As organizations race to keep up with AI advances, no area of people management is free from disruption. This includes benefits and compensation, as evidenced by the recent waves made by insurance giant State Farm.

The more than 100-year-old insurance firm is requiring all 19,000 independent contractors who work as sales agents to sign a new contract by 2027 that includes significant changes to compensation and benefits, according to The Wall Street Journal, which viewed a video of CEO Jon Farney announcing the changes during a recent Las Vegas sales agent convention.

From LinkedIn to Reddit, and across several new Facebook groups for employees that were created immediately after the announcement, agents registered their anger. One told NPR they were reeling from "false promises."

A changing landscape for comp, benefits

According to the Journal and LinkedIn reports, the single-style contract will end healthcare benefits for agents and their spouses, along with retirees. It is also terminating its deferred compensation program, which many considered a retirement program—a move that one agent said will cost him $1 million.

Rewards will lean more heavily toward success on individual investment products, rather than homeowner or auto policies, potentially disadvantaging tenured sales agents who have built a network of long-term home and auto customers.

State Farm is also reducing base compensation and plans to slash pay for agents who miss targets for two consecutive years. Those interviewed by the Journal estimate their annual income could drop by 40%. According to The Journal, agents have until the end of September to take advantage of an "exit payment" that could range from $50,000-$300,000.

The moves come on the heels of several high-profile benefit rollbacks. For instance, Deloitte recently cut family-building benefits and paid time off for a select group of employees, while Zoom reduced its paid family leave offering. Customer experience tech firm TTEC also recently paused its 401(k) match.

Benefits and HR leaders are facing a significantly challenging environment, as organizations try to keep up with rising costs, without risking talent investment, Wes Cowen, national practice leader for employee benefits at OneDigital, recently told HR Executive.

"Employers across America are facing similar challenges," Cowen says. "We are in an environment I haven't seen in the 25-plus years I have been in this industry."

The AI influence

As with most transformations today, AI is among the stated reasons for State Farm's shifts. AI is reinventing insurance sales, with Americans becoming more likely to interact with bots rather than in-person agents, a hallmark of State Farm's long-time sales model.

In addition to the compensation and benefits changes, State Farm is integrating AI throughout its agent processes. It recently announced its Next Gen Good Neighbor strategy, which the company says leverages technology to create a "human + digital" experience for State Farm employees, independent contractors and customers.

In communication about the model this spring, the company said that "key investments through Next Gen Good Neighbor will make available to agents new tools, platforms and backend improvements, so they can choose to spend more time on growing policyholder relationships, delivering for new customers and building their teams."

This includes an AI-powered digital assistant to help agents answer customer questions and a "customer intelligence tool" that provides agents insights into customer concerns and tailors product recommendations.

(Photo credit: Diego M. Radzinschi/ALM)

This article originally appeared on HR Executive and may not be reprinted.

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