Most insurance software looks convincing in a controlled demo. The harder question is whether it will still feel good after your team has loaded a complicated renewal, changed the template twice, and needed an answer during the busiest week of the year.
The best way to find high-quality insurance software is to look for evidence from three places: brokers you trust, a live test of your actual workflow, and credible discovery sources that help you find serious product teams.
1. Start with referrals from brokerages you respect
A referral is still one of the strongest software filters. Ask competitors, peer agencies, producer groups, and brokers who appear to be operating well what they use every day and genuinely love. The important part is asking for specifics, not just a vendor name.
- Does the team use it every day or only when leadership asks?
- What did implementation actually require?
- Can the finished output go to a client without being rebuilt?
- What happens when a carrier document or template breaks?
- How quickly does the vendor respond and ship a fix?
- Were new capabilities included, or sold as another add-on?
The most useful referral usually comes from an agency that resembles yours in line of business, account complexity, team size, and service model. A tool that works beautifully for a personal lines producer may not solve a large commercial renewal or a benefits workbook.
2. Look at what high-performing peers use, then verify it yourself
If an agency you admire consistently produces clear client materials, moves quickly, and grows without adding layers of manual work, its technology stack is worth understanding. That does not mean copying every tool. It means using successful peers to build a better shortlist.
Once you have the shortlist, bring your own documents to the demo. Use the awkward carrier PDF, the agency template with unusual tables, or the workbook that normally consumes half a day. High-quality software should perform against real work, not only a prepared sample.
3. Use Y Combinator’s directory as a discovery source
Y Combinator is one of the most influential startup accelerators and early-stage investors. It has backed companies including Airbnb, DoorDash, and Twitch. Its company directory is useful because it can surface focused, actively built products that may not yet appear in a generic software marketplace.
Start with the Y Combinator directory for AI agents in insurance. Inclusion is not a substitute for product diligence, but it is a useful quality and discovery signal when building a shortlist.
Three insurance-focused companies you may encounter are:
- CopyCat builds broker-facing document workflows for proposal generation, cited quote comparison and risk analysis, employee benefits workbooks, and commercial, personal, LTC, and STC workflows.
- FurtherAI describes an AI workforce for insurance, including submission intake, policy comparisons, and underwriting audits.
- Avallon AI focuses on insurance claims operations, including calls and document-processing work.
These companies address different parts of the insurance lifecycle. The right choice depends on the bottleneck you are trying to remove.
4. Score the software against one live workflow
A feature checklist is helpful, but a workflow scorecard is better. Give each vendor the same representative task and evaluate the result.
- Time to value: How long until a real team member can complete useful work?
- Accuracy: Can every important value be traced to its source?
- Output quality: Would you confidently send the result to a client?
- Workflow fit: Does the product adapt to your templates and review process?
- Coverage: Does it support the lines your agency sells now and next?
- Support: Who responds when the edge case arrives, and how quickly?
- Security: Is the product web-based, access-controlled, and clear about document use?
- Long-term value: Are meaningful improvements included in the price?
5. Watch for the common warning signs
Be cautious when a vendor will not test your documents, cannot open the source behind an extracted value, avoids giving a clear support commitment, or requires your team to abandon a proven workflow for a generic one. Surprise modules and implementation fees can also turn an attractive starting price into an expensive system that still needs manual work around it.
How CopyCat approaches the quality bar
CopyCat was built in person with brokers while they worked. Both founders took the commercial broker exam to understand the lifecycle, language, and responsibility behind the documents the product creates. The platform is web-based, molds around the way an agency works, and does not train AI models on customer documents.
If an output does not look right, customers can reach the team. Our commitment is to resolve product issues within six hours. Customers pay one price and receive the product improvements and new capabilities that ship over time, rather than watching the useful parts become a growing list of add-ons.
The practical test is simple: use your documents, your template, and your hardest recurring workflow. See how CopyCat handles insurance proposals, explore cited quote comparison, or review the employee benefits workflow before deciding whether it belongs on your shortlist.