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For years, we watched employees leave for one reason above all else: money. Bigger salaries, signing bonuses, richer compensation packages — you name it. But lately, many of us are seeing something different happen.
People are still changing jobs. The surprising part is that many are willing to take less pay to do it.
According to a recent report from Korn Ferry, two in five white-collar professionals who recently changed jobs accepted pay cuts of more than 10%. That would have been hard to imagine even two years ago.
But when you talk to employees today, the reasons start to make sense.
Many professionals are exhausted. Over the past several years, insurance organizations have dealt with staffing shortages, rising claims severity, tighter margins, digital transformation pressures, and now AI disruption layered on top of everything else. In many companies, the workload has simply intensified.
As a result, employees are reevaluating what they want from work. Flexibility matters more. Culture matters more. Leadership matters more. And increasingly, stability matters more than squeezing out another 10% in compensation.
Recent research from global asset management firm Nuveen shows that 51% of workers recently accepted—or applied for—roles with equal or lower pay in exchange for better benefits, flexibility, or long-term opportunity. Even more telling, 62% said they would prioritize job security over higher pay.
That should get every insurance executive’s attention.
Because this trend tells us something important: retention is no longer just a compensation conversation. It’s a trust conversation.
People want to feel valued. They want manageable workloads and leaders who communicate clearly. They want to know there’s a future for them inside the organization, especially as AI continues reshaping roles across underwriting, claims, operations, and customer service.
In our industry specifically, this creates both a challenge and an opportunity.
Insurance has always depended on experienced professionals who carry deep institutional knowledge and relationship expertise. If we want to retain those people, we have to create environments where they can thrive—not just survive.
That means investing in career development, mentorship, flexibility, and better management training. It means recognizing employees before they burn out. And it means giving people opportunities to continue growing as technology changes the nature of work.
It also means thinking differently about workforce strategy. Flexible staffing models, like those supported by WAHVE, can help reduce pressure on internal teams, preserve institutional knowledge, and give full-time employees the breathing room they need to stay engaged and productive. Further, WAHVE provides firms with on-demand access to experienced professionals who can step in quickly to support underwriting, claims, operations, customer service, and administrative functions without adding unnecessary overhead. In a market where burnout is real and experienced talent is increasingly selective, having access to seasoned professionals on a flexible basis can be a meaningful advantage.
At the end of the day, organizations that win the talent battle over the next several years likely won’t be the ones simply offering the highest salaries.
They’ll be the ones building cultures where good people genuinely want to stay.
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