Before the Strategy Session: How to Walk Into Your Claims Meeting Already Ahead
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Maya is nine months into her first benefits admin role when the calendar invite lands. Q1 Claims Analysis Meeting โ Tuesday, 10am. Her broker added a friendly note: Looking forward to walking through your year-over-year trend.
She stares at the invite. Then she clicks accept, because what else is she going to do? She has no idea what to ask for. She has no idea what’s going to be on the slides. She has no idea that this meeting โ three months before her actual renewal strategy session โ will quietly shape whether she walks into that strategy session as a participant or as the practitioner directing the conversation.
If you’re Maya right now, this is the post I wish someone had handed me before my first one.
What the Claims Meeting Really Does

Most new benefits administrators show up to the claims meeting expecting it to be informational. The broker presents trend lines. The carrier rep walks through a few categories. You nod a lot. You leave feeling like you understand your plan a little better than you did before.
Here’s what’s actually happening: every option that lands on your strategy meeting agenda months later is being shaped right now. What the broker shows you here becomes the framing for what they recommend later. If the claims meeting only looks back twelve months, the strategy meeting will only think one renewal cycle ahead. If it surfaces aggregate trends only, the strategy meeting will only consider aggregate solutions. If nobody asks how prior plan design changes performed, the strategy meeting will recommend brand-new ones โ without anyone knowing whether the old ones actually worked. Industry coverage is full of stories where this played out badly.
The meeting feels informational. It isn’t. It’s foundational.
The Question Nobody Tells You to As

Here’s the question I wish someone had told me to bring to my first claims meeting:
What plan design changes have we made in the last three years, and is the data showing they did what we said they were going to do?
That single question rewires the meeting. You’re no longer just looking at a trend line. You’re looking at whether the changes you already made are doing the job. The ER copay you raised two years ago. The deductible shift. The plan you consolidated. Every one of those changes was sold with an outcome. Did the outcome happen?
Nobody is going to bring that question to you. You have to bring it to them.
And here’s the thing โ your broker can absolutely pull that data. They just won’t unless you ask. Brokers prepare what they’re asked to prepare. They have other clients. They build the deck around the standard ask. If you request the prior-changes overlay three to four weeks before the meeting, a good broker says yes and builds it. If you don’t ask, you get the standard slides.
What Usually Goes Wrong
Most claims meetings miss the same things, and the misses compound:
โขย The trend window is twelve months. Behavior change in benefits doesn’t show up that fast โ you need 36 months to see whether a plan change worked.
โขย Large claims aren’t separated from baseline. One catastrophic claim can swing a small group’s trend by double digits, and nobody flags it.
โขย Prior plan design changes aren’t overlaid against the data. Nobody knows whether last year’s lever did its job.
โขย Demographic context gets skipped โ HCE/NHCE split, male/female ratio, dependent enrollment patterns. All of it shapes how a plan change lands.
โขย Industry benchmarks get cited without checking whether your population resembles the benchmark population at all.
The result: a meeting that feels productive in the room and produces a strategy session three months later that’s optimizing for the wrong things.
What To Do Instead

Send your broker this list three to four weeks before your claims analysis meeting:
- 36 months claims data. Not twelve. Not twenty-four.
- Place-of-service detail, not just cost categories.
- Large claimant detail with status โ resolved, ongoing, recurring โ so you can separate one-time spikes from durable trend.
- A list of plan design changes from the prior three years, with a one-line note on the original intent of each.
- Utilization data for the categories those changes were meant to influence, traced before and after the change.
- Demographic and geographic context that lets you normalize comparisons year over year.
- For self-insured plans: diagnosis-level detail in any category where you’ve made a design change, so you can see whether the diagnostic mix has shifted.
That’s the ask. It’s not unreasonable. A good broker will say yes, build the deck around it, and bring more insight than they would have otherwise. A broker who pushes back is telling you something about the working relationship.
For more on what to handle inside the renewal cycle itself, see your open enrollment timeline guide.
Your Broker Is a Strategic Partner, Not Your Replacement
This is the piece nobody explained to me when I started, and it changes everything:
Your broker is a strategic partner. Your broker is not a substitute for you. They bring the data, the market view, and the actuarial muscle. You bring the population knowledge, the organizational context, and the accountability for what gets decided. When the partnership works, both perspectives sharpen each other. When it doesn’t, one perspective dominates and the other goes quiet โ and the renewal pays for it.
The new practitioner mistake isn’t relying on the broker. It’s deferring to them.
There’s a difference. Relying means trusting them to do their job and bringing your own judgment to the table. Deferring means treating their recommendation as the answer rather than as input.
A good broker takes direction. They ask before you ask. They tell you what’s coming on the regulatory horizon before it hits. They push back when you propose something they think is a mistake โ and they engage with your pushback when you challenge theirs. They don’t let you walk blind, and they don’t let themselves walk blind either. (For the broader picture on working with benefits brokers, SHRM’s resource library is a solid starting point.)
If you’ve got that broker, you’re in a strong position. The position is still yours to maintain.
Think Five Years, Not One
A plan change made for next year doesn’t deliver its full effect for two to three years. A network change takes eighteen to twenty-four months for members to fully adjust. A carrier change has transition friction in year one, baseline in year two, and only starts compounding in year three.
If you’re only looking one renewal ahead, you’re optimizing for the next cycle and accepting whatever happens in years two through five as fate. If you’re looking five years ahead, you’re making intentional choices now whose value compounds โ sometimes in directions that don’t show up on the next renewal proposal but show up powerfully on the one three years out.
The renewal isn’t an event. It’s a year in a multi-year arc.
The Prep Work That Changes Everything
Maya sent her broker the request list two weeks before her claims meeting. The broker said yes. The deck came back deeper than the standard one. Maya walked into the meeting with questions, walked out with answers, and walked into her strategy session three months later able to push back on a recommendation that didn’t account for the population shift the data had already shown her.
That’s what the prep work buys you.
The same homework applies to the back half of the renewal cycle, too โ catching what open enrollment missed before it shows up in someone’s January paycheck or someone’s June claim denial. The Post-OE Audit is the field guide I built for the practitioner version of that work. Five phases, real stories, and the tracker that turns the homework into a system you can run every January, every April, and every June. (See also: why the file feed is the most fragile moment of OE. )
1. The claims analysis meeting isn’t informational โ it shapes everything that comes after.
2. Ask for 36 months of data, not 12. Overlay prior plan design changes against current claims so you can see whether they actually worked.
3. Send your prep ask to your broker 3โ4 weeks before the meeting. The deck reflects what you ask for.
4. Your broker is a strategic partner, not your replacement. Rely, don’t defer.
5. Plan choices compound over five years, not one. Look further than the next renewal.
You don’t need to be an expert in your first year. You need to be the practitioner who asks. That’s how the meeting changes. That’s how the strategy session changes. That’s how the next five years of plans get built on something stronger than last year’s slide template.

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