The two techniques Lindy should use are cross-selling and upselling.
The first technique is cross-selling. Cross-selling means offering existing clients additional insurance products that meet needs they may not yet have insured through Lindy. For example, if a client already has automobile insurance with her, Lindy may review whether they also need homeowners, tenant, condominium, umbrella liability, travel, business, or recreational vehicle coverage. This allows Lindy to grow revenue from her existing client base without having to find completely new customers. It is also a strong service technique because it helps identify gaps in the client’s insurance program. However, cross-selling must be based on a proper needs analysis, not pressure selling. Lindy should review the client’s lifestyle, property, family situation, business activities, and liability exposures before recommending additional products. Cross-selling is specifically recognized as a sales/prospecting concept in the course question set.
The second technique is upselling. Upselling means encouraging an existing client to improve, broaden, or increase the coverage they already have. This may include higher liability limits, lower deductibles, broader policy forms, enhanced endorsements, guaranteed replacement cost, sewer backup, identity theft, scheduled personal articles, legal expense coverage, or umbrella liability. Upselling is different from cross-selling because Lindy is not necessarily selling a separate new policy; she is improving the quality or amount of coverage already in place. This can increase commission revenue while also improving client protection. Like cross-selling, it must be ethical and needs-based. Lindy should explain the benefit, cost, limitation, and risk of not purchasing the enhancement. She should document the recommendation and the client’s decision, especially if the client declines broader coverage.