Agent Questions

Are you being encourage to write under someone else's agent #? Do you have an agent # too?

Posts are right about companies not letting you do this as a normal course of business. They have "single-case agreements" for otherwise doing this.

If you are being encouraged to do this by some "manager", it's so they get the renewals and you get zero.

atlantainsguy
 
I have a few questions to ask and the best responses is needed.
If you are a licensed agent can you right business under another agents number?

If you sign up with a key Broker with United Health Care do you have to have your commisions paid to the agency?

Last but not least if a keybroker does not want to release an agent can you work under somebodies elses license?

THanks for any response

The reason you may not be getting the answers you are looking for is you may not have worded your question correctly.

I'm going to take a WAG. I don't know what your definition of a "key broker" is. It is not a term I am familiar with. It sounds like you are asking about being the agent of record (AOR).

If you are working for an insurance agency, most insurance agencies will contract with an agent to sell insurance for the companies the agency represents. I believe the agent will still have to be appointed with the insurance company but every application the agent writes will be submitted to the insurance company with the agencies writing number as the AOR.

When the insurance company writes the commission check it is made out to the insurance agency, not to the writing agent. The agency then decides how much of the commission they receive from that application they want to give to the writing agent. It can be anything the agency decides and/or what the writing agent has agreed to. It could be as little as $5 or $10 dollars even though the agency received $50 from the insurance company.

Typically when the agent leaves the agency he/she walks away with zero renewals. Why? Because the writing agent who worked so hard to get the appointment, make the sale and provide excellent service is not the agent of record.

I would never sell any kind of insurance policy if I was not the AOR.

If that doesn't answer your question you may want to consider rewording it.
 
The answer is really NO!, Cut the crap guys..there are agents who let other agents write under their number but it is aginst the LAW, I know this FOR SURE IN CA
 

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