Jennifer9922
New Member
- 16
I’m just wondering what is normal for chargebacks? Do people get several chargebacks per month or is that too much?
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chargebacks in the early years are normal, but if you are 5 or 10 years in and still regularly getting chargebacks then you are doing something wrong.I’m just wondering what is normal for chargebacks? Do people get several chargebacks per month or is that too much?
No matter what, something needs to change. You shouldn't be getting more than a few chargebacks a year.it’s confusing- I am enrolling them in the best plans but noticed several of them through Humana and it was surprising. I wasn’t sure if this was normal but thanks for the different input. I wasn’t sure if I needed to do something different to avoid that.
Chargebacks are normal. They will ALWAYS happen. Clients die, clients are “stolen”, etc. Good agents have them, but good agents don’t have many.
If you are a field agent:
Rapid (90 day) churn should be no more than 5 percent. Your goal should be less than 3 percent. These are the chargebacks that sting the most. They’re mostly avoidable if you’re being clear and careful. If you focus on T65, rapids should be no more than 2.5 percent.
Other first year chargeback ( > 90 day) churn varies by demographic. For all sorts of reasons, you shouldn’t have many if you’re selling mostly T65. If you sell lots of switchers, this first year “chargeback-able” churn should be no more than 10 percent. Many good agents do better.
Duals are the exception. They are slippery even for the best agents.
If you are a call center:
Most of these agencies see a roughly 20% 90 day rapid churn. The math won’t work for a 200+ seat call center unless it’s under 12%.
Other first year chargebacks (> 90 day) churn vary by demographic but it’s much higher than in the field.
Large call centers typically see a 45% annual churn of one sort or another - rapid, “chargeback-able”, and other. Sometimes they’re churning their own clients. More often, they’re churning back and forth between other call centers. It’s a shitty business model and it’s not sustainable. A race to the bottom.
Be sure to manage your complaints, too.
Good field agents should have no more than a 2 percent complaint rate, with most of those complaints dispositioned as unsubstantiated. Many agents are better than 1 percent.
Call centers are a shit show. Most of them have a 5-7 percent complaint rate, with up to half of those complaints dispositioned as substantiated. Consider that the largest phone agencies are writing like 250,000 Advantage plans every year. You’re looking at hundreds of substantiated complaints every month … what Humana would call “section A” complaints. Not trivial stuff.
I don’t think our industry overall fully understands or appreciates just how bad they operate, or how carriers hold them virtually unaccountable. In turn, CMS holds the carriers unaccountable. It’s almost unforgivable.
I hope this is helpful to you.
Walter
This is pretty spot on and I’ll add a some things . Thats why I’ve told all you work high vol leads 90% will be lis/duals . Unless your on the ground in person and can build face to face relationships stay away . As Walter says you’re in for a world of hurt and pain . The call centers are replacing each other left and right . They also target there own book after 13 months to get a bigger paycheck on a roll ti another carrier . It’s tough to do but the sticky mapd is T-65. Even how hands I’m with my dsnp clients I still have 12% that are flipped and I save 70% of them . I lose at most 2% non dual per yr