Insurance agencies have CRM needs that generic platforms cannot address. Policy management, renewal tracking, commission calculations, multi-carrier quoting, and compliance documentation all require industry-specific features that no horizontal CRM includes out of the box.
What Insurance CRMs Need
An insurance CRM must track clients, policies, carriers, agents, claims, and commissions as interconnected objects. A client may have multiple policies across multiple carriers, each with different renewal dates, coverage details, and commission structures. Generic CRMs track contacts and deals. Insurance needs a data model that reflects the actual complexity of the insurance business.
Beyond data structure, insurance CRMs need to support workflows specific to the industry: policy renewal sequences that start 90 days before expiration, claims tracking that coordinates between the client, the carrier, and the agency, and commission reconciliation that matches carrier statements against expected earnings.
Renewal Management
Policy renewals are the lifeblood of an insurance agency. Missing a renewal means losing a client and the ongoing commission income. A custom CRM automates the entire renewal process: flagging upcoming renewals, generating renewal quotes, scheduling client review meetings, sending reminder communications, and tracking the renewal through completion.
The automation ensures every renewal gets attention at the right time. An agency with 500 policies cannot manually track 500 renewal dates across multiple carriers. The CRM handles this automatically, surfacing only the renewals that need human attention — the ones where the client has questions, the rate has changed significantly, or the policy needs restructuring.
Commission Tracking
Insurance commissions are complex. Different carriers pay different rates. Different policy types earn different percentages. Commissions may be split between multiple agents. Override commissions may apply for production thresholds. A custom CRM tracks expected commissions at the policy level, calculates agent splits automatically, and reconciles against carrier commission statements to identify discrepancies.
This automation replaces hours of manual spreadsheet work each month and catches underpayments that might otherwise go unnoticed. For agencies with significant commission volume, the tracking functionality alone justifies the CRM investment.
Compliance and Documentation
Insurance is a regulated industry. Client communications, policy recommendations, and coverage discussions all need documentation. A custom CRM creates an automatic paper trail — every interaction, every document shared, every coverage discussion is logged and timestamped. When a regulator or an E&O claim requires documentation, everything is in one searchable system.
This documentation happens passively as agents use the CRM normally. No extra steps, no separate compliance system. The act of doing business through the CRM creates the compliance record automatically.
At Adroited, we specialize in custom CRM development and related services. If this resonates with your business needs, get in touch — we would be happy to discuss how we can help.
