Megan should deliver the bad news clearly, respectfully, and with empathy, but she should not hide or soften the facts so much that Mr. Robertson misunderstands the situation. She should contact him personally, preferably by telephone or in person, because he is a widower on a fixed pension and the premium increase may cause financial stress. Her tone should be calm, professional, and supportive. She should explain that the increase is not personal to him alone; it is connected to a hard insurance market caused by higher expected future losses from extreme weather. Premiums are determined by statistical predictions of future losses and tend to increase during a hard market.
Megan should use active listening. This means she should allow Mr. Robertson to express frustration, ask questions, and explain his financial concerns. Active listening includes interpreting verbal and non-verbal cues, not simply giving a one-way explanation. She should avoid blaming the insurer or making promises she cannot keep. She should also avoid using technical language without explanation. Instead, she should explain the reason for the increase in plain language: insurers are paying more claims from weather-related losses, repair costs are rising, and insurers are tightening rates and underwriting rules.
The outcomes Megan should work toward are fairness, understanding, and a practical coverage solution. First, she should make sure Mr. Robertson understands why the premium increased. Second, she should review his policy to see whether the coverage still fits his needs. Third, she can explore options to reduce the premium, such as increasing the deductible, reviewing dwelling values, removing unnecessary optional endorsements, checking eligibility for discounts, improving risk-control features, or remarketing the policy to another insurer if appropriate. However, she must not recommend cutting essential coverage just to make the premium cheaper. That would expose Mr. Robertson to underinsurance and expose Megan to errors and omissions risk.
After discussing the options, Megan should clearly explain the consequences of each choice. If Mr. Robertson chooses a higher deductible, he must understand he will pay more out of pocket after a loss. If he removes optional coverage, he must understand what losses will no longer be insured. If he keeps the policy as issued, he must understand the new premium and payment requirements. Megan should document the conversation, confirm the client’s decision in writing, and remind him to review the policy documents for accuracy. A broker’s policy communication should include a reminder for the insured to review policy documents carefully.