Insurance Leads
Experience the best insurance leads for your company needs. Lead Canon has over 10 plus years of generation opt in organic insurance leads. Our lead generation and online marketing campaigns yield the most qualified insurance seeking clients. Each client has requested information to receive a health product quote. These are perfect leads for small to large insurance companies.
Health Insurance Leads
We offer health insurance leads with a risk free option. Each wrong number or disconnected lead will be replaced free of charge. These health insurance leads are great to follow up with and provide health policy information. Targeted insurance leads for the health industry.
Auto Insurance Leads
There are many auto insurance lead companies but not many that stand behind each product like Lead Canon. Each auto insurance lead that you buy is covered for our lead for lead guarantee. Meaning that if you get any unusable leads or wrong numbers we will credit each lead back to you free of charge. Its our way of increasing the quality of your lead purchase.
Life Insurance Leads
Contact the best life insurance leads. These clients have requested information about a life insurance product or service. In most cases they are requesting a quote from your office to see if the product meets their budget.
Annuity Leads
We can target your annuity leads by state and other custom filters. The clients are seeking annuity options and would like to ask questions about annuity products and services. Explore the annuity lead option plan with your sales associate to find the best campaign for your insurance company.
Home Insurance
Opt in home insurance leads and new homeowners are two options to bring new business. We also suggest targeting the lead so that renewal dates can be achieved. There are several ways that we generate home insurance leads. We look forward to speaking with you to find the best option.
Speak with an experienced insurance lead specialist.
Insurance Facts
Insurance is the equitable transfer of the risk of a loss, from one entity to another in exchange for money. It is a form of risk management primarily used to hedge against the risk of a contingent, uncertain loss. An insurer, or insurance carrier, is selling the insurance; the insured, or policyholder, is the person or entity buying the insurance policy. The amount of money to be charged for a certain amount of insurance coverage is called the premium. Risk management, the practice of appraising and controlling risk, has evolved as a discrete field of study and practice.
The transaction involves the insured assuming a guaranteed and known relatively small loss in the form of payment to the insurer in exchange for the insurer's promise to compensate (indemnify) the insured in the case of a financial (personal) loss. The insured receives a contract, called the insurance policy, which details the conditions and circumstances under which the insured will be financially compensated.
Insurance involves pooling funds from many insured entities (known as exposures) to pay for the losses that some may incur. The insured entities are therefore protected from risk for a fee, with the fee being dependent upon the frequency and severity of the event occurring. In order to be an insurable risk, the risk insured against must meet certain characteristics. Insurance as a financial intermediary is a commercial enterprise and a major part of the financial services industry, but individual entities can also self-insure through saving money for possible future losses.
An entity seeking to transfer risk (an individual, corporation, or association of any type, etc.) becomes the 'insured' party once risk is assumed by an 'insurer', the insuring party, by means of a contract, called an insurance policy. Generally, an insurance contract includes, at a minimum, the following elements: identification of participating parties (the insurer, the insured, the beneficiaries), the premium, the period of coverage, the particular loss event covered, the amount of coverage (I.e., the amount to be paid to the insured or beneficiary in the event of a loss), and exclusions (events not covered). An insured is thus said to be "indemnified" against the loss covered in the policy.
Source: Insurance,
Wikipedia.org