The Problem
Your client just filed an income protection claim after a serious diagnosis. They're scared. They want to know what's happening. And you? You're logging into five different insurer portals every morning, squinting at dashboards that all look different, hunting for any status change on any active claim.
That routine eats one to two hours a day when you're managing 50 or more active claims. The average claim passes through five to eight status changes before it resolves: lodged, under assessment, additional info requested, approved or declined, payment processing, payment issued. Every one of those transitions is a moment your client wants to hear from you. Most of the time, they don't.
So they call. "Any update on my claim?" It's the most common inbound call brokers receive during active claims. And it's entirely preventable. The information exists in the portal. It just isn't reaching anyone.
Legacy systems make this worse. Repeated handoffs, manual data entry, and zero integration between the insurer's system and yours. You're the human middleware, copying status updates from one screen to another. Meanwhile, claims are the single biggest moment of truth for client retention. How you perform during this window determines whether that client stays for a decade or leaves at the next renewal.
How It Works
The automation runs on a scheduled loop, polling insurer portals (or parsing their notification emails) for status changes. When something moves, the right people hear about it within minutes.
1. Scheduled portal check
Every two to four hours, a workflow in a platform such as n8n or Make polls your insurer portals for status updates on active claims. If the insurer sends email notifications on status changes (most do), the workflow can parse those emails instead of scraping the portal directly.
2. Compare against last known status
Each claim's current status is compared to the last recorded status in your tracking database (such as Airtable or your CRM). If nothing has changed, the workflow moves on. If a status has shifted, it flags the claim for notification.
3. Notify the broker
The broker receives a Slack message or email with the client name, claim number, old status, new status, and a direct link to the portal. This takes seconds to read and lets the broker decide if they need to take action before the client hears about it.
4. Send client update
After a short delay (or immediately, depending on your preference), the client gets an SMS or email written in plain language. Not insurer jargon. Something like: "Your income protection claim has been approved. The insurer will process your first payment within five business days." The tone adjusts based on claim type and outcome.
5. Log to compliance register
Every status change and every outbound message is timestamped and logged. This creates a full audit trail for compliance reviews, showing exactly when each party was notified and what they were told.
6. Escalation on stalled claims
If a claim sits in the same status beyond an expected timeframe (say, 14 days under assessment with no movement), the workflow alerts the broker to follow up with the insurer. No claim falls through the cracks.
Why Email Parsing Beats Portal Scraping
The biggest technical question brokers ask about this automation: "Do insurers even have APIs?" Almost none of them do. Not for brokers, anyway.
But here's what most insurers do have: automated email notifications. When a claim status changes, the portal sends the broker an email. That email is structured enough to parse. The subject line contains the claim number. The body contains the new status. A workflow can read that email, extract the key fields, and trigger the notification chain without ever touching the portal.
This matters because web scraping insurer portals is fragile. One UI redesign and your automation breaks. Worse, scraping may violate the portal's terms of service. Email parsing is stable, legitimate, and works across every insurer that sends notifications (which is nearly all of them).
A broker receives an automated alert at 10:14am that a client's income protection claim was approved. She calls the client with the good news within three minutes. That client, who had been checking their phone every hour for a week, tells four friends about the experience. Previously, that approval would have sat unnoticed in a portal until the next morning's manual check.
That's the difference between a broker who reacts in minutes and one who reacts in days. The information was always there. It just wasn't moving fast enough.
Getting the Tone Right on Difficult Notifications
Not every claim gets approved. And sending an automated message that says "Your claim has been declined" without context is a terrible experience. Template design matters more than the automation itself at this point.
The solution is a tiered messaging approach. Positive outcomes (approved, payment issued) go straight to the client with details and next steps. Negative or complex outcomes (declined, additional information requested) trigger a broker notification first, with a short hold before any client message goes out. This gives the broker time to call the client personally for the difficult conversation.
You can set this up with a simple router in your workflow. Approved? Client gets the good news immediately. Declined? Broker gets an urgent alert and the client message waits for manual release. Additional info needed? Client gets a message with specific instructions and an upload link, because speed matters when the insurer is waiting on documents.
The point isn't to remove the human from claims communication. It's to remove the human from the 80% of updates that are routine ("still being assessed", "payment processing") so you can be fully present for the 20% that need a real conversation.
The Business Impact
Take a brokerage with three brokers, each managing 40 active claims across six insurers. Each broker spends roughly 90 minutes a day on portal checking and manual client updates. That's 4.5 hours of broker time per day, or 22.5 hours per week across the team.
At a blended cost of $80 per hour (salary plus overhead), that's $1,800 per week spent on work that an automation handles in the background. Over a year, that's $93,600 in recovered capacity. Not savings in the sense that you fire someone. Savings in the sense that three brokers just got 7.5 hours a week each to write new business, handle renewals, and actually advise clients.
The automation itself runs on tools costing $50 to $100 per month. Email parsing through n8n, SMS via Twilio at a few cents per message, and a free tier Airtable base for status tracking. The payback period is measured in days, not months.
But the number that matters most isn't on a spreadsheet. Claims are the number one driver of client retention in insurance broking. A client who feels informed and supported during a claim stays. A client who felt ignored leaves at the next renewal and tells others why.
- 90 minutes per broker per day recovered from manual portal checking
- Client status updates delivered within minutes of a change, not hours or days
- Inbound "any update?" calls reduced by 70% or more
- Full compliance audit trail for every notification sent
- Stalled claims flagged automatically before they become complaints
- Stronger client retention during the most emotionally charged touchpoint in the relationship
Frequently Asked Questions
Claims are sensitive. Doesn't this need a human touch?
It does, and this automation gives you more of it. Routine updates ("your claim is still under assessment") don't need a personal phone call. Automating those frees you to be fully present for the moments that do: approvals, declines, complex situations. You're not removing the human touch. You're concentrating it where it counts.
Our insurers don't have APIs. How does the polling work?
Most insurer portals send email notifications when a claim status changes. The automation parses those emails to detect the change, extract the claim number and new status, and trigger the notification chain. No API required. If an insurer doesn't send emails, you can add a manual status entry step as a fallback, which still triggers the client notification and audit logging automatically.
What about privacy? Claim details are highly sensitive.
Client messages contain only what the client already knows: their own claim status and next steps. No medical details, no policy numbers in SMS messages. The workflow logs are stored in your existing systems (CRM, Airtable) behind the same access controls you already use. Email and SMS channels are standard for insurer to client communication in Australia.
What if a claim is declined? I don't want an automated message breaking that news.
The workflow includes a router that holds negative outcomes for broker review. When a claim is declined, you get an urgent notification. The client message waits in a queue until you manually release it or call the client yourself. You control which messages go out automatically and which ones wait for your input.
We only handle 10 to 15 active claims at a time. Is this worth it?
Even 10 claims across three insurers means daily portal checking and manual updates. And claim volumes spike unpredictably (natural disasters, pandemic related claims, seasonal patterns). The automation costs almost nothing to run and handles one claim the same way it handles 200. When your next spike hits, you won't be scrambling.
Can this work with our existing CRM?
Yes. The workflow connects to whatever system you're already using for client records. If your CRM has an API or integrates with Make or n8n (most do, including Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoho, and industry platforms), the status updates and notification logs write directly to the client's record. No double entry, no separate system to check.
How long does this take to set up?
A typical build takes two to three weeks, including template design for each notification type, integration with your email or portal setup, and testing across your active insurers. Most of that time is spent getting the message templates right, not the technical plumbing. Book your free audit and we'll map out exactly which insurers and communication channels your workflow needs to cover.
Sources
Automations we’ve already built
Thirty days after onboarding begins, an automated workflow surveys your client, pulls milestone data from your project tools, generates an AI written retrospective, and flags anyone who needs a recovery call. Every onboarding teaches the next one.
When a new client lands in your practice management software, this automation generates a tailored engagement letter with the right services, fees, and deadlines, sends it for electronic signature, then builds the client folder and kicks off your onboarding checklist. No chasing. No waiting.
A project manager fills out a short form after a discovery call. Within minutes, AI drafts a full Statement of Work into your branded template, routes it through Slack for internal approval, and sends it to the client for signature.
When a project closes in your PM tool, this automation collects every contract, deliverable, and sign off from across your systems, organises them into a standardised archive folder, and generates a summary PDF. No manual cleanup required.
When a contact is tagged in your CRM as needing an NDA, the agreement is generated from a template with their details prefilled, sent for signature, and tracked automatically. Overdue NDAs trigger reminders so nothing slips through.
Automatically converts raw meeting notes or recordings into structured, branded board minutes with tracked resolutions and action items, so your admin staff can stop spending full days on documentation that nobody reads until it's too late.
Capture scope changes on site, generate costed PDFs, route them through internal approval and client e signature, and log everything automatically. No verbal agreements, no lost paperwork, no payment disputes.
When a new contract lands in your cloud folder, an AI agent extracts the text, checks every clause against a risk framework, and sends your team a structured memo flagging the problems that actually matter. Preliminary review drops from hours to minutes.
When a new contractor lands in your HR system or Airtable base, this automation generates a complete document bundle, sends it as a single signing package through PandaDoc, and updates your records the moment everything is signed.
When a deal hits the proposal stage in your CRM, this automation pulls the client name, scope, pricing, and line items, then merges everything into a branded template. The finished PDF lands back on the deal record and in the prospect's inbox without anyone touching a document.
When every party signs a document in DocuSign or PandaDoc, this automation downloads the completed PDF, renames it to your filing convention, stores it in the right client folder, and notifies the account manager. No manual downloading, no misfiled contracts.
A scheduled workflow scans your contracts database daily, flags renewals at 30, 14, and 7 day intervals, and sends tiered alerts to account managers and leadership so nothing expires unnoticed.
When a new client is created in your CRM, this automation builds their billing profile, generates the first invoice, sets up recurring payments, and sends a secure link to collect their payment method. No manual data entry between systems, no forgotten first invoices.
When a project is marked complete in your project management tool, this automation pulls billable hours and rates, generates a branded PDF invoice, and emails it to the client with payment instructions. A copy lands in the client folder without anyone lifting a finger.
When a new patient books an appointment, this automation sends digital intake forms, collects consent and insurance details, converts everything to PDF, files it in the patient folder, and notifies your front desk. No clipboards. No data entry.
An AI agent that turns your meeting recordings into structured summaries, assigned action items, and tracked tasks across Slack, Asana, and Notion. No more post meeting admin, no more forgotten decisions.
An automated workflow pulls client KPIs from your data sources on the first business day of each month, populates branded report templates, converts them to PDF, and emails every client their personalised report before your team starts work.
Automatically classify incoming contracts by type, route each one to the right reviewer, and track every document through the review pipeline so nothing stalls in someone's inbox.
When a new B2B client submits their intake form, this automation reads every team member's role and sends each person the exact onboarding content they need. Billing contacts get payment setup. Project sponsors get the timeline. Day to day operators get tool access and kickoff details. Every stakeholder's progress is tracked independently until all are ready.
When a new client record lands in your CRM with a signed engagement letter, a prefilled contract is automatically generated and sent for e signature. No copying, no delays, no forgotten clauses.
When a prospect opens your proposal, this automation logs the view in your CRM, pings the assigned salesperson on Slack, and sends a templated follow up email if the document stays unsigned after 48 hours.
When a real estate agent fills out a short form with property details and buyer information, the automation generates a complete contract of sale, attaches the correct disclosure forms, and sends the full package to DocuSign with the right signing order.
Automatically converts approved quotes into signed service contracts with warranty terms, payment schedules, and scope definitions. No manual paperwork, no verbal agreements, no disputes three months later.
When a vendor sends a contract, AI extracts payment terms, liability caps, termination clauses and auto renewal dates into a structured row. Your procurement team can then compare every vendor agreement side by side, spotting bad deals before anyone signs.
Not ready to talk yet? Start here.
Everything we've learned building 300+ automations for small businesses, in one practical guide. Written for business owners, not engineers.
- Where your team's hours are actually disappearing
- The five automations worth setting up first and why
- How to calculate what manual work is actually costing you
- A step by step checklist to get your first automation live this week
Completely free.