With a serious talent shortage on the horizon, the insurance industry needs to become an employer of choice for the next generation. Here's how to do it.
Mar 01, 2015 | By Melissa Hillebrand
Mastering Vendor Selection and Partnership Management
Changing the millennial mindset
1. Changing the Millennial mindset
With a serious talent shortage on the horizon, the insurance
industry needs to become an employer of choice for the next
generation. Here's how to do it.
Mar 01, 2015 | By Melissa Hillebrand
It's a stark statistic: Nearly one-half of the professionals in the insurance industry today are 45
years or older—and one-quarter of the industry will retire by 2018. To address this trend, the
industry can recruit and hire millennials, those born after 1980 and the largest-growing
demographic in the U.S.
The problem is, a good number of these potential recruits think that an insurance career lacks the
glamour of finance or other business careers on Wall Street, and that industry careers are
restricted to sales. While longtime insurance pros know that that's a misconception, how can the
industry get the word out that an insurance career has much to offer professionally, is a great
contributor to society and the economy (a matter of great importance to this demographic), and
offers a variety of job opportunities that utilize a multitude of skills?
“When we survey millennials, they know very little about the insurance industry and what they
say they know is incorrect,” says Anita Bourke, executive vice president at The Institutes. “They
have a negative perception.”
2. Illustrating this disconnect, 61% of young people said that they would like a job that includes
analyzing risks and recommending solutions, according to The Institutes‟ report “Millennial
Generation Attitudes About Work and the Insurance Industry,” yet less than 10% are interested
in working in insurance.
The insurance industry must become an employer of choice for this generation. Nearly 400,000
jobs will be available by 2020, and now is the time to lay groundwork. Here are five ways to do
so, from recruitment through training.
Identify future gaps and hire appropriately
Because it takes years for knowledge to be passed on and for skills to effectively sharpen, it's
ideal to recruit and hire young people well before the seasoned employees leave. At Arbella, a
property & casualty mutual insurance company based in Quincy, Mass., the human resources
department analyzed the demographics of its employees to learn where to expect talent shortages
in the next decade. They discovered that its commercial lines, actuarial and claims departments
will be especially hit hard.
Of the firm's 1,000 employees, Senior Vice President of Human Resources and Marketing
Communications Gayle O‟Connell says, “We have a talented—but tenured—population. And
within the next five to 12 years, a lot of that depth will be walking out of the door.” Since
January 2013, 62% of new hires at Arbella have been younger than 35 years old.
A new hire is a significant investment, one where the cost of failure is greater than the cost of
training. With that in mind, start the training process even before a job offer has been formalized,
says Meg Allwein, senior vice president and chief quality officer at Assurex Global, a
partnership representing independent agents and brokers.
“By presenting a training plan before the final job offer, you can gauge how proactive the
candidate will be in his own onboarding,” says Allwein. “Does he accept the training plan as
presented, or does he evaluate the plan and offer customization?”
Align with educational institutions for interns
Get a leg up on recruitment by developing relationships with colleges and universities. Don't
know where to start? The Institutes recently launched MyPath, an initiative to educate
millennials about the industry through the website insuremypath.org. Collegiate partners can post
information about their risk management, insurance or actuarial programs on the site. In turn,
insurance carriers and agencies can publish internships. When this story went to press, there were
173 internships available in actuarial, underwriting, research, IT, analytics and agency sales.
The Spencer Educational Foundation, RIMS‟ scholarship, grant and funding initiative, awards
nearly 30 internships every summer. Companies that are interested in the program must submit a
proposal that details what projects a potential intern will work on. For example, if the company is
trying to analyze workplace injuries, Spencer interns would be expected to develop internal data
and come to a conclusion regarding better work practices or loss prevention. “We look for
3. proposals that will be a differentiator for the student,” says Ron Davis, executive vice president
and head of market customers at Zurich and the foundation's board president.
Establishing relationships with local colleges can be equally effective. Arbella turned to UMass
Amherst, about 100 miles away from the carrier's headquarters in Quincy. Arbella's vice
president of personal lines, an Amherst alum, serves as a visiting professor. Closer to home, the
firm has relationships with Northeastern University and Bentley University, to recruit and hire
students majoring in actuarial sciences, finance and IT.
Across the board, industry associations agree that internships are one of the best ways to not only
recruit young talent, but also to provide some early hands-on training. Members in The Council
for Insurance Agents & Brokers have access to an online step-by-step internship tool that shows
how to formulate an internship program or augment an existing one.
“New hires with the best success rates are those who did internships with the firm prior to
joining it,” says Elizabeth McDaid, senior vice president, leadership and management resources
at The Council.
Stress the ‘meaningful’ component of insurance
work
Younger employees value how they contribute toward the big picture and they ask for
responsibility earlier than previous generations. Millennials want to work on things that impact
the common good. Whenever possible, show them—in person—how their job positively impacts
a person's life or business.
It's not enough to post available positions to job boards. Millennials are not clamoring for just
any job—they want the right job. Adam Rothert, president of Rothert Insurance, an MGA based
4. in Portland, says that he has had more success attracting young workers when he highlights
“responsibilities” rather than “tasks” in job descriptions.
“Manage your message with younger folks,” says Rothert, who also is the president of
AAMGA's Under Forty Organization. “Telling them that they are responsible for helping
maintain compliance with the state is a lot more attractive than telling them that they will file
taxes and fees.”
Need some assistance crafting your message? In the near future, the Foundation for Agency
Management Excellence, a charitable educational organization associated with The Council, will
launch a program called Year One, which will contain resources, online courses and activities to
develop a new producer in his or her first year.
Hands-on experience, where new hires go out into the field and meet clients or participate in
strategy meetings, help them comprehend how their roles align with future goals—whether for
their own company or their clients. “The more context you provide, the more people feel that
their work is meaningful,” says Dan Epstein, CEO of ReSource Pro, a New York-based provider
of business process outsourcing services for the insurance industry. “And when they feel that
connection, they are more likely stay on and develop a career path with the company.”
Choose your mentors wisely
5. Many longtime insurance professionals will be able to dispense thoughtful advice to new hires,
but the truth is, not every seasoned pro makes an effective mentor. It's important to create a
workable pairing between mentors and younger employees in order to drive success. Personally
select mentors that are knowledgeable in not only their jobs, but also in the business culture, says
O‟Connell at Arbella.
Consider personality traits. Some of your seasoned veterans may be very good at their jobs, but
cannot effectively convey their experience to new hires. Keep in mind that in addition to these
new duties, a mentor still has to carry his or her own workload.
6. “It takes years to gather the skill set to become a really good underwriter,” O‟Connell says, “but
millennials are not afraid to ask questions—even to company executives. They like to be
involved.”
Don't be afraid to give trainees freedom, and that includes the freedom to fail. And when a
mentor has to sit down with his or her protégé and give feedback? Don't sugarcoat the hard stuff.
“Younger folks prefer if you are more direct,” Rothert says. “Just say „These are the
expectations, and you aren't meeting them.‟ Millennials can separate themselves from their job
performance.”
This younger generation thrives under structured planning, so establish key milestones and
timelines for both the mentor and new hire, as “meeting those goals is a measure of success for
both the mentor and mentee,” Allwein says.
Make teamwork part of the learning process
Teamwork is important to many younger recruits, and they collaborate well on tasks. “Hiring a
group of millennials and having them go through the training as a cohort is an excellent best
practice,” says The Council's McDaid. She suggests giving trainees group projects that they can
work on together.
At ReSource Pro, nearly 95% of its 2,000 employees are of the millennial generation. Epstein
stresses that team activities don't always have to focus on the company's bottom line: For
example, the firm recently purchased bicycles that employees could build together. “It was really
about learning how we relate to each other,” he says. “Give them action learning. Building a bike
helps them develop communication and apply new skills.” The assembled bikes were donated to
disadvantaged children in Los Angeles.
“We try to force interaction,” Rothert says of his 26-member staff. “We play games like Family
Feud, where some categories are insurance-focused. We play „Two Truths and a Lie‟ [in which a
person reveals two true things about him or herself and one false thing, and others guess which is
false]. It inspires morale and motivation when you feel more connected with the people you work
with.”