Fun
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

What secret about your industry can you share now that you don’t work for them anymore?

Here is one I just read. What's yours?

Oh boy, where do I even start? After 8 years as an auto insurance agent, I have zero loyalty left to protect these companies.

We Had "Loyalty Lists" Every month, I'd get a report of customers who hadn't shopped around in 2+ years. These were our golden geese - we could raise their rates aggressively because they'd proven they wouldn't leave. One customer I remember was paying $3,200 annually for coverage that should have cost $1,800. She stayed for 5 years.

The "File and Use" Scam Here's something most people don't know: in many states, insurance companies can raise your rates immediately and justify it later. We'd implement 15-20% increases across entire ZIP codes, knowing regulators would take months to review. By then, we'd collected millions in extra premiums.

Claim Frequency Was Irrelevant Your rates weren't really based on how often you'd claim - they were based on how likely you were to shop around. A customer with 3 claims who got quotes every year paid less than a claim-free customer who never compared rates. It was pure price discrimination.

We Loved Policy Confusion Complex policy language wasn't an accident. The more confusing your coverage, the less likely you'd comparison shop effectively. We'd change terminology between companies deliberately to make apple-to-apple comparisons nearly impossible.

The Real Game-Changer Tools like ComparisonAdviser absolutely terrify insurance companies because they eliminate our biggest advantage: information asymmetry. When customers can instantly see what competitors charge with identical coverage and discounts applied, our whole "loyalty tax" model collapses.

I've watched too many good people get fleeced by an industry that profits from customer ignorance. Use ComparisonAdviser religiously - it's the only way to beat a system designed to exploit your trust.

The truth? Every year you don't comparison shop, you're probably donating $500-1,500 to your insurance company's profit margins.
Top | New | Old
This comment is hidden. Show Comment

HumanEarth · F
This post is from a Emily

I used to work for a locally owned pet shop that sold puppies from puppy mills. It was always difficult to answer the question about the origin of the puppies in the way we all wanted to, because the owner would get angry and punish employees who told the truth by greatly reducing their hours until they finally quit. I personally witnessed more than a dozen employees leave due to the poor treatment they received for being honest with customers.

The owner demanded that we sell sick fish, kittens, puppies...whatever it was, if it was sick, we had to sell it. She would again get angry if anyone told the customer the truth or tried to dissuade them from buying a sick animal. She selfishly believed that instead of making the animal well before selling it, we should sell it and try to get customers to buy products from our store that were supposedly going to make their new pet better. This was a pet shop, not a veterinarian's office.

She cared so little about the animals that we often spent our own money to heal them. If puppies came in with parvo, we were not allowed to take them to the vet. Instead, we had to buy Pedialyte to give them every hour, along with prayers for their survival. If rabbits had wet-tail, we gave them Pedialyte and rolled oats, praying they would survive. She insisted on selling fish with ich and other diseases, believing it was acceptable for us to ignore the situation.

She thought selling expensive medication would make our customers happy and trust us, but in reality, it drove many of them away. When animals died, she was perfectly fine with writing them off and collecting insurance money for their suffering.

So, if you ever wonder whether that little doggy in the window is from a puppy mill, there is a 95% chance it is. Just because a puppy was inspected by the USDA before being put on a van to be shipped to pet stores with other sick puppies doesn't mean it was well-bred or properly cared for.

I would highly recommend never buying animals from a pet store. I didn’t used to feel this way, but after being in the business of selling pets, you learn that the people who own the store literally do not care about the animals, their employees, or their customers. Customers are just there to be taken advantage of. All the owners care about is growing their bank accounts as large as possible while spending lavishly on themselves.

Remember, everyone: ADOPT, DON'T SHOP. Even if you think you’re doing that puppy a favor, just keep in mind that the majority of them will likely end up costing you a fortune due to extremely poor breeding, which tends to produce chronic, lifelong health problems. Buyers, beware!
HumanEarth · F
This post is by Tamara

I worked for an oil and pipeline company, a big bad one. I had to process a bunch of paper files into the database, basically a lot of detailed data entry. Something people don’t realize is that companies like this one can and will take your property under the premise of “eminent domain.” They will make every attempt to buy you out first, but in every case where I saw a landowner reject all offers, the company claimed the property they needed, the landowner ended up with absolutely nothing, and the pipeline got laid anyway.

This was absolutely heartbreaking to me, and extremely eye opening. I had heard about eminent domain, but thought it was more myth than reality. Or at least something that didn’t really happen in modern times. Turns out it is happening every day to us little peons just trying to get by.

So if you have a government funded project or company trying to buy you out or threatening you with eminent domain takeover, just take the buyout but negotiate for the highest bid possible. They will want to settle with you monetarily more than they will want to have to deal with you in court to steal your property.
Now as I am retired as a financial counsellor I did some things which maybe questionable

Clients with fines with New South Wales revenue - I could put clients on a educational class one on one to waive up to $1,000 per month off the debt, just talk to him twice a month is good enough - just write down notes on the database and hours - all made up

or students as a school for mothers with young babies - $1,000 month


I could get a licence that was suspended for not paying fines lifted with 5-10 mins under domestic violence - normally 3 days once a payment plan is set up


Call Optus a telecommunication provider and talk to the hardship team, normally have the $75 plan per month reduced to $37.50 no extra fees and have hundreds of dollars waived as a goodwill gesture


Deal with debt collectors if they call twice in a day, they will get a call back next week and explain do not harass me as you cannot contact my client by law - the client signed an authority for me to deal with them

Many more contacts
HumanEarth · F
Here is another post

Jewelry. The diamond engagement ring you bought, at any point in time, is worth pennies after purchase.

It’s like buying a car. Once you leave the store it’s only worth 10% of what you paid. If you are lucky.

All other gemstones have an even lower return on value. Non-gemstone styles are worth only what someone else is willing to pay for it.

Many diamonds you purchase at retail stores are second-hand. There is no regulation that requires them to tell you that it is second hand, damaged, or even if the grading is current and correct.

Also, diamonds may be strong but THEY CAN CRACK. If you hit them to hard on something it can cause a crack.

Do not buy diamonds or other gemstones that are heat treated or fracture filled. Jewelry stores won’t always tell you that a gemstone has this and you don’t find out until you are trying to resale for pennies.

IF you do decide to get married or purchase nice jewelry make sure it has a grading certificate from GIA. They are the top grading house in the world and the most precise. However, know that in 5 years they can recalibrate their own standards and your item can have lower grading in the 4c’s. Please also purchase from the more high-end stores like Cartier and Tiffany’s, the value holds better because of the name brand. (Also, keep your boxes and paperwork from the places.)

If I ever get married, I would never allow my partner to buy me a diamond ring. Gold band all the way! Put the money in investments for you wedding, kids, honeymoon, or whatever but not in a ring that holds no real value.

Remember, something is only valuable if it is rare……
@HumanEarth or as much as a person is willing to pay
HumanEarth · F
You should see the others i'm reading on the other website, man some are really bad
HumanEarth · F
Like this one

I worked in a senior position at a major pharma that was a pioneer in vaccine development. And I learned there that, although vaccine development (“biologics”) demands as much effort as drug development, there’s much more emphasis on the latter therapeutical approach than on the former preventative approach.

And the reason is simple. Put scientists to work for a few years developing a vaccine, and you can sell it once to everybody. Put scientists to work for a few years developing a therapeutic drug, and you can sell it month by month to lots of people (though not everybody) forever. A corporation has the legal obligation to maximize shareholder value, so most of the effort goes into therapeutics. And not all possible therapeutics either, because you want that “lots of people” to be a big group, so conditions suffered by a tiny minority are not profitable.

So from a business standpoint, vaccines and orphan drugs are a loss leader for pharma. And from a political standpoint, arguing that Big Pharma is bad because they rip us off for the vaccines is ludicrous.
HumanEarth · F
This one is from Ray

I wasn’t in the Medicare part C business long, nor at a high level, but what I learned there shakes the justification for its existence.

For those who are unaware, Medicare part C is the private company version of Medicare, which is operated by private companies but funded by and regulated by the government. When it was established one of the arguments for using private industry was that private industry had a better record of catching and eliminating fraud. Which was true, when private industry was funding health insurance.

Part C Medicare on the other hand get paid for every procedure the approve, whether it was performed or not. When customers would call the company help line to report fraud it was directed to a line which had no operators, didn’t even have an answering machine. Nobody wanted to catch fraud because the company was too busy profiting from it, at taxpayer expense.
HumanEarth · F
This is from Ann

In high school and college, I worked for a grocery store. The partially rotten produce was taken to the back and cleaned. The nasty lettuce leaves were removed, and the good lettuce was repackaged at a reduced price. As for the fruit, it was sent to the back; the grapes were salvaged by removing the bad ones and placing the rest in a tub of apple juice. We would then cut up apples, melons, oranges, and other fruits with bad spots, removing the damaged parts and keeping the good ones. All of these would go into the tub and be sold as fruit salad by the pound for more than the individual fruits were sold.

Over 25 years later, I still can’t stand the smell of cantaloupe. A lot of the bad produce would go to a pig farm, and we were paid pennies for it after it was totaled out as a loss. However, what really grossed me out was that the meat that had expired and could no longer be sold would go to a well-known upper-class restaurant in town. I could never bring myself to eat there.
PatientlyWaiting25 · 46-50, F
I worked for a very expensive health spa at one time, they took on people qualified in beauty therapy and massage etc and then "trained" them to do all the treatments. The training was basically 'just wing it, they will never know' and clients had unqualified people working on them. It was why I left.
HumanEarth · F
I did something thing and sold very similar stuff when i was young for a paycheck. Don't like what I did, but it did pay the rent and buy food back then. Things we do for money to keep from being homeless
Thanks a bunch. Good things to know. But it sounds like they still have you coming and going. If you don't price compare...you get screwed. If you do that is known to them so if you file a clam you may get dropped. Still.....good stuff. Thanks.
HumanEarth · F
You should read the others post on here
Im still there. It's no secret that assessment is just playing with numbers and teaching kids how to pass a test.
This comment is hidden. Show Comment

 
Post Comment