Workers’ Compensation (WC) has always been one of the more nuanced lines in commercial insurance, but right now the market is moving in three different directions at once. The gap between carrier types is creating real friction for retail agents and their clients. The good news is that to stay ahead of things, you don’t need to do more work. You just need to work with the right partners.
A Market Divided: Three Carrier Realities
If you’ve been placing workers’ compensation business lately, you’ve probably noticed that not all carriers are operating in the same universe anymore. Here’s what the landscape actually looks like.
The Traditional Markets
These are the tried-and-true carriers with experienced underwriters, established appetites, and a submission process you know well. Applications, supplementals, financials, loss runs: they want the full package, and they want it organized. They’re not going anywhere, and for the right risk, they’re still the best home. But they’re not built for speed, and they’re not built for complexity.
The Tech-Forward Carriers
On the other end of the spectrum, you have carriers fully leaning into AI in insurance by automating underwriting, integrating with workplace cameras, and enabling real-time loss control monitoring. These markets can move fast and price sharply for the right account, but they come with their own set of requirements and, frankly, a learning curve. Navigating their systems, meeting their data requirements, and understanding what their models are actually flagging isn’t always intuitive the first time around.
The Hybrid Middle
Then there’s the growing middle ground of carriers with modernized front-end systems that are rater-friendly and easy to interact with on the surface. They offer direct underwriter access, streamlined quoting tools, and digital payment integrations, but with traditional back-end infrastructure for audits, loss control, and claims, often through third-party vendors. They look tech-forward, but they don’t always operate that way once a claim hits.
Three different operating models. Three different submission expectations. Three very different experiences for your insured when something goes wrong.
Why This Creates Friction for Retail Agents
Retail agents typically have a handful of carrier relationships they know well, which works fine when the market is consistent. But when carriers are operating on fundamentally different systems and underwriting philosophies, gaps start to appear.
The most common friction points we see are:
- Submission requirements that vary dramatically between carriers.
- Tech-forward carrier platforms with portals, data integrations, and digital workflows that aren’t intuitive without regular use.
- Multi-state workers’ compensation insurance risks that trigger complex payroll allocation, class code consistency issues, and state-specific compliance requirements.
- Growth accounts where rapid hiring, new job classifications, or expansion into new states shift the risk profile mid-term.
- Claims and audit experiences that don’t match the front-end promise.
When any of these variables are in play, the placement gets harder, and the margin for error narrows.
Where Workers’ Compensation Wholesale Brokers Earn Their Place
A wholesaler isn’t just an access point to markets you can’t reach directly. The real value is in knowing which market makes sense for a specific account and how to work effectively within each.
We work with all three carrier types regularly, which means:
- We know which traditional markets are moving on workers’ compensation business right now and what they actually need to get comfortable with a risk.
- We know which tech-forward carriers are worth the onboarding investment for the right account and which aren’t worth the friction.
- We know where the hybrid carriers’ back-end processes can create surprises, and how to set expectations with your insured upfront.
- We can structure multi-state workers’ compensation insurance submissions correctly the first time, routing to markets and programs built for that complexity.
- We can build a loss narrative for accounts with challenging histories that puts underwriters in the right frame of mind before they open the file.
That institutional knowledge, built through volume, specialization and relationships, is what reduces uncertainty for you and your client. And it’s exactly why the wholesaler’s role is only going to become more important.
AI in Insurance: Why the Market Complexity Isn’t Slowing Down
Every major carrier is actively investing in AI integration right now. Some are farther along than others, but the market will only continue to fragment as carriers build out proprietary systems, automated underwriting models, and data-driven risk assessment tools at varying paces and in different ways. What that means for retail agents is more variation, not less. More portals. More data requirements. More underwriting logic that isn’t fully transparent. More accounts that fall outside what a standard market can accommodate cleanly.
There’s a cost dimension to this too, and it shows up directly in claims outcomes. Jeff Sandy, EVP of Jencap’s National Workers’ Compensation Practice, points out that carriers cutting corners on AI adoption, particularly by reducing claims staff, often see the effects reflected in the client’s experience mod. A larger claim paired with a thinner claims team can push mod factors higher, and a higher mod can quietly disqualify a client from the jobs that matter most to them. The carrier a client is placed with isn’t just a coverage decision. It’s a factor in how the claim gets handled months or years down the line.
Workers’ compensation wholesale brokers who work across the full carrier spectrum every day will have a structural advantage in that environment with established contacts across carrier types, deep knowledge of each market’s appetite and systems, and the ability to find the right home for an account as the rules of the game keep changing. This is the trend line. Getting ahead of it now by building the wholesaler relationship before you need it is the right move.
Agent Checklist: Signs Your WC Account Needs Wholesale Support
Not every workers’ comp account needs a wholesaler. But these are signals worth paying attention to:
- The risk has a difficult loss history or a mod above 1.00.
- The account operates in multiple states or is planning to expand.
- The business is growing rapidly with new hires, new job classifications, or new locations.
- You’re getting inconsistent underwriting feedback from direct markets.
- The insured has had audit surprises or class code disputes in the past.
- A tech-forward carrier seems like the right fit, but you haven’t worked in their portal before.
- Renewal is coming up, and you’re not confident the current carrier will stay.
- The account has subcontractor exposure, seasonal payroll swings, or complex class code segmentation.
If two or more of these apply to an account, a conversation with a workers’ compensation wholesale broker is worth the call.
Ready to Simplify Your Next WC Placement?
The workers’ comp market isn’t getting simpler, but your role in navigating it doesn’t have to get harder. Jencap’s workers’ compensation specialists work across the full carrier spectrum every day, bringing market access, submission expertise, and carrier relationships that turn complex placements into closed deals. Whether you’re dealing with a tough loss history, a multi-state footprint, or an account that’s outgrown its current market, we’re ready to help you find the right fit. Reach out to the Jencap workers’ comp team and let’s talk through what your account needs.
FAQ
When should I involve a wholesaler in a workers’ comp placement?
Any time the risk has complexity, like difficult loss history, multi-state exposure, rapid growth, or class code ambiguity, a wholesaler can help you identify the right market faster and structure the submission more effectively. You don’t have to wait for a standard market to decline.
Does working with a wholesaler slow down the placement process?
Not if you engage early. When a wholesaler receives 3–5 years of loss runs, mod worksheets, payroll by class and state, and an operations narrative, they can move quickly. Delays usually happen when submissions are incomplete, not because of the wholesale channel itself.
How do wholesalers stay current on what different carriers actually want?
Volume and relationships. We’re submitting to these markets constantly, which means we know their current appetite, their underwriting preferences, and how their systems work in practice — not just on paper. That institutional knowledge is built through repetition across a wide range of accounts.
As AI in insurance becomes more common, will wholesalers become less relevant?
The opposite, actually. As carriers adopt different AI tools and systems at different rates, the variation in how markets operate will increase, not decrease. Wholesalers who work across the full market spectrum will have a growing advantage in navigating those differences for specific accounts.
What’s the most important thing I can do to set a wholesale placement up for success?
Come prepared. The more complete your submission, the more effectively a wholesaler can position the account. The narrative matters as much as the numbers.










