How to Convert Insurance Leads

Buying leads is the easy part. Converting them into issued policies is where programs live or die. This guide walks through the real-time cadence, the aged cadence, and the levers that actually move contact and write rates.

Short answer:

On real-time: first dial inside three minutes, caller ID clean, script focused on a fast needs analysis and quote. On aged: 10 to 14 touches over two to three weeks, SMS-led, tied to the consumer's original request. Measure contact rate and write rate separately; they need different fixes.

The lever stack

Four levers determine whether a lead converts:

  1. Speed to first contact attempt.
  2. Caller ID and sender reputation.
  3. Cadence discipline (especially on aged).
  4. Conversation quality (discovery + quote speed).

Most underperforming programs fail on lever 1 or lever 2 and blame the lead source. Fix the levers first, then judge the source.

Real-time cadence

For real-time, the dominant variable is first-dial time. The target is under three minutes from webhook receipt. Above five minutes, contact rate measurably drops. Above ten, it drops sharply. Above thirty, you might as well be working aged.

Real-time script framework

  • Minute 0-3: Live inbound call from buyer\'s dialer. Open with the consumer\'s own request: "You filled out a quote for [coverage type] — I\'m calling to finish that up."
  • Minute 3-8: Needs analysis. Household size, current coverage, budget range, health context. Do not quote from memory.
  • Minute 8-15: Quote two or three carriers live. Real-time leads are comparing; show them two real options, not ten.
  • Minute 15-25: Application or close. If not ready, schedule a specific follow-up, send SMS confirmation immediately.
  • Day +1 and +3: SMS touchpoints if no decision yet.
  • Day +7: Final outbound with a soft close.

If you did not connect on the first dial, retry at 3 minutes, 10 minutes, and 30 minutes. After that, move to the aged cadence below.

Aged cadence

Aged works on cadence depth, not speed. The target is 10 to 14 touches over two to three weeks, led by SMS with dialer and email layered in.

Aged cadence framework

  • Day 0: Opening SMS referencing the original request. First dialer attempt.
  • Day 1: Email follow-up with a soft CTA.
  • Day 3: SMS follow-up, different angle (price, plan options, timeline).
  • Day 5: Second dialer attempt.
  • Day 7: SMS with scarcity or seasonal trigger if relevant.
  • Day 10: Third dialer attempt + SMS.
  • Day 14: Final SMS or dialer.
  • Day 21: Last email with an "if I can help in the future" soft touch.

A three-day dialer burst is not a cadence. It is a money-losing mistake that produces the numbers that convince agents aged "doesn\'t work."

Caller ID health

Spam-flagged DIDs kill contact rate. Symptoms include contact rate suddenly halving with no other changes, increased "scam likely" labels in dashboards, and rising voicemail hits. Fixes:

  • Rotate DIDs across agents and campaigns.
  • Register for STIR/SHAKEN attestation through your carrier.
  • Submit DIDs to free reputation remediation services (FreeCallerRegistry, Hiya, YouMail).
  • Reduce dial attempts per DID per day.
  • When a DID is flagged past remediation, retire it.

SMS discipline (10DLC)

  • Register your brand and campaigns through a 10DLC provider.
  • Keep opt-out language on every first message.
  • Honor STOP instantly across every campaign, not just the one that received it.
  • Rotate sending numbers to avoid carrier throttling.
  • Avoid URL shorteners that trigger spam flags; use branded links.

Conversation quality

On the call itself, the biggest write-rate lever is getting to a quote fast. The agent who completes a needs-discovery and returns two carrier quotes in the first call wins the case. The agent who opens with a generic "let me tell you about our plans" loses to the agent who opens with "looks like you were comparing coverage — I can get you two quotes in the next five minutes."

Watch out for over-quoting. Three options is the sweet spot; twelve is cognitive overload that pushes the consumer to delay a decision.

Follow-up after the first conversation

Most life and IUL sales happen on the second or third call, not the first. A first-call follow-up SMS within 10 minutes of hanging up, followed by a scheduled next-day call, converts higher than a "I\'ll follow up sometime" hand-off. Specific times beat vague promises every time.

What to measure weekly

  • Contact rate by source.
  • Write rate on contacts by source.
  • Per-issued-policy cost by source.
  • First-dial time distribution (p50, p90, p99).
  • SMS delivery and reply rate.
  • Caller ID reputation score.

If you are only tracking per-lead cost, you are not running a lead program — you are running a credit card bill.

Frequently asked questions

What is the ideal first-dial time for real-time leads?
Under three minutes from webhook receipt. Above five minutes, contact rate measurably drops. The dialer should be wired to the webhook, not to a CRM task queue that waits for an agent to click.
How many SMS touches is too many?
A 10 to 14 touch cadence over two to three weeks is a standard aged cadence. Past that, opt-out rates rise sharply. After day 21, most non-responders are not going to respond — move them to a 30-day dormant list.
Should I use the same script for real-time and aged?
No. Real-time openers reference the fresh form fill ("You just asked for a quote — I'm finishing that up"). Aged openers reference a longer shopping window ("You were comparing coverage a few weeks ago — I wanted to check in"). Getting this wrong drops contact rate noticeably.
What is a healthy contact rate on real-time?
30% to 60% on a fast dialer with healthy caller ID. Below 30% suggests a caller ID problem, a first-dial-time problem, or a lead-quality problem — in that order of likelihood.
How do I fix a spam-flagged DID?
Reduce dials per day on that number, submit for remediation through FreeCallerRegistry and carrier reputation services, and swap to a backup DID while remediation processes. If remediation fails, retire the number.
Should I dial aged leads like real-time?
No. Aged leads need cadence depth, not dial speed. A three-day dialer burst on aged inventory is a waste; it produces the numbers that convince agents aged "doesn't work" when the real problem is wrong-cadence execution.

Try ClosrLeads for yourself

Start with aged at $1.00 per lead or spin up real-time. TCPA consent on every record, replacement policy on invalid contacts.

Further reading

Written and fact-checked by The ClosrLeads Team.

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