Getting paid to write? Huh?

Yes, paid to write and write and write. Two and a half thousand words about financial strength ratings of insurance companies.

Whoa, there. Easy, boys and girls. It will be digital in due time. Until then, make due with this May 5 story on tort reform.

But to some extent this should explain my lack of posting lately, along with the fact I’ve little to say.

Back, with a little bit of vengeance

Let’s play catch-up. …

The only thing worse than having your moviegoing experience interrupted by someone who answers his cell phone in the middle of the picture is to receive a phone call from someone who’s in a movie theater, while the movie’s showing. Thanks a lot, Mom. …

Good riddance, Jerry Krause. Organizations may win championships, but it helps if they’re organized around Michael Jordan, doesn’t it? …

It’s amazing how hard it is to reach your destination when you don’t know where it is. Damn suburbs. …

Any time an employee for a big box store tells you the item you’re looking for is “at the end of the aisle, on the right,” it’s a lie. And when you turn around, the employee will be gone, never to be found again. …

Here’s a story I filed last week from RIMS, if you’re interested. …

I saw Tom Palmer speak at the University of Chicago last week, and whoever said he was brilliant, was right. …

And finally, there’s no delay at Meigs Field. Isn’t that great?

Self-promotion

Here’s a commentary of mine published today by the Columbia Chronicle on the effort afoot to repeal the 1998 Higher Education Act, which in part denies federal college aid to anyone with a drug conviction.

And here’s my latest story for Insurance Journal, a feature examining different types of agency cooperatives, or clusters. An abbreviated version of this story was published earlier — this is the big enchilada.

teens.progressive.com

I don’t know if you’ve seen the ads for Progressive Insurance Co. targeted at teens, but they (of course) accompanied by a Web site.

It’s actually a very good site, with lots of helpful information about auto insurance, coverage quizzes and other interesting stuff. Well, interesting to an insurance geek like me, anyway.

Originally, I found the ads puzzling. After all, most teen-agers are insured through their parents’ policy, where they get better rates. And auto insurance is not exactly the kind of things kids see as a status symbol (“Oh, mah Gawd! I cannot believe she is insured with State Farm. What was she thinking?!”).

But Progressive knows that very few teens who explore their site will actually wind up buying insurance from then, at least now. What they are doing is trying to explain the basics and help teens figure it out for themselves. The site even talks about the pros and cons of going solo.

So, even if this target market cannot afford Progressive now, it’s a name they’ll know and perhaps look to get a quote from three or four years down they line after they’re finishing up college. At least, that’s how a Progressive rep. explained it to me yesterday.

I have no idea whether it will work or not, but it’s another example of Progressive’s thinking outside the proverbial box. As the kids might say, “Kewl.” (Yes, I know I’m only 25 years old.)

The only danger will be if the anti-tobacco folks might start persecuting Progressive for pursuing the teen target market. “Look at all the kids you’ve hooked on insurance!” I could imagine them howling on “Nightline.”

Whew!

I just finished a 2,000-word story on the California homeowners insurance market. May you never have to write a 2,000-word story on the California homeowners insurance market.

Not that I don’t love it!