Solutions · MGAs

AI built for managing general agents

NextRev finishes the paperwork behind every placement. One intake drafts the carrier submission, the binder, the endorsement, and the bordereau, so your underwriters and producers place and bind business instead of re-keying it into one portal after another, and nothing issues until an underwriter approves it.

The hidden cost between you and the carrier

Once a deal is placed, your underwriters and producers stop placing business and start moving data:

  • Re-keying the same submission into each carrier's portal, in each portal's format
  • Filling out binders, endorsements, and policy-change forms by hand
  • Reconciling bordereaux and carrier reports line by line
  • Updating the AMS and CRM so every system tells the same story
  • Answering producer status checks the systems should answer on their own
  • Pulling premium, commission, and production reports together

Industry bodies describe bordereaux still going out monthly or quarterly in spreadsheets, with weeks of cleaning and reformatting before the numbers reconcile, and performance data lagging 30 to 90 days. Industry surveys suggest most producers spend the majority of their day on administrative work, not selling. Sourced figures, not our claim. We size yours from your own book.

What NextRev does for your desk

It runs on the AMS, rater, and carrier portals you already have. No rip-and-replace.

One intake, formatted for every carrier

Capture the submission once. NextRev drafts the version each carrier program needs and keeps the AMS and CRM in step, so the same data stops getting typed five times.

Binders and endorsements, drafted and queued

Binders, endorsement requests, and policy-change forms draft themselves from the bound terms and line up for one-click approval. Your team reviews; nothing issues on its own.

Bordereaux that reconcile themselves

Premium, commission, and policy records line up into carrier-ready bordereaux on the schedule each carrier wants, with mismatches flagged before they turn into audit findings.

Provenance, not generation

Every field traces back to the submission or the bound terms. Anything unsure is flagged, never invented, and an underwriter's approval is the only point a record moves.

Why MGAs are moving now

The delegated market is growing faster than the back office behind it.

$89.9B

Premium placed through MGAs and other delegated authorities rose 15% to $89.9 billion in 2024, a fourth straight year of double-digit growth. (Conning puts the figure higher, near $114 billion.) More volume runs through the same manual back office.

AM Best, MGA Market Segment Report 2024
Still in Excel

Bordereaux still go out monthly or quarterly in spreadsheets, with weeks of cleaning and reformatting, leaving carriers and reinsurers reading data that can be 30 to 90 days old.

InsTech, The Bordereaux Bottleneck
Weeks to hours

McKinsey reports AI moving across insurance distribution, with submission handling and quoting for simpler risks moving faster. Insurers are now about as likely as technology firms to report using AI.

McKinsey, State of AI 2025

See it on your own book

We start with a paid diagnosis sized on your own submissions, binders, and bordereaux. You leave with a plan whether or not we build.

Request a Demo

Sources

  1. AM Best, "Best's Market Segment Report: MGA Premiums Showed Double-Digit Growth for a Fourth-Straight Year in 2024." US MGA/DUAE premium of $89.9 billion, up 15%, fourth straight double-digit year; 700+ MGAs over the NAIC disclosure threshold. captive.com
  2. Conning, "2025 MGA Study." US MGA direct premiums written of an estimated $114.1 billion in 2024, up 16% year over year. conning.com
  3. InsTech, "The Bordereaux Bottleneck: Why Reporting Is Still the Industry's Biggest Drag." Bordereaux still sent monthly or quarterly in spreadsheets; weeks of cleaning and reformatting; performance data lagging 30 to 90 days. instech.co
  4. McKinsey, "The future of AI in the insurance industry." AI across the distribution lifecycle, including faster submission handling and automated documentation. mckinsey.com
  5. McKinsey, "The State of AI" 2025. Insurers about as likely as technology firms to report using AI; capturing and processing information among the top reported uses. mckinsey.com
  6. Vymo, "How to Increase Insurance Agent Productivity" (citing a Vertafore survey). Producers spend the majority of their day on administrative work rather than selling. vymo.com