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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.
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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.