BenefitsPRO Broker Expo: Vendor relationships not working?
To effectively serve their employer clients, advisors must work cohesively with the right vendor-partners to deliver that impact.
During our panel discussion at the upcoming virtual BenefitsPRO Broker Expo, we will focus on unleashing the potential of advisor and vendor partnerships. When these two groups work together collaboratively, effectively and strategically, they become the most impactful partnership enjoyed by business owners.
Oh, the potential
Everyone recognizes the traditional business advisors: attorneys, CPAs and bankers. The impact each can make is clear. Less evident may be the impact potential of a benefits advisor and his/her broader team, but it is arguably the most wide-reaching and significant business relationship of all. When an advisor-team does their job the way their clients need them to, they impact the business of those clients strategically, operationally, financially and (because of the impact they have on the individual employee) emotionally.
Join Kevin for his BenefitsPRO Broker Expo virtual session, “Vendor relationship not working? Is it them or is it you?” Tuesday, August 18 at 3 PM.
However, to do so, advisors must work cohesively with the right vendor-partners to deliver that impact. It does take a team.
Choosing who will be on that team is becoming increasingly difficult. However, that challenge pales in comparison to creating a cohesive and effective team engagement once the players are in place.
A growing list of needs
Business owners need help more than ever before. It has never been more challenging to run a successful business, protect margins, or attract and retain employees.
The traditional focus of benefits advisors helping to design and install insurance solutions is now just the beginning. Today’s advisors need to further engage and empower employees through effective communication strategies. Advisors must help improve operational efficiencies with the right technology solutions. They need to be setting long-term HR/benefit strategies to complement their client’s broader vision. And, they have to do all of this while ensuring every compliance “i” is dotted and “t” crossed.
Oh, remember that traditional insurance responsibility? Yeah, the unbundling of plans we have witnessed over the last several years makes this a more complicated puzzle to complete than ever before. The number of moving parts and partners required (TPA, PBM, stop-loss, DPC, centers of excellence, etc.) overwhelms most.
Advisors universally recognize the need to expand their resources to address the growing list of client challenges. While it’s easy to understand this need, satisfying it successfully is a big challenge.
It takes a well-orchestrated investment of both time and money. Most advisors are relatively quick to get out their checkbook for the financial investment, but they also have to get out their calendars to ensure they learn how to use their new resources successfully.
To whom are you going to “write the check”?
Not every new partnership requires an up-front financial investment, but choosing the right partners is critical regardless. Not only are there a significant number of new solution categories advisors need to access, but there are also countless new vendors competing for attention and business at every turn.
Start by doing a deeper dive into your ideal client to understand what solutions they need. Don’t fall into the trap of trying to be all things to all people. Once you identify the needs of your client, determine which you are best suited to address for them.
As you see holes in your current offering, prioritize the order in which you need to fill the gaps. No single gap is easy to fill, at least at the required level. If you try to plug all of your holes at once, you are all but guaranteeing failure. Success requires a systematic, manageable, and strategic expansion of your abilities. The acquire-new-solutions-to-simply-check-off-boxes approach is a fool’s game.
As you approach each solution category, do your research. But, know that you cannot depend entirely on the experience of peers (positive or negative) to make a final choice. Having access to this kind of information can help you shorten the process considerably, but you cannot leave the complete vetting of vendors to someone else. What worked for them may or may not work for you.
Finally, despite what every vendor may tell you, there is no perfect solution. Searching for a perfect solution is a quixotic pursuit.
Now the hard part—your calendar
Too many advisors feel that once they have chosen a new partner, acquired access to a new resource, and become familiar with its features and benefits, the work is done. And that is why so many brokers never deliver the full impact their clients need.
While it’s obvious to you why each solution is needed, helping your prospects/clients see the same may be more difficult. However, before you can educate them adequately, you must educate yourself. Anybody can describe the features and benefits during a capabilities presentation, but your clients need you to help them understand so much more.
You must understand the answers to the following questions. Be the student first, and then you can be the teacher your buyers need you to be.
What problem does the solution solve? It’s okay to state the obvious, but it does have to be stated. Buyers don’t want to discuss the products you have to offer, but they are always interested in discussing the problems they have that make the product necessary. Some other questions we’ll address during our panel:
- What is the operational and/or financial impact for a business if they don’t solve the problem?
- What challenges likely stand in their way of fixing it themselves?
- How can you show them an implementation path that addresses the problem and leads to better results?
- What does improvement look like on the backside of implementation?
Manage the relationship
Knowing your new solution will give you a huge advantage over competitors who have access to the same solutions. But the hard work still isn’t done. Like any relationship, your vendor relationships have to be nurtured and maintained.
Never before has it been more critical to have successful vendor-partner relationships. If you’re attending the (now virtual) BenefitsPRO Expo in August, please join us as we discuss these issues and many more.
And, if you’re not planning on attending, well, there is still time to fix that lapse in judgment.
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