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Farron Blanc: L&G America

Episode #38

On this episode of Scouting for Growth, Sabine VdL interviews Farron Blanc, VP, Brokerage Distribution & Strategy at Legal & General America (L&G America) where he works with an amazing team of innovators to drive growth within life insurance by leveraging emerging technologies to accelerate opportunities within the brokerage channels.

Farron is an entrepreneur too. He started Gerry, a concierge Service platform that used data and licensed Social Workers to help thousands of Americans to navigate requirements and deliver the right support within the long-term senior care space. Farron and his team sold the company in 2021 which is when he made his move to L&G America. 

 

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Iā€™ve been at Legal & General for about three months. L&G America is the worldā€™s 11th largest asset manager, but in the US itā€™s a really nimble business. As a corporation, weā€™ve invested so much in digital. One of the things Iā€™m really passionate about is how to help the underserved get adequate, affordable protection through term life insurance. You have to use technology to reach customers today and empower brokers to do that most effectively. Iā€™m loving it!
  • On the entrepreneurial side, in a venture-backed startup with $4, $10, or $100 million USD, money doesnā€™t solve anything because ā€“ until youā€™re a big tech like Amazon, Apple, or Google  ā€“ that money is an investment in the future and you will have to raise more capital in 12-18 months to scale. So the default mode is death as youā€™ll run out of money at some point because you won't be profitable. Profit is indeed still the rule of the game.
  • Another thing people donā€™t understand is that when people give you funding or a specific amount of money, this funding amount comes with expectations. For some a $1 billion USD (Unicorn level) exit isnā€™t big enough, even if theyā€™re only writing a $2 million USD cheque, they want to be in markets where companies can do $10 billion USD exits (Decacorn level.) If you can understand those metrics, the unit economics, and the expectations then you will do well. As an entrepreneur, you need to stay focused and stay relevant while hitting all the milestones you promised to your investors so that you get there.
  • Within a corporation, the main challenge is actually "speed time to market". You may have distribution, but you may not have innovation because youā€™re so efficient (e.g., you have processes, best practice committees, procedures, and meetings to ensure that everything that is done gets super efficient.) Tech giants like Amazon, Netflix, Apple, and Google do phenomenally well at attracting talent to be able to attack a problem internally, and then by buying companies externally.
  • At L&G America, we want to cover the largest amount of families with affordable protection. The only way to do that is by using technology to digitize the process and personalize engagements and internal processes (i.e., rates, the experience, the journey that the policyholder goes through) from designing products, underwriting, or ensuring efficient claims. Weā€™re probably the market leader in the application part of the process. Still, we have so much work to do on the back end. You then have to work with partners in distribution to optimize all this. Iā€™d love to be proved otherwise, particularly in the life insurance or mortality coverage spaces. Let's remember that insurance is sold not bought. No one wants to talk about death. The best way to sell it is through independent distribution, reaching out to the customer, and engaging with them in the way they want to engage and met. Thereā€™s no one magic bullet.

 

BEST MOMENTS

ā€˜Iā€™ve always been fascinated by problems and whatā€™s the best way to solve them. Sometimes itā€™s a clean sheet of paper with no rules and sometimes itā€™s leveraging a 100-year-old brand with a $40 billion USD balance sheet.ā€™ 

ā€˜As long as youā€™re rapidly learning and re-assessing your challenges and assumptions, thatā€™s the most enriching part.ā€™

ā€˜Within corporate venturing, you must have a strategic return lens on things. Whereas financial VCs are purely looking at gross IRR or total value paid-in capital and multiples. You have to look beyond the numbers even though they are so important.ā€™

ā€˜The response to the global financial crisis of 2008 was to print more money to avoid a global depression. I think that worked, but it inflated asset prices and we were at a 0% interest rate environment for essentially two decades meaning long-term contracts started to fall apart. What does the value of money mean now? Itā€™s a debt obligation, but the rapid inflation weā€™re seeing means itā€™s going to be really interesting to see how weā€™re going to ride that out, how does being in an era of superabundant capital impact peopleā€™s subscriptions?ā€™

 

ABOUT THE GUEST

Farron Blanc and his team help L&G America drive growth by leveraging technology throughout the broker channel. Prior to that, as co-founder and CEO of Gerry, Farron raised $3.75M of VC funding to start the startup - a concierge service that used data and licensed Social Workers, helping thousands of Americans navigate long-term senior care. Farron told us that he sold the business in the middle of 2021.

Farron was named by Digital Insurance as one of the 20 Insurance Innovators to know, as well as one of the top 35 young executives by Intelligent Insurer in 2017. 

Farron is a recovering global reinsurer, corporate VC, life insurance carrier President, BCG Strategy Consultant, and insurance Chief Marketing Officer with deep Asian and North American startup and corporate experience. Ensure to reach out to Farron, he is such an amazing expert, influencer and person. 

Website: https://www.lgamerica.com/ 

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/farron/ 

 

ABOUT THE HOST

There are over 140,000 FinTech ventures out there, including FinTechs, InsurTechs, HealthTechs, and WealthTechs. And the number keeps on changing every month. One statistic remains the same: 25% of these ventures have received investment and support from the financing world. 75% of these businesses still seek financing support from institutional and corporate investors alongside value-creating commercial collaboration opportunities with Global Fortune 500. 

Through this podcast series, I would like to demystify the world of corporate venturing, including how corporations collaborate with growth ventures, how venture capitalists and corporate venture capitalists make investment and collaboration choices in ventures and give tech founders and entrepreneurs, the strategies, tactics, tools, and techniques to build, grow and scale their business by understanding how those with financing power think. So, listen in, share and comment as you see fit.

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