Chicago, Illinois: September 24, 2024 -- The 15th annual Extended Warranty & Service Contract Innovations
conference was held from September 23rd to 25th, 2024, once again at the Palmer House Hilton in Chicago. It
was a week filled with valuable conversations, intriguing presentations and panels, knowledge sharing, and
networking, and a highlight of the year for our industry. And this year, to honor the milestone 15th
anniversary of this conference, the first-ever Warranty Innovation Awards were presented and bestowed.
These awards are especially meaningful because they were peer-voted, so these companies and individuals were
selected by fellow warranty professionals as shining examples of the excellence for which we strive in this
industry.
There were five award categories, which recognized and showcased "innovation and excellence" in the warranty
and service contract industry. Four of these awards recognized corporate entities, with the exception of
Warranty Industry Champion, which was bestowed to an individual.
The five awards, and the winners, were:
Roz Applebaum of the Strategic Solutions Network presents Tim
Meenan of Meenan P.A. with his Warranty Industry Champion award,
September 24, 2024
The Warranty Innovation Awards were the brainchild of Roz Applebaum, the Vice President of Conferences at
the Strategic Solutions Network, and organizer of the Warranty Innovations conferences, who many in the
industry have dubbed the "queen of warranty conferences." Over the course of more than a year, Applebaum
first created a Brainstorming Committee to design the award categories and their descriptions. Once that
work was complete, Applebaum formed the Awards Steering Committee, comprised of industry icons and veterans,
to oversee the administration of the nomination and voting periods for the awards.
The Awards Steering Committee was comprised of: Roz Applebaum, VP of Conferences at Strategic Solutions
Network; Eric Arnum, Publisher of Warranty Week; Travis Moore, General Counsel of the Service Contract
Industry Council (SCIC); Gregory Myers, Executive Managing Director of Brown & Brown; Paul Swenson, Senior
Vice President of Domestic & General; and Dan Tafel, Chief Development Officer of Ironwood Warranty Group.
First, there was a three-month open nomination period, where anyone in the warranty industry could suggest
nominees for the awards categories, based on the descriptions that Applebaum and the Steering Committee had
crafted. Then, the committee reviewed and selected the nominees, and oversaw the voting period, which lasted
for about a month.
Applebaum's dedication to fairness, and her unbiased administration of these awards with the help of the
Steering Committee, is a testament to her understanding of and respect for the warranty industry.
Warranty Innovation Awards at the Palmer House Hilton,
September 24, 2024
We had the privilege of sitting down with some of the award winners to learn about the best practices and innovations that inspired their peers to select them as recipients of the first-ever Warranty Innovation Awards.
The Innovative Product Design was awarded to Bolt Solutions and Choice Home Warranty, which have
collaborated to sell both home warranty and mobile phone protection together using the Bolt
platform. We spoke to Jim Mostofi, the CEO of Choice Home Warranty, and Clay Bodnarek, the Executive
Vice President of Alternative Distribution at Bolt Solutions
"Bolt tech is a leader in providing a platform for insurance agents and brokers to sell and
distribute all sorts of insurance across the United States, and across the world," Mostofi said.
"One of the things that the brokers and agents were looking for is the ability to sell additional
products, beyond auto insurance, and homeowners' insurance, and other types of more traditional
insurance, and using that platform to sell both home warranty and mobile handset protection is what
brought this partnership together."
Bodnarek told us that this partnership was a case of "serendipitous timing." He continued, "Jim knew
I had
moved over to Bolt, and I knew Jim from working with him before, and knew that he was at Choice. So
we
started to explore ways that we could work together. It just seemed like the Venn diagram should
overlap."
Mostofi expanded on that notion of fate bringing the two companies together for this collaboration. It
wasn't just that Bodnarek and Mostofi were already familiar with each other professionally. Mostofi stated,
"I knew that Bolt tech was a leader in providing access to insurance brokers all over the country, and I
knew that Choice was a leader in providing home warranties to those homeowners. Bolt tech also had a
complementary mobile handset protection product. And so, because of both of our respective core
competencies, it made sense to put them together to bring home warranties and mobile phone products to
brokers and agents."
Mostofi also remarked on why mobile phone protection specifically was so appealing to Choice Home Warranty
and its consumers. "That's what consumers want. They're less concerned these days about protecting their
big-screen TV. When you can purchase a brand-new big-screen TV for a few hundred dollars, it's not as much
of a concern to consumers as it used to be. But what is a heightened concern now is protecting the mobile
phone, because everyone is under contract, they want to return a phone in good working order at the end of
that contract. It's just much more desirable than traditional consumer electronics coverage."
Bodnarek added, "In terms of the consumer value proposition, and what coverage they have, we really
focused on delivering a relatively low-cost, but high-optics, high value, product. And as such, we
did it as a service contract product that would cover accidental damage, liquid damage, malfunction,
and breakdown, the core things that would typically happen to a device."
Bodnarek remarked that there's two components of this partnership that are especially innovative.
"First, Jim teed up the innovation of being able to offer a home warranty, and broadened
distribution. There's a lot of innovation around the whole Bolt platform that enables that, for
thousands of agents across the country. Second, the mobile device product going into that home
warranty is completely different than the traditional products that are out there. The innovation on
that is there's a 100% digital claims journey." Furthermore, Bodnarek said, "Using that digital
journey, there's no need to pre-register. You register at the time of making the claim, so whichever
phone broke is the one that you're registering. That innovation makes it fit well inside of the
overall journey that the Choice team can provide."
In addition, Mostofi said, "Home warranty is a new distribution channel for protecting consumers' products.
The biggest differentiator between home warranty, and it could be other similar channels, is that instead of
insuring a product, you're focused on insuring a customer, and the products that they own. So that's the
innovation. That's why it's growing, is because of the changing distribution channels. People don't go to
stores anymore, they buy online, they buy in all sorts of omni-distribution channels. It's easier now. It's
shifting to, if you can protect the customer, you cover all of the distribution channels that they use,
instead of trying to sell a warranty at each of the individual distribution channels."
Bodnarek concluded that it was the perfect time to introduce this partnership, since the definition of home
has changed, to a certain degree, since COVID. "Where we have landed in this post-COVID era," Bodnarek said,
"and with the amount of remote work that's taking place, is that 'home' is a little bit different now. So
you'll see that there's innovation happening across the board, whether it's home warranty, homeowners'
insurance, renters' insurance — there's an expectation from the consumer that they need somewhat different
protection, because they're using their homes differently."
The Transformative Technology Innovation award went to the partnership between Tavant, a leading provider of
service life-cycle management (SLM) solutions, and Daimler Truck North America, the largest heavy-duty truck
manufacturer in North America. While Tavant and Daimler Truck have been working together for years, this
newest collaboration, leveraging Tavant's generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) tools, along with its
warranty and service life-cycle management platform, to enable Daimler Truck North America to enhance
customer experience and dealer efficiency, represents a significant expansion.
Daimler Truck North America is leveraging Tavant's Service Lifecycle Management (SLM) solutions, which are a
"comprehensive suite of modules, encompassing warranty registration, inventory management, claims
management, and service analytics," according to apress
release published by Tavant about the collaboration. Tavant's platform and SLM solutions allow
Daimler Truck North America to "improve claim data, empower users to create ad-hoc reports, and leverage
machine learning to predict standard repair processes."
This partnership utilizes generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) to allow dealers to "search for vehicle
information using natural language." This includes a code prediction feature, which utilizes text and
vehicle maintenance reporting standards (VMRS) code analysis to make accurate code analysis, helping dealers
standardize coding and process warranty claims. Advanced reporting tools help make submitting required data
for regulatory reporting easier.
The use of GenAI on the part of manufacturers and dealers to streamline warranty claims processing is
transformative technology, and this partnership between Tavant and Daimler Truck North America is at the
forefront of innovation.
The Operational Performance & Administrative Excellence award highlights companies that "streamlined
their back-office processes to deliver excellent service, while maximizing return on investment,"
according to the Warranty Innovation Awards.
We spoke to Bijoy Jha, the Vice President of Financial Services & New Business Ventures, from award
winner Brunswick Corp., a global leader in the marine recreation and technology industry.
Jha told us, "A service contract product is only as good as how good you are at paying the claims.
Anybody can sell you a warranty or a service contract, but how do you behave when there are claims
and you have to pay them?"
Jha said, what's important from a consumer perspective is, "how efficient we are at paying, and how
quick we are. It's important to remember that behind every claim, there is a customer who is looking
to get back on the water very quickly. That is where the efficiency, and how we do these things, is
really important." He continued, "When they are at the dealer, they are frantic. They need to get on
the boat. They bought a warranty. When it comes to us, if we can turn it around within the same day,
and make the process seamless, that is the most important thing."
And it just so happens that emphasizing a seamless, efficient, and streamlined claims process has helped
Brunswick save money in the long run. Jha said, "Maximizing margin by denying gray-area claims is not a good
long-term strategy." He feels strongly that warranty is about building customer loyalty, and this ethos
propels Brunswick forward.
In our March 2024 newsletter "Top 100
Warranty Providers of 2023," we observed that Brunswick Corp. reduced its warranty claims and
accrual rates from 2022 to 2023. It's great to hear from the company that this reduction in warranty costs
was a happy by-product of Brunswick's dedication to emphasizing the customer experience, and efficiency in
processing claims as a driver of customer loyalty and happiness.
In summation, Jha said, "What we value the most in our operations is our desire to get our customers back on
the water as soon as possible. We work with our dealers to process claims as efficiently as we can, such
that our dealers can service our end-customers efficiently and effectively."
Warranty Industry Champion is a bit like a lifetime achievement award for this industry. So who
better to receive this award than Tim Meenan, Managing Shareholder at Meenan P.A.?
Tim Meenan has been a leader in the warranty and service contract industry for over thirty years. He
co-founded three industry trade associations, the Service Contract Industry Council (SCIC),
Guaranteed Asset Protection Alliance (GAPA), and Motor Vehicle Protection Products Association
(MVPPA), conducts his own regulatory and legislative law practice, Meenan P.A., and has presented at
a robust number of industry events and conferences over the years. He has made a huge impact in
shaping the regulatory and legal landscape of the warranty and service contract industry for over
three decades.
Meenan's first exposure to the world of warranty was in 1988, when he was Deputy Insurance
Commissioner in his home state of Florida. "A local lawyer came in with a problem, and it was
assigned to me to work on," Meenan said. "It was Circuit City. They owned an extended warranty
company — or, here, they call them service warranty companies — and they didn't have enough money in
their reserves, so I had to work through that problem."
After Meenan's tenure at the Florida Department of Insurance, Treasury, and State Fire Marshal, he went into
private legal practice. Meenan said, "The very first call I got was from a gentleman in the motor vehicle
service contract business named Steve Brooks, who was the head of the SCIC for 22 years. He passed away two
years ago. He was like a big brother to me. He said to me, 'The regulator's got a lot of overreach here in
Florida, let's do something about it.' The idea was the form a trade association. That one was called the Florida Service Agreement
Association; it still exists."
A few years down the line, "We were having our second or third annual meeting," Meenan said, "and the owner
of National Electronics Warranty, which later merged with Asurion, came to the conference and said, 'We need
something just like this nationally.' So we started something called the Service Contract Industry Council
[SCIC]. We started that with five companies in Las Vegas. At the time, it was only for consumer goods
service contract companies. And then, somewhere in the mid- to late-90's, we said, let's open it to home
warranty, and motor vehicle service agreement companies."
The SCIC has become a crucial and influential trade association in the
warranty industry. "Along the way, in 30 years, we've probably amended the Florida law 25 times on behalf of
the industry," Meenan stated. "I showed up on behalf of the SCIC at the NAIC [National Association of
Insurance Commissioners] when they were writing the NAIC model act on service
contracts. We provided input. I would say that substantially, most of the states that have adopted the model
act, did it because the SCIC hired a local lobbyist to take it to the legislature and get it done."
Nine states and Washington, D.C. have adopted the model act, and another 34 states plus Puerto Rico have
passed related laws based on the model act.
Many veterans of this industry will recall the huge extended warranty fraud fiasco when the record and
consumer electronics store Crazy Eddie went bankrupt in the late 1980's. Moments like that are the perfect
case for the need for this SCIC in this industry.
"Crazy Eddie's did leave hundreds of thousands of worthless service contracts behind," Meenan said. "There
was very little regulation, not in New York or anywhere, of the product. And so what we found is, with
regulators reacting to something like Crazy Eddie's, and several did — in other cases, they would react to
the fact that their wife was sold an auto service agreement — and they'd say, this is insurance." The power
of the SCIC was "wrapping ourselves in an NAIC model act, and giving us the ability to stand before
legislatures and say, this is more regulation. Which is good for consumers. But it's certainly not as much
regulation as an insurance company would have, which was important."
Meenan noted that the difference between the fiasco of Crazy Eddie going bankrupt in 1989, and the much
smoother situation of Circuit City going bankrupt in 2008, was the passing of the NAIC model act or similar
in many states. "I've used this analogy before," Meenan said, "with Crazy Eddie's and Circuit City. Crazy
Eddie's goes under, people are left holding the bag, no one got unearned premium refunds, no one got their
claims paid after that date. Flash forward to Circuit City going under, they had an insurance-backed
program, all the claims got paid, the insurer stepped in and had to actually take the claims. And no one got
hurt. And that's the difference between the model act, and pre-model act. So we've come a long way."
"It all centers around an insolvency," Meenan continued, "because what happens is that a regulator in the
state where the most people are getting hurt wants to overreach, and apply insurance laws, guaranteed funds,
and things of that nature, to service contracts. So that's been the thing we've had to manage the most."
In addition to the SCIC, Meenan helped found two other trade associations, the Guaranteed Asset Protection Alliance (GAPA), in 2006, and the Motor Vehicle Protection Products Association, (MVPPA) , in 2007.
Meenan helped get countless laws and regulations passed during his over thirty years at the helm of these
three trade associations. "What people want in business is certainty," Meenan said, "and when we started,
there was no certainty. Any insurance commissioner — and many did — could wake up and decide, they don't
like your industry, and the definition of insurance — it sounds a lot like us. In fact, it can sound
identical to us, and all of a sudden, they say, you need to be an insurance company, and they're issuing a
cease and desist order. And we were able to stop a lot of that, but even when it would happen, we would
parachute in, and educate them, and say, 'Give us this one session. We'll work with you and pass the model
act. Don't issue cease and desists. Let us operate in your state.' That story played out numerous times."
"Now, it would be difficult — not impossible, but difficult — for a regulator to try to be an outlier,"
Meenan continued. "We've also been able to stop rate regulation of this industry, to allow innovation.
Frankly, competition lowers rates, so it's a good thing. We've also not needed to be licensed insurance
agents. It's difficult, to take a 200 hour course, to work at Best Buy, to say, 'Do you want to buy a
service contract?' It's not practicable. Same thing at a car dealership, or a realtor's office." Overall,
Meenan said, "It's a pretty strong industry, that has a great trajectory upward, in light of the
professional staff we've got set up" at the three trade associations.
In 2022, Meenan stepped back from his role as General Counsel and Executive Director of the SCIC. Meenan
said, "You know, it was probably time, for a lot of reasons, for me to step back. Most national trade
associations aren't run by a lawyer out of Tallahassee. Most trade associations have professional, full-time
staff. So I'm very proud of having helped form a management company, and hire Tom Keepers as Executive
Director, Travis Moore as General Counsel, and the other staff there. They wake up every day, and spend the
whole day focused on the industry."
Meenan is being modest, because he still spends his whole day focused on this industry as well, through his
regulatory and legislative law practice, Meenan P.A. "Our firm still represents many companies in the
industry," Meenan said. "We helped them get licensed on a national basis, we help them develop new products,
we help them file the forms with regulators. A lot of programs that started as a small motor vehicle, or
consumer goods, service contract company, using a big licensed insurer to back them with that contractual
liability policy, have now grown to such an extent that they come to us and say, help us form our own
insurance company, to issue ourselves a CLIP [Contractual Liability Insurance Policy], and how do we do that
on a national basis? So, our firm has grown dramatically."
We asked Meenan to summarize his many years of experience in this industry. "When you're in third grade, and
you ask, 'What do I want to be when I grow up?' Nobody says, I want to be the expert on service contracts
and extended warranty," Meenan said, "but that's how it ended up, and it's been a blessing. Many of my
friends come from this industry. My advice to the industry is, don't run from regulation, run towards
balanced regulation. That's been our theme. I think it's worked pretty well. I think the trick is to stay
focused on the task at hand, which is the laws, and the regulations, governing the industry, and make sure
that they are solid, remain that way, and change. Back then, we didn't understand that we might be
delivering service contracts by text, let alone email, so some of the laws don't allow that, and you have to
keep up with that evolution. Who knows? We'll probably, eventually, just be able to beam it into someone's
head, and we'll be changing the laws to be able to do that as well. Sticking to our knitting is what I would
ask the industry to do. I would just say, I feel nothing but gratitude, and I'm looking forward to the next
decade of helping companies grow in this business."
Article Courtesy of WarrantyWeek
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