By Peter Manoogian
and Zander Magee March 31, 2021
Fewer webinars, more customer insights: What
brokers want from health plan sales teams
U.S.
employers insure one hundred fifty million Americans, or more than half the
country. As these businesses reach their cost-sharing limits, they are
understandably searching for new ways to lower healthcare expenses.
Although
certain large corporations (and some states) have launched innovative
cost-curbing initiatives, many
employers do not have the leverage to do the same. Instead, they enlist brokers
and consultants to connect them with appropriate health plans.
These
brokers and consultants face growing pressure to continue curbing healthcare
expenses while improving whole-person health, especially as employer benefits
evolve post-pandemic. ZS recently interviewed several producers and agency
owners from across the country to learn how health plan sales teams can best
partner with them.
What brokers told us
Some
employers simply want to purchase the most affordable plan, but most businesses
require brokers to holistically consider their needs. Brokers respond by only
working with proven, member-centric providers.
Show value with data: Brokers told us that health plan representatives tend to
pitch the latest innovation—be it a funding mechanism, partnership or
product—and then forget about it during the following cycle. Pitching new ideas
is great, but agency partners are looking for the hard facts around the impact
such programs can have on their clients’ multi-year medical trend. It’s fine if
the data isn’t there, but the value prop must then pivot to improving topline
results to justify the cost. Wellness programs are a prime example of this
given the ongoing debate of their overall
impact on costs (and time to realize cost savings). Brokers are looking for
real data from health plans to tell the value story to their clients so that
they can set the right expectations over a multi-year period.
Anticipate needs: Brokers and consultants shared that their real work begins
after their clients choose plans. Health plan sales, product and technology
teams can strengthen their partnerships with brokers by:
·
Streamlining
sign-up: Brokers are more
likely to consistently work with plans that simplify onboarding, especially as
online and open enrollment grow.
“Don't make me or the
client spend six months building a file feed. Nobody is good at online
enrollment; everyone is equally bad. I need people who know the industry as
much as people who know how to manage data.” - Producer, National Agency,
Southeast
·
Bundling
services: Producers
interviewed want to consolidate business among select carriers. By showing
willingness to look at an employer’s needs holistically instead of by
individual lines of coverage, health plans can win more of a broker’s book of
business.
“I tried to hand a carrier a 1,000-member, multi-line account
and [the carrier] said no because [it] didn't want [to cover] the short-term
disability. The profit centers at each carrier are limiting [our] ability [and
don’t have the] willingness to bundle.” - Producer, Regional Consulting Firm,
South
·
Focus
on quality of communication, not quantity: Brokers have Zoom fatigue, too. While some
health plans may benefit from more touch points, frequent communication is not
always better. Setting up meetings without clear objectives is a guaranteed way
to disappoint brokers, but regularly showing how various plans perform builds
trust.
“People are sick of being in webinars. Many reps have strained
their relationships because they either push for meetings over and over or come
around only when it’s time to renew the case. We need more meaningful
touchpoints to review post-sale diagnostics.” - Owner, Independent Agency,
Midwest
Health
plans have opportunities to capture brokers’ and employers’ perspectives
with comprehensive communications. Gone are the days when we only heard from
brokers during an annual- or president’s club meeting. Health plan sales teams
must listen to and gather insight from brokers to better match their needs.
Final
thoughts
As
health plan sales teams gear up for the 2022 selling season, here are a few
additional ideas to keep in mind.
·
Develop
agency level business plans: Strengthening partnerships is as critical as ever given the pace
of consolidation in the industry, leaving many plans with a smaller and more
dominant share of agency partners in the markets they serve. Key brokers must
be treated as strategic relationships, which warrants creating an annual
relationship plan to serve as the growth roadmap at an agency level. This exercise
liberates insights about an agency’s operations, opportunities and pain points
rather than have it bottled-up as “tribal knowledge” among the small set of
people managing the relationship. It also helps surface leading practices that
sales leaders can replicate with others.
·
Look
at leading quantitative indicators: Health plans can track wins, losses and sales with each
partner. Which agencies drive the most consideration? Which account sizes are
more likely to succeed? Defining rates for each step in the funnel (e.g.,
quotes, finalist presentations, wins) will create a more durable comparison
when comparing effectiveness of sales executives across teams or geographies.
·
Gather
multiple forms of feedback: Almost
all health plans have some form of an unblinded advisory panel consisting of
top producers, strategic partners and independent brokers. This is absolutely a
value add. We also see immense value in periodically pulsing agencies in the
marketplace in a blinded manner to enable the partner to speak
more openly. Collecting input from a broad and balanced set of partners,
including those who may not be top producers for a plan, yields richer insights
for health plan leaders on perceptions across a variety of attributes in a way
that a hand-picked advisory board cannot.
Brokers
made it clear that many of their clients are re-evaluating their benefits
options heading into 2023—and that means a lot of businesses will be out to
bid. Now is the time for sales leaders to take stock of how they can take a
more strategic and data-driven approach to engaging this important channel
partner to drive growth.
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