Showing posts with label benefit plans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label benefit plans. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Money back guarentee
Equitable Life, a company I have a good relationship with and have enjoyed working with in the past has a new offering I wanted to touch on briefly.
They are calling it Rate Shield, and it is essentially a mini “Refund” plan. Normally Refund is reserved for 100+ member groups, and only one of two carriers still offer it. Equitable will do a Refund plan on your first renewal of a small group starting at 10 members.
It works like this.
If you claim less than your Target Loss Ratio (TLR), you get a refund of the difference. You will recall that the TLR is essentially the ratio of administration expenses and Claims Paid. So an example of a TLR of 80.5% means: 19.5% of your premium is going to admin, and the rest, 80.5% is going to pay claims.
Let’s say your Extended Health Care premium is $30,000 per year, your TLR is 80.5% and at your first renewal you actually claimed 76.5%. You claimed 4% less than budgeted (80.5% - 76.5% = 4%) so in reality you overpaid by 4%. Not any more, Equitable Life will refund you 4% of your premium (4% x $30,000 = $1200).
You get a cheque for $1200, well not quite, they do charge a $100 admin fee so the cheque is for $1100.Still pretty good. It is a shame they will only do it for the first renewal, I would love to see it as a permanent feature.
On a side note, I have always found that Equitable Life's renewal are very fair, the rates they come up with are almost always dead on what I calculate independently. This basically never happens with any other carrier, except possibly Wawanesa.
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Robert Reynolds, GBA
Certified Group Benefits Advisor
Hendry McKenzie Reynolds Employee Benefits Ltd.
Toll Free: 1-888-592-4614
rob@hmrinsurance.ca
www.hmrinsurance.ca
E.O. E.
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Sound off in the comments
Google Analytics is telling me I am getting about 500 unique visitors per month, wow!
Most are being driven here through Google Searches, and most are in Canada, using Internet Explorer during office hours. Who is out there? Human Resources people? other insurance advisors? employees? business owners?
Are you finding what you are looking for? Is there something I haven't touched on that you would like to see more information on? Are you in British Columbia and you want to try me out as your benefits advisor? [shameless plug] ;)
Let me know in the comments below, you can post anonymously, no need to sign in.
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Robert Reynolds, GBA
Certified Group Benefits Advisor
Hendry McKenzie Reynolds Employee Benefits Ltd.
Toll Free: 1-888-592-4614
rob@hmrinsurance.ca
www.hmrinsurance.ca
E.O. E.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
What is the absolute cheapest way to run a benefits plan?
1) You need to be big. Rates improve dramatically when you get to above 50+ lives. Size also opens up additional funding methods such as Refund or Self Insurance.
2) Break out lines of benefits. The carrier that provides the best Life Insurance rate, may not have the best rate for Health Care. Some carriers have sharper pencils or specialize in certain areas. RBC provides really good LTD rates and coverage, but has no health or dental. Green Shield has good rates with health and dental but no pooled benefits such as life insurance. If you want the best rates the market has to offer you need to place the benefits with the carrier that can offer the best rate. This usually results in 2 carriers at least, one for pooled lines and one for health and dental.
3) Manage it yourself as much as possible: With more than one carrier this can get complex. Sure there are Third Party Administrators (TPA) which will help organize and manage the complexity but they will want a slice of the pie. Also, If you advisor doesn’t have to renegotiate renewals or fight over getting claims paid, why pay full price? Negotiate a flat annual fee, or a dollar per hour rate.
4) Embrace volatility. Pooled rates might be slightly lower if you take a shorter guaranteed of 12 months over 24 or 36 months.
5) Self Insure. Health and Dental benefits have big margins in premiums for risk premiums. By self insuring you take the risk and save the charges. You will want a stop loss policy for big health care claims however
6) Fee for service or percent of paid claims. Self insured plans are usually priced as a percentage of claims paid. IE: if a health care claim of $100 was paid, the administrator charges 10% or $10 to process the claim. Most plans use a percent of paid claims. Bare bones paper pushing can get as low as 6-8% before advisor compensation. Health care is usually more expensive than dental care. A less popular but equally valid approach is a flat fee per claim. With this method it doesn’t matter if the claim is $5 or $500 the administrator charges a flat cost to process each claim. Dental claims are usually a buck or two, pay direct drug claims are a few cents. Something more time consuming like a paper paramedical claim might be $5-$10 each.
TL;DR
- Be big
- Shop each line of benefit individually (Pooled lines: RBC Insurance, SSQ, IAP. Health and Dental: Green Shield, Blue Cross, Claim Secure)
- Take some risk.
--
Robert Reynolds, GBA
Certified Group Benefits Advisor
Hendry McKenzie Reynolds Employee Benefits Ltd.
Toll Free: 1-888-592-4614
rob@hmrinsurance.ca
www.hmrinsurance.ca
E.O. E.
Monday, January 31, 2011
Potential conflict of interest
I just wanted to get this out of the way, I have a potential conflict of interest with regards to new Great West Life insurance policies. As I have talked about here in the past, I am paid primarily through commission for selling polices. The way the commission structure works is shown below in an example.
Say I sell a Term 10 Life policy, which has an annual premium of $1000. I get paid a basic commission of 40% of the first years premium, or in this case $400. Now, this rate is pretty standard for all carriers, they pretty much all pay the same basic commissions.
Term 10 = 40%
Term 20 = 50%
Living Benefits (CI, LTD) = 55%
Whole Life, Universal Life, Term 100 = 70%
There is a slight conflict if one were to try and up sell to a more expensive carrier for an equal product, but that doesn't really ever happen as the market pressure for the lowest rate keeps the least expensive policies on top.
Now the part where the conflict comes in, is that there is a second layer of compensation, sometimes called a Bonus or Over ride. The issuing company decides on what Override they would like to pay to an advisor, it usually ranges from 100% to 150% of the basic commission. With GWL I used to have an override of 130%. So on the sample policy above, I would make $400 in base commission and then get a bonus or override of $520 for a total compensation of $920. The override is tied to a level of production, if you don't produce for the company you get a lower bonus. If you produce a lot you get a higher bonus. I received word that my production has not been high enough recently and my override with Great West Life has been reduced from 130% to 0%. Ouch.
I would love to say that the compensation doesn't determine where I place business, and to the most part it is true. I have companies I like dealing with, which includes GWL, and others which I can't recommend. All things being equal, I will always recommend the best product at the best price for my clients, however, I have to eat, and pay my bills as well. Taking more than a 50% pay cut for the same amount of work is hard to overlook. I have put a good amount of business with GWL over the years, I like them as a company, I like their product line especially their Group, Term and Living Benefits products. However, I like Equitable's Term just as much, I like RBC's Living Benefits just as much, and I like Manulife and Sun Life's Group just as much.
So if I have an equal product from another company which will pay me twice as much I am going to have to recommend the one that pays me better. Now this is not to say that I would ever recommend an inferior product just because I get paid more. I am talking strictly apples to apples, comparisons here. Manulife's group product is just as good as GWL's, RBCs Disability policies are just as good as GWL's. The rates are often nearly identical as well. So is it wrong to recommend an equal product to a client on the basis that I know I will make twice as much commission?
In short, I won't be recommending Great West Life policies any more unless absolutely necessary.
I think the only way to solve this is to provide total disclosure on what I get paid. In the next few days I will be working on a new disclosure statement which breaks down my commissions and bonus rates for all the companies I deal with.
--
Robert Reynolds, GBA
Certified Group Benefits Advisor
Hendry McKenzie Reynolds Employee Benefits Ltd.
Toll Free: 1-888-592-4614
rob@hmrinsurance.ca
www.hmrinsurance.ca
E.O. E.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Creative Saving
I have lots of tricks up my sleeve for saving bits of money here and there on benefit plans. Here is a list of some of the creative things I can do for your company to help either reduce, or control your benefit plan costs.
One of the more creative ways of controlling benefit costs is to make your employees more savvy consumers. If they were going out on their own to purchase prescription drugs or professional services with their own money you can be sure they would try and find the best price and value they could for their hard earned dollars. But because most plans are as easy as “Swipe, and go” employees often don’t think of way to save money. It all seems free to them.
First prescription fills are often the most wasted. When an employee is prescribed a new drug there are many unknowns, will it fix the problem? Will it have side effects? Will the problem go away before the prescription is used up? Most plans have a 3 months supply limit, where the maximum amount of drugs that can be dispensed at any one time is equal to 3 months. We can set up your plan to limit the maximum supply of the first and only the first time a new drug is dispensed. This is a slight inconvenience if the member needs to go for a refill, but each subsequent refill will be for 3 months. The benefits here are that if the drug in question is has some side effects or is ineffective, only a month is wasted, rather than 3 months.
Dispensing Fees can eat up a lot of plan dollars, for small prescriptions or for prescription of some low cost drugs like antibiotics the $12 dispensing fee you might pay is more than the cost of the medication. Going hand in hand with high dispensing fees are high drug prices. Costco or Wal-Mart have low dispensing fees and often similarly low drug costs, where small or private pharmacies might charge two or three times as much to dispense the same drug, they often also charge a premium for the ingredient as well. Making the employee pay the dispensing fee firstly reduces the costs directly paid by the plan, as well as it makes members shop around for a cheaper dispensing fee (and as a result cheaper drug costs). I have a list of dispensing fees by pharmacy located at this page on my blog.
Say no to 100% reimbursement. Plans will often have 80% coverage for Drugs or dental, but will occasionally leave the professional services (massage, chiropractor, naturopath etc.) at 100% coverage. Because employees see these services as “free” they will tend to take advantage and max out their benefits regardless of if they need the treatment for medical reasons or not. Massage therapy is especially notorious for this. When the member has some skin in the game, a 20% co-pay or even a $5 user fee, they think twice before spending recklessly.
Physicians recommendations can also be added to paramedical plans, so before a claims will be reimbursed the member must provide written medical evidence, usually in the form of a prescription from their doctor. The recommendations ensure that the treatment received is medically necessary. These referrals are easy for members actually suffering a problem to
Ensuring proper Co-ordination of benefits can help improve the coverage employees receive as well as improve the bottom line of your plan. if employees have duplicate coverage under their spouses plan, ensure that they are properly setup to take advantage of Co-Ordination of Benefits. If there is duplicate coverage, some of the bills invoiced on your plan perhaps could have been paid under the spouses plan, reducing the total impact on your claims history.
Deferred Drug Cards (DDC) are a new type of drug cards which have been popular in Quebec for some time but are now just branching out to the rest of the country. Great West Life is a big supporter of Deferred Drug Cards out west. DDC work similar to a Pay Direct Drug Card (PDDC) they allow electronic claims tracking, formulary control, and other benefits brought about by a normal drug card, however, the way the member get reimbursed is different. With a Direct Drug Card the member only pays their portion of the claim as defined by their co-pay. In a plan with an 80% co-pay and a $100 claim, the member only remits $20 to the pharmacy as their share. However, with a Deferred Drug Card the member pays the whole claim cost of $100 out of pocket. The claim starts a timer, the employee will be electronically reimbursed directly to their bank account as soon as one of two conditions is met.
1) A predefined time period elapses, say 30 days from the claim.
2) A predefined out of pocket maximum is reached, say $150.
The employee is out of pocket $100 from their drug claim. Because the member had to pay upfront they take on a more consumer savvy attitude, they think before they buy. The member might decide to go to a cheaper pharmacy, purchase a less expensive drug, take a smaller supply or simply decide they don’t need the prescription filled after all. These choices all reduce the cost of the plan. Once the time period is reached, again lets assume 30 days, an electronic fund transfer takes place and deposits $80 to the members bank account. Similarly, if they incurred another claim inside that 30 day period, which exceeded the out of pocket maximum of $150, the covered portion is deposited to the members account.
All of these ideas revolve around making your employees better consumers. Take advantage of cheaper vendors, utilize other available coverage, think before you spend. None of these changes create huge savings up front, they do however help control claims and rates over time. The cost of benefit plans is rapidly increasing all the time, these are all perfect ways to slow that increase down.
--
Robert Reynolds, GBA
Certified Group Benefits Advisor
Hendry McKenzie Reynolds Employee Benefits Ltd.
Toll Free: 1-888-592-4614
rob@hmrinsurance.ca
www.hmrinsurance.ca
E.O. E.
One of the more creative ways of controlling benefit costs is to make your employees more savvy consumers. If they were going out on their own to purchase prescription drugs or professional services with their own money you can be sure they would try and find the best price and value they could for their hard earned dollars. But because most plans are as easy as “Swipe, and go” employees often don’t think of way to save money. It all seems free to them.
First prescription fills are often the most wasted. When an employee is prescribed a new drug there are many unknowns, will it fix the problem? Will it have side effects? Will the problem go away before the prescription is used up? Most plans have a 3 months supply limit, where the maximum amount of drugs that can be dispensed at any one time is equal to 3 months. We can set up your plan to limit the maximum supply of the first and only the first time a new drug is dispensed. This is a slight inconvenience if the member needs to go for a refill, but each subsequent refill will be for 3 months. The benefits here are that if the drug in question is has some side effects or is ineffective, only a month is wasted, rather than 3 months.
Dispensing Fees can eat up a lot of plan dollars, for small prescriptions or for prescription of some low cost drugs like antibiotics the $12 dispensing fee you might pay is more than the cost of the medication. Going hand in hand with high dispensing fees are high drug prices. Costco or Wal-Mart have low dispensing fees and often similarly low drug costs, where small or private pharmacies might charge two or three times as much to dispense the same drug, they often also charge a premium for the ingredient as well. Making the employee pay the dispensing fee firstly reduces the costs directly paid by the plan, as well as it makes members shop around for a cheaper dispensing fee (and as a result cheaper drug costs). I have a list of dispensing fees by pharmacy located at this page on my blog.
Say no to 100% reimbursement. Plans will often have 80% coverage for Drugs or dental, but will occasionally leave the professional services (massage, chiropractor, naturopath etc.) at 100% coverage. Because employees see these services as “free” they will tend to take advantage and max out their benefits regardless of if they need the treatment for medical reasons or not. Massage therapy is especially notorious for this. When the member has some skin in the game, a 20% co-pay or even a $5 user fee, they think twice before spending recklessly.
Physicians recommendations can also be added to paramedical plans, so before a claims will be reimbursed the member must provide written medical evidence, usually in the form of a prescription from their doctor. The recommendations ensure that the treatment received is medically necessary. These referrals are easy for members actually suffering a problem to
Ensuring proper Co-ordination of benefits can help improve the coverage employees receive as well as improve the bottom line of your plan. if employees have duplicate coverage under their spouses plan, ensure that they are properly setup to take advantage of Co-Ordination of Benefits. If there is duplicate coverage, some of the bills invoiced on your plan perhaps could have been paid under the spouses plan, reducing the total impact on your claims history.
Deferred Drug Cards (DDC) are a new type of drug cards which have been popular in Quebec for some time but are now just branching out to the rest of the country. Great West Life is a big supporter of Deferred Drug Cards out west. DDC work similar to a Pay Direct Drug Card (PDDC) they allow electronic claims tracking, formulary control, and other benefits brought about by a normal drug card, however, the way the member get reimbursed is different. With a Direct Drug Card the member only pays their portion of the claim as defined by their co-pay. In a plan with an 80% co-pay and a $100 claim, the member only remits $20 to the pharmacy as their share. However, with a Deferred Drug Card the member pays the whole claim cost of $100 out of pocket. The claim starts a timer, the employee will be electronically reimbursed directly to their bank account as soon as one of two conditions is met.
1) A predefined time period elapses, say 30 days from the claim.
2) A predefined out of pocket maximum is reached, say $150.
The employee is out of pocket $100 from their drug claim. Because the member had to pay upfront they take on a more consumer savvy attitude, they think before they buy. The member might decide to go to a cheaper pharmacy, purchase a less expensive drug, take a smaller supply or simply decide they don’t need the prescription filled after all. These choices all reduce the cost of the plan. Once the time period is reached, again lets assume 30 days, an electronic fund transfer takes place and deposits $80 to the members bank account. Similarly, if they incurred another claim inside that 30 day period, which exceeded the out of pocket maximum of $150, the covered portion is deposited to the members account.
All of these ideas revolve around making your employees better consumers. Take advantage of cheaper vendors, utilize other available coverage, think before you spend. None of these changes create huge savings up front, they do however help control claims and rates over time. The cost of benefit plans is rapidly increasing all the time, these are all perfect ways to slow that increase down.
--
Robert Reynolds, GBA
Certified Group Benefits Advisor
Hendry McKenzie Reynolds Employee Benefits Ltd.
Toll Free: 1-888-592-4614
rob@hmrinsurance.ca
www.hmrinsurance.ca
E.O. E.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Youtube
I am on the Youtubes
Believe it or not this was the best take out of about 10...
Olympia Trust http://www.olympiatrust.com/
Great for sole proprietors as it allows you to send in funding with claims, you dont have to prefund the trust.
Benecaid https://www.benecaid.com/
Great for employee groups as there is no setup fee, the trust can be funded monthly, quarterly or annually.
Blog Post on Health and Welfare Trusts http://canadianlifeandhealthinsurance.blogspot.com/2009/10/private-health-services-plans-aka.html
--
Robert Reynolds, GBA
Certified Group Benefits Advisor
Hendry McKenzie Reynolds Employee Benefits Ltd.
Toll Free: 1-888-592-4614
rob@hmrinsurance.ca
www.hmrinsurance.ca
E.O. E.
Believe it or not this was the best take out of about 10...
Olympia Trust http://www.olympiatrust.com/
Great for sole proprietors as it allows you to send in funding with claims, you dont have to prefund the trust.
Benecaid https://www.benecaid.com/
Great for employee groups as there is no setup fee, the trust can be funded monthly, quarterly or annually.
Blog Post on Health and Welfare Trusts http://canadianlifeandhealthinsurance.blogspot.com/2009/10/private-health-services-plans-aka.html
--
Robert Reynolds, GBA
Certified Group Benefits Advisor
Hendry McKenzie Reynolds Employee Benefits Ltd.
Toll Free: 1-888-592-4614
rob@hmrinsurance.ca
www.hmrinsurance.ca
E.O. E.
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