Companies that act as intermediaries between insurance buyers and carriers, matching risk transfer needs with underwriting capacity through advisory, placement, and negotiation services.
The insurance brokerage industry occupies the intermediary position between entities seeking to transfer risk and the carriers willing to underwrite that risk. The core function is matching: understanding a client's exposure profile, surveying available carrier appetite and pricing, and structuring a placement that satisfies both sides. For commercial, specialty, and reinsurance placements, this involves significant analytical and negotiation work that neither buyers nor carriers can efficiently perform independently.
The economic structure creates a distinctive revenue pattern tied to premium volume rather than risk assumption. Brokers earn commissions as a percentage of premiums placed, meaning revenue rises when insurance pricing increases even without adding new clients. This embedded exposure to insurance pricing cycles occurs without the broker bearing underwriting risk, creating a business model that participates in premium volume fluctuations without absorbing claims volatility. Client retention depends on accumulated knowledge of claims history, coverage structure, and carrier relationships that creates practical switching friction despite the absence of contractual lock-in.
Scale operates through two mechanisms: placement leverage, where larger brokers aggregate premium volume for negotiating weight with carriers and access to exclusive facilities, and geographic and specialty breadth, where multinational clients require coordination across regulatory environments and complex risks require access to specialty markets. These scale advantages are most pronounced in large commercial and reinsurance segments, while smaller commercial and personal lines brokerage remains fragmented because placement complexity does not require global infrastructure.
Structural Role
Reduces information asymmetry between insurance buyers and carriers by matching risk transfer needs with underwriting capacity, aggregating placement volume to create negotiating leverage, and providing advisory services that enable efficient risk-to-capital allocation across insurance markets.
Scale Differentiation
Large brokers operate global placement networks with access to specialty and reinsurance markets, serving multinational corporations and complex risk programs requiring coordination across jurisdictions. Mid-size brokers focus on regional commercial markets or specific industry verticals where deep expertise and personal relationships anchor client loyalty. Small brokers serve local businesses and individuals, competing on accessibility and responsiveness in markets where global platform infrastructure is unnecessary.