Wednesday, February 18, 2009

How Low Can You Go? Attaining a Perfect Score for Your Mod

Perfect and yet attainable scores apply to many areas of life: credit reports, bowling, the game of Yahtzee, and ACT college prep exams immediately come to mind. These are cases in which the higher the score, the better. Less commonly, an excellent score is represented by a low number: as our director of strategic consulting Lloyd Kelley would be quick to point out, golf is an example, even if it doesn't have a true perfect score.



If your mod was a game of golf, you'd want it to be under par - not just average. You also want to know what your company's perfect score can be - and then implement loss control and prevention measures to attain that perfect score.





Did you know that you can have a perfect score on your workers comp mod?

You can. But here’s the tricky part: the perfect score for your mod is unique to your company. It will be different from the perfect score of the company next door, or your competitor across town. It may change somewhat from year to year. The variability is due to the fact that the mod is based on your unique industry and payroll. But it is a real, attainable number, not just a theoretical best case scenario.

Many employers have the idea that a workers comp mod of 1.0 is, if not perfect, at least the goal that they want to reach. This is like saying a “C” on your grade school report card is good - or that you've shot par on the golf course. You may be pretty happy with it, but in truth, a mod of 1.0 is only average. If you want to beat that average, and thus lower your workers’ compensation insurance costs, you’ve got to know the value of your minimum mod - your perfect score - and your controllable mod.

Every mod value can be broken into two pieces: the minimum mod and the controllable mod. The minimum mod is that perfect score: the lowest possible mod if your business had no losses for the experience period (typically three years). The controllable mod is the difference between your actual mod and the minimum. This value is a direct result of the losses your company had during the experience period.

Attaining your perfect score directly impacts your work comp premium costs

The minimum mod and controllable mod are important for two reasons. For larger companies, these values highlight the savings that are possible by controlling losses. For example, as shown in the report example below, a large company with a mod of 0.98 may think they are doing quite well, however, since they have a controllable mod of 0.22, there is significant room for improvement - which in this case translates to a $44,000 cost savings!

For a small company, the minimum and controllable mod values can be used for setting realistic expectations; for example, a small risk that sets a goal of having a 0.80 mod will not be able to achieve it under any circumstance if the minimum mod is 0.85.





Here's a snippet of a sample WorkCompEdge Proposal Report that shows the minimum mod and controllable mod - and how much money this company could be saving!


No matter the size of your company, knowing the controllable mod is critical to understanding the possible savings achievable by reducing that controllable mod to 0 through loss control and loss prevention activities.

Ask your insurance agent to show you your minimum and controllable mod values – and estimate the premium dollars you can save by attaining that perfect score. A WorkCompEdge agent can do this using the WorkCompEdge Proposal Report from our ModMaster software. WorkCompEdge members can also use the WorkCompEdge QuickMod tool in the module Learn the lessons your experience mod can teach you to obtain this valuable insight.

http://www.workcompedge.com/
http://www.specificsoftware.com/

Friday, February 6, 2009

Maureen Steps Up (and Down!)


Our blog earlier this week about staffer Tony King's marathon training and intentionality seems to have started a trend: WorkCompEdge regular contributor Maureen Gallagher is also preparing for a big physical challenge ahead of her, and we're hoping WorkCompEdge readers might help. Maureen, who's also a partner with Neace Lukens, is going to be fighting childhood heart disease - and testing her own physical limits - in the grueling Carew Climb, part of the Skyscraper Vertical Mile challenge, on Sunday, February 22 at Cincinnati’s Carew Tower.


Specifically, that means she'll be climbing and descending the Tower’s forty-five floors ten times, with another eight floors and six steps thrown in just to round off the total distance to one mile up and one down—a total of 3,780 stairs in under three hours. And by auctioning off each one of those stairs, she’s hoping to raise enough money to send twenty kids to camp through Hope With Heart as well as raising money for the American Lung Association, the Climb’s sponsor.

Established as a summer camp experience, Hope With Heart provides year round support and friendships for its campers. The camp, now in its tenth year, is unique because it accepts high-risk children with limited life expectancies. The camp has children with varied heart problems such as valve replacements, pacemakers and transplants. Providing a recreation and social eight-day camp experience for children ages seven to fifteen, Hope With Heart has transformed the lives of more than 400 children with serious heart disease through the generosity of contributors.

Maureen, a fitness advocate who has run several marathons, has a personal interest in the Hope With Heart cause. Her nephew, Ryan, was born with a life-threatening heart defect similar to that of other children who attend the Hope With Heart camp. Ryan attended the camp along with other kids whose hart disease was so severe that other camps would not take them.

"We are all grateful for the experience Ryan had at the Hope With Heart camp,” said Maureen. “And we want to ensure that experience remains available for other children in the coming years."

The camp must maintain an emergency helicopter on standby along with doctors and nurse to monitor activities and dispense medicines to the children there. Everyone involved with Hope With Heart is a volunteer and the camp is free to all campers.

Maureen says that training for the Carew Climb is one of the more physically demanding challenges she has ever taken on. Those interested in making a contribution can do so directly to Hope With Heart at
www.hopewithheart.com or to Maureen directly at
Maureen.gallagher@neacelukens.com. Any amounts are appreciated!

http://www.WorkCompEdge.com
http://www.SpecificSoftware.com

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

The Power of Intentionality, Part 1

As you may know, we have two affiliated businesses under one roof here at Specific Software and SIGMA Actuarial. Our actuaries hang out on the “south side” of the office, while most of our software staff is located on the north end of the floor. This provides us with the opportunity to kid each other about where the brain power resides. One of my favorite targets for this friendly ribbing is actuarial analyst Tony King.



SIGMA actuarial analyst Tony King has been very intentional about his marathon goals. At WorkCompEdge, we believe the components of his intentionality can apply to any goal, including a new vision for your company. Photo courtesy of Mike Stanfield.


Tony is mild mannered, humble, intelligent, highly disciplined, and focused. But, as he recently taught me by example, he’s also very intentional in working toward his goals. Tony has been a runner most of his life, although he took a break from it while his children were young. Now he puts in about 60+ miles per week. Last year he decided to step up his training in order to decrease his time and qualify for the Boston Marathon. Popping into his secluded south side office ever so often, I kept up with his progress and learned a lot that can apply to any goal:

Being intentional requires specific knowledge

Tony bought Lore of Running - and actually read it. (I have a copy collecting dust on my bedside table.) Gathering the knowledge one needs to effect change is a crucial first step that takes initiative.

Being intentional requires whole system intelligence

Tony then put the knowledge from his reading into practice. Knowledge is, in my definition, information and facts. Intelligence is a more abstract concept that involves applying knowledge to the whole system or “big picture” – in this case, Tony’s body and environment – to the challenge at hand. Intelligence includes a healthy dose of creativity, reason, and abstract connections between seemingly unrelated items to bring about change and improvement. It is one thing to read the Lore of Running, but is an entirely different level of functioning to know what the heck it means to you!

Being intentional requires quantitative measurements

Tony strapped on numerous electronic devices and gathered heart rate, distance, time, and speed data he needed to measure his progress. He then downloaded this data to a computer and gained insight that led to new questions and new measurements – and thus the feedback loop got tighter and tighter. Some of his insights – like how his heart rate correlated with his endurance – were new for him. They also led to new strategies, such as starting slow and ending fast. Some of his discoveries were not intuitive, thus proving the value of lots of measurements and an unbiased analytical approach.

Being intentional requires discipline

Tony used his knowledge, intelligence, and quantitative measurements to develop and execute specific action plans. Most of us can figure out what to do to a reach a goal – it is the doing itself that we struggle with. Discipline overcomes that emotional resistance.

Being intentional requires repetition

After going through the process above, Tony wasn’t sure he was where he needed to be, so he started the entire process over again. He reached out to new experts, identified road blocks, doubled his efforts, measured data again, tried new things. He persevered.

Being intentional produces results

Tony was shooting for a time of 3:15:59 to qualify for the Boston Marathon. He ran the Marshall University Marathon in West Virginia and finished with a time of 3:15:28, trimming about 30 minutes off his previous personal best!

So, when did Tony succeed? Would this have been a worthwhile effort if he finished with a time of 3:16:00? Certainly! The moment Tony decided – to the exclusion of all other options - that he would pour his heart and soul into creating a new level of performance, he created a new reality for himself. Which brings me to my final point:

Being intentional requires a vision

I don’t use the word decision lightly. A true decision leaves no alternative because it’s based on a vision of where we want to be. Arguably, the vision – of qualifying for the Boston marathon – is the first thing Tony had in this process. But he also kept that vision foremost in his mind. A solid vision guides our decisions and provides opportunities for the future.

So what’s your vision as an employer? What’s your “Boston marathon” goal?

This year, employers are facing unbelievable challenges. If, combined with economic challenges, you have workers compensation issues, you may feel very overwhelmed. I believe that the power of intentionality can make a dramatic difference for any employer that wants to change their business, address their workers compensation challenges and significantly reduce costs. In the weeks ahead, I will explore how an employer can use Tony’s model of intentionality with the knowledge and tools in WorkCompEdge to make dramatic reductions in workers compensation costs. But your first job is to make that decision and develop a vision of being a more successful company.

http://www.SpecificSoftware.com
http://www.WorkCompEdge.com