- Published on: June 29, 2026
Automation can seem overwhelming for many agencies, often raising questions about priorities, implementation, and impact.
This 8‑step guide helps agencies identify a focused starting point, implement automation, and scale to achieve measurable, sustainable outcomes.
Step 1: Recognize the Cost of Staying Manual
Before deciding what to automate, take an honest look at what manual work is costing your agency today.
1. Are your teams spending significant time each day on tasks that add no strategic value?
2. Have errors in manual processes led to client dissatisfaction or compliance issues?
3. Are operational bottlenecks preventing you from scaling or responding quickly to new business?
4. Could freeing staff from repetitive work allow them to focus on client-facing or revenue-generating activity?
If most of those apply, the sign for automation is already clear. The next step is knowing where to act first.
Step 2: Identify the Right Process to Start With
Not every process is ready for automation, and trying to automate everything at once is one of the most common reasons agencies stall before they start.
Use this filter to find your starting point:
Among all the tasks your team performs, which one takes too long?
Then run it through three criteria:
- Is it repetitive and high-volume? Look for tasks your team does often, not just what feels most painful in the moment.
- Is it rule-based? Can this task be completed by following a defined set of steps without someone making a judgment call each time? If yes, it is a strong reason to automate.
- Is it quietly causing frustration daily? The task nobody wants to own. That is usually where automation delivers the most immediate and visible return.
Step 3: Map How the Process Actually Works Today
Before building anything, document the current workflow from start to finish. This does not need to be complex. Walk through the steps your team follows, note where handoffs happen, where delays occur, and where errors tend to show up.
This step matters for two reasons:
- It helps you identify where automation can create an impact.
- It gives you a baseline to measure improvement once the automation is running.
Step 4: Set a Clear Goal for What Automation Should Achieve
Automation should serve a specific business outcome.
Before moving forward, define what success looks like.
Examples:
- Reduce manual processing time on reconciliations by 40%
- Eliminate missed cancellation notices by monitoring carrier portals automatically
- Free up staff hours currently spent on document retrieval
Having a defined goal keeps the project focused and gives leadership a concrete result to evaluate.
Step 5: Start with what works for you
The right approach is to start small, show results, and build from there. Three workflows that consistently deliver strong early results for insurance agencies are:
Policy Renewals: Automatically retrieving renewal data and updating internal systems, reducing the manual back-and-forth across carrier portals.
Direct Bill Reconciliation: Matching carrier payments against agency records to eliminate hours of manual review each week.
Notice of Cancellations: Monitoring carrier portals, triggering alerts, and updating records without manual intervention.
Step 6: Bring Your Team into the Process Early
Automation initiatives fail when teams are not prepared for them. Staff often worry about job displacement. The reality is that automation removes low-value manual work, so people can spend more time on client service, retention, and work that requires human judgment.
Involve your team before deployment. Provide training so people feel confident working alongside automated systems. When staff see automation as support, adoption is faster and smoother.
Learn more about it in our article about Change Management.
Step 7: Choose the Right Automation Tool
Insurance workflows require precision, security, and domain knowledge that generic automation tools often lack. When evaluating a technology automation tool, look for:
- Proven experience with insurance operations and carrier workflows
- Seamless integration with your AMS, CRM, and policy management tools
- Clear compliance and data security standards
Step 8: Build a Roadmap for What Comes Next
Once the first workflow is running, the conversation in your agency will shift from “where do we start” to “what do we automate next.” At that point, a structured roadmap keeps expansion on track.
A scalable roadmap includes:
Pilot insights: Reviewing early-stage outcomes and challenges.
Next-phase priorities: Identifying adjacent workflows to automate.
Governance: Defining ownership, access controls, and decision traceability.
Continuous improvement: Refining workflows and performance over time.
Automation starts with one clear step. Progress comes from improving processes and proving results. When teams experience reduced manual workload, fewer errors, and more time for meaningful work, automation shifts from being an operational change to a business advantage.
Ready to take the first step towards automation? Talk to our experts to find your ideal starting point