Disability income insurance for large physician and dental groups represent some of the most valuable opportunities sales. A single 30-doctor practice can produce more revenue than dozens of individual disability insurance policies.
Despite the opportunity, many insurance brokers avoid pursuing large medical groups. Some assume these practices already have an established benefits broker. Others believe physician group disability insurance is too complex to approach.
Many medical practices have significant disability coverage gaps they do not realize exist.
Physicians often purchase disability insurance early in their careers, but their income may increase dramatically over time. Without proper policy reviews, their income protection may no longer match their earnings.
Advisors who successfully work with physician groups understand two critical steps:
- How to connect with the right decision-makers
- How to identify gaps in physician disability insurance coverage
The following framework outlines a proven approach to entering and winning disability insurance cases with large medical practices.
Step 1: Identify Who Actually Makes the Decision
Before approaching a physician group, it is critical to determine who controls benefits decisions.
Today, many doctors are employed by hospitals or healthcare systems. In these environments, individual physicians typically do not select their own disability insurance coverage.
Decision-makers vary depending on the structure of the practice.
Physician-Owned Medical Practices
Common decision-makers include:
- Managing partner
- Practice administrator
- Office manager
Large Physician Groups (20+ Doctors)
Larger practices may involve:
- Chief Financial Officer (CFO)
- HR director
- Benefits committee
Hospital or Health System Physicians
For employed physicians, benefits decisions are often made by:
- Human resources leadership
- Corporate benefits teams
Before reaching out, conduct basic research using LinkedIn, the practice website or a quick phone call to the front desk.
A simple question often works:
“Could you tell me who handles employee benefits decisions for the practice?”
Identifying the correct contact early prevents wasted time and improves outreach success.
Step 2: How to Reach Decision-Makers at Medical Practices
Reaching decision-makers at physician practices can be challenging.
Cold calls to medical offices are often filtered by administrative staff. Cold email outreach also performs poorly because most practice managers receive frequent vendor solicitations.
Successful brokers often rely on personalized outreach that stands out from typical sales communication.
The Handwritten Note Strategy
One effective approach is sending a handwritten envelope that includes:
- A short handwritten note
- A small gift card ($25–$50)
- A request for a brief virtual introduction
Example outreach message:
“I’d appreciate 15 minutes on Zoom to ask how your current disability insurance policy handles partner income if an owner becomes disabled.”
Handwritten mail stands out because most medical practices receive large volumes of generic marketing mail.
Even modest response rates of 10–15% can significantly outperform traditional cold outreach methods in this niche market.
The goal of this outreach is not to sell disability insurance immediately. Instead, the goal is to start a conversation about physician income protection.
Step 3: Use Virtual Meetings to Identify Disability Insurance Gaps
The initial meeting with a practice manager or administrator should focus on identifying potential gaps in the group’s disability coverage.
This short conversation should help determine whether a deeper review is worthwhile.
Begin by asking about the practice’s current structure of disability insurance coverage:
- Does the practice offer group long-term disability insurance (LTD)?
- Do physicians also maintain individual disability insurance policies?
- Has anyone reviewed how these policies interact?
Many physician groups have multiple layers of disability coverage that have never been evaluated together.
Then ask targeted questions about the group’s policy design.
Examples include:
Ownership income offsets
“Does your group disability policy reduce benefits if partners continue receiving profit distributions during disability?”
Definition of disability
“How does the policy define ‘own occupation’ for surgeons or procedural specialists?”
Maximum capacity provisions
“Does the policy allow the insurer to assume a physician could work additional hours and reduce benefits accordingly?”
These questions often reveal potential coverage concerns.
If a meaningful issue surfaces, the next step is scheduling an in-person meeting with physician leadership to review the policy details.
Step 4: Conduct a Disability Insurance Gap Analysis for Physicians
An in-person meeting allows brokers to perform a full disability insurance gap analysis.
Before the meeting, request relevant documents such as:
- Group LTD policy certificate
- Summary plan description
- Policy riders or amendments
Reviewing the existing coverage allows you to identify limitations that commonly appear in group disability insurance for doctors.
Common Disability Insurance Gaps in Physician Practices
Ownership Income Offsets
Many group LTD policies reduce benefits based on income received during disability.
For physician-owners, this may include K-1 distributions or profit sharing that continue even when the physician cannot practice.
A doctor expecting $15,000 per month in disability benefits may receive significantly less.
Weak “Own Occupation” Definitions
Disability definitions vary widely.
For surgeons and procedural specialists, policies should clearly protect physicians who can no longer perform the procedures that generate their income.
Without proper language, insurers may argue that physicians could still work in a different medical role.
Mental Health Limitations
Many group disability policies limit benefits for mental health claims to 24 months over a lifetime.
Policies offering per-occurrence coverage provide stronger protection for physicians experiencing burnout, depression or other conditions.
Self-Reported Symptom Limitations
Certain policies limit benefits for conditions based on patient-reported symptoms such as:
- Migraines
- Fibromyalgia
- Chronic fatigue
- Carpal tunnel syndrome
These limitations can significantly reduce protection for physicians.
Mandatory Part-Time Work Requirements
Some disability policies require claimants to accept part-time or modified duties.
If a physician declines, the policy may terminate benefits.
Present Disability Coverage Findings Clearly
When presenting findings to physician partners, clarity is essential.
Create a simple side-by-side comparison showing:
- Current disability coverage
- Identified policy limitations
- Recommended improvements
Translating policy language into real financial outcomes is especially effective.
Physicians tend to respond well when they see exact policy clauses and their potential financial impact.
This approach builds credibility and shifts the conversation from sales to problem solving.
Step 5: Navigate the Decision Process
Large physician practices rarely make immediate benefits decisions.
Many groups require partnership approval or committee review.
Brokers should identify all stakeholders involved in the process.
Common influencers include:
- Managing partners
- Practice administrators
- HR leadership
- CFOs
Each group has different priorities.
Physician partners typically focus on personal income protection, while administrators focus on implementation and cost management.
Providing clear communication materials and offering to assist with enrollment can simplify the process and improve approval rates.
Why Disability Insurance Is an Entry Point to Physician Groups
Disability insurance is often the easiest way for brokers to build relationships with physician practices.
Many benefits brokers treat group LTD as a basic product and rarely analyze how it interacts with physician compensation structures.
When a broker demonstrates expertise in physician disability insurance, it immediately creates differentiation.
Once credibility is established through disability coverage discussions, the relationship often expands into broader conversations around:
- Health insurance
- Life insurance
- Executive benefits
- Retirement planning
In many cases, solving one disability insurance problem opens the door to a long-term advisory relationship with the practice.
Final Thoughts: Building a Pipeline of Physician Disability Insurance Opportunities
Winning physician group disability insurance cases requires persistence, research and specialized knowledge.
Successful brokers focus on:
- Reaching the right decision-makers
- Identifying meaningful coverage gaps
- Presenting clear solutions supported by policy language
Start by identifying one physician practice this week. Research its structure, locate the decision-maker and begin the conversation.
Many physician groups already have disability coverage—but far fewer have the right disability protection for their income and practice structure.
Do you have questions or need more information? Reach out to your Local Sales Rep. Do you already have a client in mind? You can submit quote requests, view underwriting case status and much more in our Advisor Portal.
