CINCINNATI BUSINESS COURIER MAY 20, 2016 Note of advice from Carl Lindner Jr. holds place in Cassady’s daily life R BIO Tom Cassady Title: Midwest regional CEO of USI Insurance Services Education: Bachelor’s degree in history from the University of Cincinnati Family: Wife, Karen, four children and four grandchildren Residence: Hyde Park Tom Cassady is Midwest regional CEO for USI Insurance Services. S aturdays aren’t really part of the weekend for Tom Cassady. They’re just another workday. Cassady, the Midwest regional CEO of USI Insurance Services, has been coming in on Saturdays since he started working in the insurance business right out of college in 1976. He started that because Carl Schlotman, who ran insurance agency Continental Associates (now called CAI), was his first employer and said he’d guarantee that Cassady would be successful if he worked every Saturday for the first five years of his career. “What he didn’t tell me is that after five years it becomes a habit,” Cassady said. Now the 61-year-old Cassady oversees a region extending from Erie, Pa., to Wichita, Kan., for New York-based USI. It’s the largest insurance agency in Cincinnati, generating more than $35 million in local property and casualty revenue in 2015. How has the industry changed since you got into the business? Like a lot of businesses, the insurance brokerage industry has responded to customer demands to be more innovative and creative. Career path: Joined insurance agency Continental Associates in 1976. Left in 1981 to start his own firm, Queen City Insurance. Sold that company to USI in 1999 and became regional CEO, a role he’s held ever since. In the old days, best-in-class service, competitive pricing and strong security could win new business. Customers consider that table stakes today. Providing actionable information, not just data, that can mitigate and predict risk is required. Do you expect more merger and acquisition activity in the insurance brokerage business? Yes. We are highly acquisitive and have a lot of confidence that we can integrate an acquisition with our organic growth tools. There are tens of thousands of agencies that have become very valuable so internal succession is problematic for them. How have firms like yours diversified the services they offer to include more consulting services? We discovered 10 years ago that our best customers wanted our advice and tools to predict and mitigate risk, not just be a vendor. We are providing the technical resources to the middle market with a team capable of providing the consulting value that used to be exclusively available to the Fortune 500. This allows our customers a competitive advantage. What is the best book you’ve ever read? I have read “The Road Less Traveled” by Scott Peck at least 20 times. I try to read it every summer. More than that, I’ve tried to live my life by its principles. Life is difficult. With discipline, the grace of God manifested through love and courage, we can experience spiritual growth. How good is that? What music are you listening to right now? Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. How do you most like to spend your money? I don’t like spending money, but I don’t mind spending it on roses and flowers. What scares you? I hate alligators and snakes. I mean, hate them. What traits helped you rise to the professional level you’ve reached? I was lucky enough to have a father that modeled an unbelievable work ethic. As a blackbag-carrying pediatrician, I thought everybody’s dad worked seven days a week, including Christmas. I can’t hold a candle to his effort, but I work harder than most. A month before he died, Carl Lindner Jr. handed me one of his infamous cards from his pocket without even looking at it. It said, “The harder I work, the luckier I get.” I have that on my mirror. Are you a good time manager? How do you handle time management? Fairly good. I know the art of standing up to end the meeting, and I’m usually the first one out the door. I have been called abrupt. I’m not good at goodbyes. How do you motivate your employees? They never have to guess my thoughts. I’m expressive and try to be real by exposing my own weaknesses. They reciprocate by being genuine with me. Favorite guilty pleasure? My annual golf outing in Michigan with my grade school and high school buddies. My wife calls us the Idiots Club. Enough said. - Steve Watkins [email protected] This article appeared in the Cincinnati Business Courier on May 20, 2016 on page 15. It has been reprinted by the Cincinnati Business Courier and further reproduction by any other party is strictly prohibited. Copyright ©2016 Cincinnati Business Courier, 101 West Seventh Street, Cincinnati OH 45202.
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