Methodology – a blog on insurance agent websites, web design, and marketing

Entries categorized as ‘Insurance Agent Websites’

A Balanced Approach to Agency Websites

June 10, 2010 · Leave a Comment

A few weeks ago, Steve Anderson posted “A Balanced Approach to Agency Marketing” on his blog. If you haven’t read this already, you should. Steve’s a smart guy and he knows what he’s talking about. In the article, Steve’s did a good job of explaining something that we emphasize in our talks with agents everyday – balance.

There is a lot of focus on the value of websites as lead generation tools. This message is pushed by many of the technology vendors in the website space. They’re telling you “websites are lead generation tools!”, “It’s all about search optimization!”, and “launch a quote engine and watch the money come”.

The reality is that the successful online agent needs balance just as much as the successful traditional agent. Your insurance agency website isn’t just for lead generation or quoting – actually, it may be an even more valuable tool for retaining and growing your existing relationships.

Let’s go through Steve’s four pillars of profitability to look at how your website can support them in a balanced way:

Keep: Your website puts you just a click away from your customers at any time. Put resources on your site that educate customers and help them from day 1. Make sure they know they can always reach you online. Put your picture and contact information on your homepage to remind them who you are and that you are there to help. Relationships go a long way in keeping a customer.

UpGrade: Make sure you explain the benefits and risks of different coverage amounts. Link to tools, resources, and articles that can help your customers learn about the risks of being underinsured. This sets you up to have your customers ready to increase their policies when the time comes.

Round Out: Put content on your site for all of the policy types that you sell. On your homepage, rotate the policies that you feature on a regular basis to make sure they all receive exposure. This reminds your customers that you can meet all of their insurance needs and helps you round out your business.

Get More: Today, most of the focus is on websites. It certainly is an important aspect, although it isn’t the only one. You need to make the right first impression, and more  often this happens on your site. We believe that a professional site with good, informative, and educational information should always come before a quote engine. Make sure you build trust with your prospects before asking for the sale!

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Uncategorized

The 4 People You’ll Meet Online

May 13, 2010 · Leave a Comment

Want to know more about who’s coming to your website and what they want to find there? Now’s the time to find out! We’ve recently written about this exact topic at Life Insurance Selling magazine. Let us introduce you to The 4 People You’ll Meet Online.

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Press

What Insurance Agents can Learn from Phishing Websites

May 6, 2010 · Leave a Comment

“I’ve had a terrible day. I did something really stupid this morning…”

That’s how the phone call from my dad began yesterday. It turns out during his morning email review, he received what he thought was a message from his bank asking him to update his account information. He clicked on the link, was taken to what he thought was the bank’s website, and proceeded to input all kinds of personal information. We’re talking pins, account numbers, mother’s maiden name…

After a few minutes on the website, he began to notice things were a little off. Nothing major, just a typo here, some improper grammar there, a section out of alignment somewhere. When he started adding these clues up, he slowly came to a very bad realization: he had fallen victim to a phishing scam.

The moral of the story is not that you should NEVER click on an email from any financial institution claiming it needs sensitive account information. We already know that (ahem, dad). Instead, the moral of the story lies in the clues that gave way to my dad realizing he’d been had – the typos, grammar errors, and bad page layout.

As the general public is becoming more experienced with the web, they’re getting more and more sensitive to the small clues that separate a quality, legitimate, website from a fly-by-night scam. One of the most important functions of your insurance agent website is to build trust. To succeed, it must look 100% professional. No matter what type of insurance you sell, as your visitors move through the process of doing business with you, they’re going to expose you to a lot of very sensitive information. They absolutely must trust you if you are going to get their business. If your website gives them any reason whatsoever to question your level of professionalism, you can expect them to move on.

Please learn from my dad’s mistake! If you want people to trust you, make sure your website reflects your professionalism.

And, by the way, in case you’re wondering how things turned out for my click-happy pops, looks like he saved himself by realizing right away that he’d been had. He spent the day yesterday at the bank where they had him close all of his accounts and open new ones. This time, luck was on his side.

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Sales

Press: AgentMethods in “Life Insurance Selling”

April 8, 2010 · Leave a Comment

Our own Aaron Kassover has been featured in the recent Life Insurance Selling magazine, where he gives three quick tips getting high quality traffic to insurance websites. Check out the article, “Beyond Search Engines: 3 Strategies To Drive Traffic To Your Web Site” on their website.

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Press · Traffic

Bringing value to the table

March 30, 2010 · 2 Comments

A recent post on Copyblogger titled  The Difference Between Salad and Garbage zeros in on the value an insurance agent can bring when helping  people make wise buying decisions. By becoming a specialist, you change the relationship you have with your prospects. All of a sudden you’re an expert who provides a valued service instead of just another salesperson.

Here are some additional points to  consider to help you position yourself as a knowledge broker instead of just another salesperson and, in turn, build a relationship with your prospect and customers, so that you become the go-to-person for answers regarding insurance issues.

  • Create a professional website with valuable content.
  • Use email to reinforce the relationship
  • Consider starting a blog, which you update on a regular basis.

The goal is to demonstrate the value you can bring to the decision-making process.

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Sales · Trends

It all comes down to trust.

December 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Your customers buy insurance from you because they trust you. They know that you will meet their needs, act in a professional manner, and give them the attention and service they want. If a prospect doesn’t trust you, they aren’t going to buy from you. Sales, in a sense, is the process of developing enough trust with your prospects to ensure they will turn to you when they have an insurance need.

In the “old world” of selling insurance, building trust began with your appearance. As the saying goes, you don’t get a second change to make a first impression, and the first impression is largely visual. You needed to look professional. This meant having a clean haircut, wearing a well-pressed high quality suit, and showing up in a Cadillac. We all know intuitively what a trust-worthy professional is supposed to look like, and in the old world building trust was based largely on looking the part.

In the “new world”, most agents are never in the same room with your prospects. They visit your website, talk to you on the phone and exchange emails. But they almost never see you in person. That first impression is no longer based on showing up to an appointment in a shiny Cadillac and crisp suit. Our prospects don’t care what kind of car we drive.

First impressions today are based on your website. Your prospect starts building their impression of you the minute they type in your domain name. Does the site load quickly? Does it work in their browser? Is your page well-designed, clean, and on point? Do you provide informative and well written copy? Or, does it take 10 seconds for the homepage to come up? Do you have a broken image?

Built right, your website can “seal the deal” with your visitors before you even talk to them, showing them that you are someone they trust. But done wrong, your website destroys your chances by making a first impression that you are not someone they should trust. So save some money on the Cadillac, and instead make sure your insurance website makes the right impression.

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Sales

8 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Have a Blog on Your Agent Website

October 26, 2009 · 1 Comment

Blogs have become the rage among insurance agents with websites. With the rise of blog popularity among insurance agents, most likely you heard many reasons why you should start one. You may have heard that blogs help with SEO, they get your site indexed more quickly, and they give you a place to generate new content with diverse messaging.
For all of the reasons to start a blog, insurance agents should still think twice before adding one to their insurance website. Why? Here are eight reasons:
They are a LOT of work. True, blogs are easy to launch. But to keep a blog fresh, you must continue to add content. This means adding new posts on a regular basis. Otherwise, your blog will quickly go stale and look abandoned.
Blogs take your attention away from selling. Every minute you spend on your blog is a minute you aren’t spending with a prospect. If you have leads to contact or quotes to follow up on, they should always come first.
Nobody’s going to read it anyway. Let’s be honest. Your customers don’t want to keep up to date on the latest musings of an insurance agent, and they really don’t want to know the minute details and inner workings of the industry.
You’re an insurance agent, not a writer. Writing is hard, and reading bad writing is even harder. Unless you are a pent up writer, masquerading as an insurance agent, chances are good you are stretching yourself in the wrong direction with your blog.
A blog isn’t going to make or break you. Lots of other things will. A blog might be a cherry on a sundae, but until you’ve got the complete sundae, you can do without. Do you have good inbound links? A high-quality insurance website? A watertight process for follow-ups? These, and many other things, should come first.
Your point of view isn’t original and compelling. With all of the professional writers and bloggers online, there’s a good chance someone else already wrote the blog post you’re thinking about, and they probably did a better job.
Blogging isn’t a quick fix. Even if you have a great blog, you aren’t going to see results for months. Even then, it will begin with a trickle and grow very slowly. If you’re looking for leads today, look elsewhere.
Typos and bad grammar make you look unprofessional. If peoplle dont think your professional, they are’nt going to buy from you. Unless you writing is flawles, theirs a good chance it will hurt you more then help you. (See what I mean?)
So before you jump on the blogging bandwagon, take a minute to consider the downside. It’s not often talked about, but it’s definitely there. Is your insurance agency really ready to jump on the blogging bandwagon?

Blogs have become the rage among insurance agents with websites. With the rise of blog popularity among insurance agents, most likely you heard many reasons why you should start one. You may have heard that blogs help with SEO, they get your site indexed more quickly, and they give you a place to generate new content with diverse messaging.

For all of the reasons to start a blog, insurance agents should still think twice before adding one to their insurance website. Why? Here are eight reasons:

  1. They are a LOT of work. True, blogs are easy to launch. But to keep a blog fresh, you must continue to add content. This means adding new posts on a regular basis. Otherwise, your blog will quickly go stale and look abandoned.
  2. Blogs take your attention away from selling. Every minute you spend on your blog is a minute you aren’t spending with a prospect. If you have leads to contact or quotes to follow up on, they should always come first.
  3. Nobody’s going to read it anyway. Let’s be honest. Your customers don’t want to keep up to date on the latest musings of an insurance agent, and they really don’t want to know the minute details and inner workings of the industry.
  4. You’re an insurance agent, not a writer. Writing is hard, and reading bad writing is even harder. Unless you are a pent up writer, masquerading as an insurance agent, chances are good you are stretching yourself in the wrong direction with your blog.
  5. A blog isn’t going to make or break you. Lots of other things will. A blog might be a cherry on a sundae, but until you’ve got the complete sundae, you can do without. Do you have good inbound links? A high-quality insurance website? A watertight process for follow-ups? These, and many other things, should come first.
  6. Your point of view isn’t original and compelling. With all of the professional writers and bloggers online, there’s a good chance someone else already wrote the blog post you’re thinking about, and they probably did a better job.
  7. Blogging isn’t a quick fix. Even if you have a great blog, you aren’t going to see results for months. Even then, it will begin with a trickle and grow very slowly. If you’re looking for leads today, look elsewhere.
  8. Typos and bad grammar make you look unprofessional. If peoplle dont think your professional, they are’nt going to buy from you. Unless you writing is flawles, theirs a good chance it will hurt you more then help you. (See what I mean?)

So before you jump on the blogging bandwagon, take a minute to consider the downside. It’s not often talked about, but it’s definitely there. Is your insurance agency really ready to jump on the blogging bandwagon?

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Trends

New Feature – Leads Management

October 8, 2009 · Leave a Comment

This week we launched Leads Management for your agent sites. Leads Management is a FREE upgrade for every AgentMethods website so Sign In to take advantage of this powerful new tool or Sign Up for your FREE 30 day trial and see what all the buzz is about!

Here is a quick intro to Leads Management in Agent Methods:

  • Track all of your leads – Add leads, take notes and filter your leads to help you keep your information organized.
  • Never miss a follow up – Add and schedule follow up activities with your leads, and see a history of your interactions.
  • Easily import and export leads – AgentMethods makes it easy to import and export leads from other sources.

We’ve also produced a demo of the new Leads Manager in action:

scrn_leadsdemo

Questions bout this or other features in AgentMethods? Contact us on our support site: http://support.agentmethods.com/.

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Lead management · Uncategorized

New Feature – Link to your quoting engine, blog or anywhere

September 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Many of you make use of external websites for your agency such as quoting engines, blogs and other informational pages on the web. Wouldn’t it be great if you could link to these sites or completely replace you AgentMethods quoting form with your own third-party quote form? Our new external linking feature enables you to link from your home page callout buttons directly to any website link you choose. Also, you can now replace our quote form with your third-party quote engine.

Upgrade Now to our Gold or Platinum plans to gain access to this feature that will enable you to link to your third-party websites.

Already have a Gold or Platinum plan? Sign In and try out this useful feature now!

For a quick demo of how the feature is activated and used please view the video below.

player-extlink

(Questions about this video? Contact support)

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites

New Feature – Customize Your Homepage

September 23, 2009 · Leave a Comment

We recently added the ability for you to customize your home page with your own content. This new feature is FREE for everyone. This simple, yet powerful feature is a great way to add content such as lists of coverage options, links, carrier logos and welcome messages for your sites’ visitors.

Sign Up with AgentMethods for a free 30-day trial to see this and other great features for your AgentSite.

Sign In if you already have an AgentMethods account and add your free content block now.

For a quick demo of how the feature is activated and used please view the video below.

player-contentbox

(Questions about this video? Contact support)

Categories: Insurance Agent Websites · Uncategorized