A broker told a 165-person company they were "too small" for self-funding. That broker made $72,000 annually keeping them fully-insured. The company switched anyway and saved $340,000 in Year 1. Here's what "too small" actually meant. Fully-insured premium: $1.44 million annually. Renewal at 8.9%. The CFO asked about self-funding. Broker's response: "Companies your size can't handle catastrophic claims. One $500K cancer case could sink you. Fully-insured is safer." What he didn't say: His $72K commission was the same either way. But self-funded meant actual work—managing claims data, vendor relationships, quarterly reviews. Fully-insured meant forwarding emails and collecting checks. They brought in a second advisor. Level-funded structure: $103,000 monthly fixed payment covering admin, stop-loss, and expected claims. Total: $1.236M annually. Year-end actual claims: $847,000. Surplus refund: $73,000. Effective cost: $1.163M vs. $1.57M renewal. Savings: $407,000. The real win? Visibility. They discovered 6 employees with chronic conditions weren't getting proper care management. Added health coaching and medication monitoring. Year 2 claims for those employees: down 34%. Better health outcomes, lower costs. Also found their PBM charging undisclosed $180-per-claim admin fees. Renegotiated them out. Another $94,000 saved annually. Two-year savings vs. staying fully-insured: $763,000. "Too small for self-funded" means "I don't want to do the work." Most 50-250 employee companies can self-fund successfully with proper structure and stop-loss coverage. The question isn't size. It's whether your advisor will actually work. You're not too small for transparency. You're not too small for control. You're not too small to deserve an advisor who earns their commission.
Savings opportunities in insurance operations
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Summary
Savings opportunities in insurance operations refer to strategies that companies can use to reduce the costs and improve the efficiency of their insurance plans, often by moving away from standard approaches and taking a more hands-on, proactive role in managing policies and claims. By reevaluating how insurance is funded and administered, businesses can achieve substantial financial benefits while still maintaining strong coverage for employees.
- Review funding options: Consider alternatives to traditional coverage, such as self-funding or captives, to gain greater control over costs, transparency, and plan design.
- Scrutinize pharmacy contracts: Take a close look at your pharmacy benefit manager agreements and utilization patterns to uncover hidden fees and negotiate better terms.
- Restructure plan and network: Design your insurance plan to guide employees toward quality, cost-efficient healthcare providers and services, reducing unnecessary expenses for both the company and staff.
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What if your ‘inevitable’ 10% health plan increase wasn’t inevitable? If you’re fully insured, you’ve probably already seen the renewal letters this year. Double-digit trends. Shrugging carriers. “It is what it is.” But what if it isn’t? Say you have a $2M annual health plan. At a 10% trend, here’s what that looks like over 5 years: $2M → $3.22M Now, what if we got that trend down to 4% through actual operational management—claims oversight, transparent PBM contracting, advanced primary care, and data-driven vendor accountability? That same plan ends up at $2.43M. That’s an $800K+ difference. And that doesn’t even include the first-year 10–40% savings that employers typically see when they transition away from the fully insured status quo. That’s an additional $200K to $800K reduction in year one alone— compounded every year after. Now think like a CFO: If your business runs on a 10% EBITDA margin, that $800K in operational savings is equivalent to generating $8 million in new revenue. And unlike new revenue, these savings come without adding a single headcount or customer. You don’t need to blow up your plan. You just need to manage it like every other mission-critical cost center.
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Rethink Rising Premiums: A Smarter Strategy for Your Benefits Renewal As renewal season approaches, many business owners and financial leaders are bracing for yet another year of rising health insurance premiums. But sticking with the status quo could mean missing out on substantial savings and smarter risk management. Now is the time to explore innovative funding models—like self-insured captives—that put you back in control. Captives are no longer just for large corporations. Small and mid-sized businesses are increasingly turning to this model to: • Reduce costs by beating the average PEPY (Per Employee Per Year) spend • Gain transparency into claims and plan performance • Customize benefits to better serve employees and dependents • Mitigate risk while maintaining flexibility If you're tired of unpredictable renewals and limited options, it's time to move beyond the comfort zone. Forward-thinking companies are already making the shift—don’t get left behind. Whether you have 50 employees or 500, let’s talk and start the conversation now. Explore how a captive strategy could transform your benefits plan and unlock meaningful savings for your organization. #renewalrates #healtcarecosts #riskmitigation #creativebenefitsolutions
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I just helped an employer turn a 34% health insurance increase into $215,000 in annual savings. Most employers accept double digit renewals because they think there's no other choice. This client was facing a 34% increase from UHC and almost gave up. Instead, I applied the Remodel Benefits framework and went beyond the traditional fully-insured market. The result? Not just massive savings, but improved benefits and access to claims data they never had before. The numbers tell the whole story, and they prove you have more control than your current broker is telling you. Click to read the full breakdown of exactly how I did it.
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