How to budget for AI at your agency

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Jackson Fregeau
5 min
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Jamieson Fregeau
5 min
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Adam Jones
5 min
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Kelly Watters
5 min
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Chantielle MacFarlane
5 min
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Brigitte Viola
5 min
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With the right budget strategy, AI can deliver measurable efficiency, retention, and revenue gains for your agency.

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Across the US, AI is reshaping how agencies handle renewals, communicate with clients, and run day-to-day operations. What once meant weeks of manual effort — cross-referencing policy documents, typing client emails from scratch, or running market quotes — can now be automated in minutes. With AI, the difference isn’t just speed, it’s capacity. Agents can finally focus on the high-touch conversations that deepen relationships and drive retention.

But here’s the thing: AI isn’t a “nice-to-have” experiment anymore. It’s an investment, and like any investment, the value depends on how well you plan. Without a thought-out budget, you risk spending on tools that sit unused or chasing features that don’t align with your agency’s goals. The right budgeting approach ensures you pick technology that delivers measurable results, both for your bottom line and your client experience.

Step 1: Define the business outcomes you want

Before you even look at AI vendors or price tags, start with clarity on your objectives. Ask yourself questions like:

  • Do you want to reduce operational costs by replacing manual processes with automation?
  • Are you aiming to shorten renewal turnaround times to eliminate backlog?
  • Do you need to improve retention by personalizing outreach at scale?
  • Are upsell and cross-sell opportunities slipping through the cracks?
  • Do your customers feel they get personalized service?
  • Are your staff having meaningful interactions with your customers?

Having a clear target will prevent you from buying AI for the sake of it. If your main goal is to cut down the hours spent on reviewing renewals, prioritize tools like Quandri’s Policy Checking that instantly flag missing coverages or premium increases. If it’s client retention, focus on AI-powered communications that keep your clients engaged and informed. 

Be strategic about where you start. Target the process that’s either your biggest time drain or your highest revenue opportunity. That’s where the budget will work hardest. For many agencies, that means starting with personal lines renewals. They often represent the largest policy volume in your book, which makes them both the most resource-intensive and the most repetitive to process. Personal lines workflows also tend to have high client touchpoints, so even small efficiency gains can have an outsized impact on client satisfaction, retention, and upsell potential.

Step 2: Identify AI-driven use cases

AI in insurance isn’t one-size-fits-all. Throwing technology at every problem rarely works, and it almost always wastes budget. The agencies that see the biggest returns are the ones that choose use cases deliberately, focusing on workflows where AI can directly influence employee wellness client experience and the bottom line.

Start by looking at your core processes and asking two key questions:

  1. Where do we spend the most manual time for the least return?
  2. Where do delays, backlogs, or missed opportunities have the greatest financial impact?

For many agencies, the answers tend to cluster around renewal reviews, market requoting, and client communications. These are processes that touch a large percentage of your book, require repetitive and detail-heavy work, and directly influence retention and revenue. They’re also the areas where automation can deliver measurable, repeatable value almost immediately.

Common examples include:

  • Reviewing renewals: Manually checking each policy for coverage gaps, missing endorsements, or upsell opportunities can take five to ten minutes per file, and that’s before you factor in the time to prioritize which clients to contact first. AI can handle this review instantly, surfacing the most important changes so agents can focus on high-value interactions and reduce E&O risk. Learn more about Quandri’s Policy Checking.

  • Automated requoting: Shopping the market manually means re-entering client data into multiple carrier systems — a process that can easily take 15–20 minutes per policy. AI can trigger and return competitive market quotes in real time without duplicate data entry, ensuring you always have the best available options ready to share with clients. See how Quandri Requoting works.

  • AI-powered client communications: Drafting a personalized, professional renewal email from scratch can take up to 20 minutes per client, which adds up fast when multiplied across your book. AI tools like Quandri’s Connect capability automatically generate tailored, policy-specific messages that save agents time while reinforcing coverage value and service quality.

Step 3: Understand the cost components

Budgeting for AI goes far beyond the headline subscription fee. While the monthly or annual license might be the most visible number, it’s rarely the full picture. Breaking down each cost category early helps you set realistic expectations and avoid budget overruns that can derail a project.

  • Technology costs: This includes your software licenses, BMS integrations, and any premium features or modules you choose to enable. Some AI solutions scale in price based on the number of users or the size of your book, so factor in potential growth over time.

  • Implementation costs: Even the best AI tools need proper setup to deliver value. This can involve configuration to match your workflows, testing to ensure accuracy, and training so your team knows how to use the system effectively. Skimping here can slow adoption and limit results.

  • Ongoing costs: AI isn’t a one-and-done purchase. Plan for regular updates, vendor support, and possibly adding more licenses as your team expands or usage increases. This also covers any internal time spent managing the system.

Taking the time to fully understand each of these components ensures your budget reflects the true cost of ownership, not just the sticker price. When you know what’s coming, you can plan for it. And more importantly, defend the investment to stakeholders with confidence.

Step 4: Find the budget for AI in your fiscal planning

Because AI is still a relatively new category for many agencies, there’s a good chance you don’t have a neat, pre-labelled budget line for it. It doesn’t always fit cleanly into traditional buckets like “software” or “operations.” That’s why it pays to think creatively about where the funding will come from. The good news is that AI is designed to replace or reduce manual effort, so it often pays for itself by freeing up time and resources you’re already spending elsewhere.

  • Reallocate from manual process costs: If automation can save your agents hours each week, you can shift that portion of your staffing budget toward the AI investment instead of hiring more to keep up with the workload.

  • Cut underperforming tools: A thorough audit of your current tech stack can uncover platforms with low adoption or overlapping functionality. Eliminating those frees up budget that can be repurposed toward AI solutions with a clearer ROI.

  • Tap into innovation or growth budgets: Many agencies have discretionary funds earmarked for future-facing initiatives. AI qualifies as both innovation and growth, making it an ideal candidate for these allocations.

  • Phase costs over time: Rather than committing to a full rollout on day one, start with a smaller pilot project. A year-one trial helps prove the business case, which makes it easier to secure more funding for expansion in future budget cycles.

Timing is critical. Align your AI budget request with annual planning cycles when leadership is already evaluating growth opportunities and operational efficiencies. That way, AI can be positioned alongside other strategic priorities rather than compete for leftover dollars.

Step 5: Phase your AI investment

AI can transform your agency, but you don’t have to (and shouldn’t) try to roll out everything at once. A phased approach spreads costs over multiple budget cycles, reduces operational disruption, and gives your team time to adapt to each change before layering on the next. It also creates opportunities to measure impact at each stage so you can justify future investment with hard results.

Start with a single, high-impact workflow—something that touches a large percentage of your book and is easy to measure in terms of time savings or revenue impact. For most agencies, automated personal-lines renewals are a strong first choice. They represent the largest policy volume, have repetitive steps that are ripe for automation, and are directly tied to retention and upsell potential.

Once you’ve proven the value here, expand into complementary capabilities:

  • Requoting to capture competitive market rates faster and protect your market share.
  • AI-powered communications to scale proactive client outreach without adding manual effort.

Each stage builds on the efficiencies and data generated in the last, making your AI program more powerful over time while keeping the budget manageable.

Step 6: Get team buy-in and adoption right

No matter how powerful your AI tools are, they’re only as effective as the team using them. This means adoption has to be part of the budget and the strategy from day one.

  • Plan for training and onboarding: Budget time to onboard agents on how the tool works and how it fits into their daily workflow. Training should be role-specific so every team member knows exactly how AI supports their part of the process.

  • Communicate the “why”: Make it clear that AI is there to support their work, not replace them. Show examples of how it reduces low-value admin tasks, giving them more time for client conversations and higher-value activities.

  • Measure and monitor adoption: Track metrics like the percentage of policies reviewed by AI, the number of requotes generated automatically, or the proportion of client emails sent using AI-generated drafts. These data points help you spot training gaps early and keep everyone accountable.

When agents experience tangible benefits—like cutting 20 minutes off an email draft or reviewing more policies in less time—they’re far more likely to embrace the technology.

Step 7: Review and adjust your AI budget annually

Your AI budget isn’t something you set once and forget. Both the technology landscape and your agency’s priorities will evolve, and your budget needs to keep pace.

At least once a year, revisit your AI spend to:

  • Increase investment in tools delivering clear, measurable ROI.
  • Reallocate funds away from tools or features that aren’t producing the expected results.
  • Refocus strategy so your AI investments align with new growth objectives, market conditions, or client expectations.

This ongoing review helps you avoid wasted spend, keeps your AI program agile, and ensures your technology stack continues to serve your agency’s long-term business goals. A continuous improvement mindset turns your AI budget from a cost centre into an engine for sustained value creation.

Bringing it together

AI can transform your agency’s efficiency, client experience, and profitability, but success depends on a smart, flexible budget. Start with a clear vision, focus on the highest-value workflows first, and track results so you can confidently expand your investment.

If you’re ready to explore AI for renewals, policy checking, or client communications, learn more about Quandri’s Renewal Intelligence Platform or book a demo today to see how it’s helping brokerages across the US turn AI budgets into measurable business outcomes.

Jackson Fregeau
Jackson is the co-founder and CEO of Quandri. With a background in finance, Jackson's posts provide insights on the insurance industry and the fast evolving space on renewal intelligence
Jamieson Fregeau
As Quandri's co-founder and President, Jamieson has a background in computer engineering. His posts focus on AI and automation advancements impacting the insurance industry and personal lines renewals.
Chantielle
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Adam Jones
A 15 year SaaS revenue executive, Adam is the VP of Sales at Quandri. His posts leverage an extensive background in SaaS to drive technological transformation in insurance.
Kelly Watters
Kelly has over 20 years of experience in the management of sales, service, operations and underwriting for commercial, group and personal lines insurance. Her posts focus on actionable advice and industry learnings.
Brigitte Viola
Brigitte is an Industry Solutions Consultant at Quandri with over 20 years of experience across carriers, agencies, and MGAs in both personal and commercial lines insurance. Her posts focus on practical insights and learnings from implementing technology to drive efficiency and growth in the insurance space.

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