often required a
different sales approach on the part of the broker.
Survey Says …
Inroads into the
voluntary broker turf is reflected in the numbers. According to the survey of
400 brokers conducted in February and March:
·
The percentage of benefit brokers writing more than five cases
annually rose more than 10 percentage points to 40 percent over the year-ago
period.
·
The number of benefit brokers with more than 25 percent of their
total benefit revenue coming from voluntary products rose almost 10 percent
this year over last year.
·
The percentage of benefit brokers selling $100,000 or less in
voluntary premium dropped by almost 10 percent year over year.
Despite the growth
in voluntary benefit sales, traditional benefit brokers rely on premiums from
employer-paid products to make up a majority of their business.
Only 5 percent of
benefit brokers have voluntary premiums that represent over 50 percent of their
benefits business.
Even with benefit
broker activity up, voluntary brokers still write more cases and generate more
premium per broker than do benefit brokers.
InsuranceNewsNet
Senior Writer Cyril Tuohy has covered the financial services industry for more
than 15 years. Cyril may be reached at cyril.tuohy@innfeedback.com.
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