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All members—regardless of category—typically receive the following core benefits: cpcusociety.org+1
✅ Free monthly webinars on industry topics
✅ Subscription to Insights professional journal
✅ Member-only access to online community and Mentor Match program
✅ Career center tools and job resources
✅ Networking opportunities via local chapters, interest groups, and events
✅ Member discounts on events and select professional resources
On Dec 15, 2025, at 6:07 PM, 'AOL! EMAIL! SERVICE!!!' via RiskList <risk...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
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“Maybe Dave's right and it will garner interest and bring in a new generation of participants”


I was lurking through this thread until I read Dave's last post and felt compelled to add my 2 cents
(oh sorry, we don't have pennies anymore so I guess I have been upgraded to a shinny nickel).
In the '80s I taught CPCU 6 (the legal environment of insurance) for over 6 years in the Dallas CPCU
chapter. It was a 15 week deep dive into legal theory and legal issues relating to insurance and insurance
contracts...difficult but not impossible. That was back when it was a full 10 parts and the exams
were blue book essay answer...no multiple choice. One had to go through the matriculation process
before being eligible to take their first exam.
You could only take 5 exams in a semester at that time due to scheduling and only a very select few that I every knew were able to take and pass 5 exams in a single semester. I guess I am saying that regardless of what real world,
practical knowledge was garnered, a CPCU designation reflected a serious commitment to
insurance education. It was recognized throughout the industry at that time as meaningful. Then things began to change.
The 90s brought massive change to the U.S. insurance industry and CPCU began changing with it.
My regret is that the time and commitment of those professionals who obtained the designation
when it was originally 5 parts and subsequently split into 10 has been devalued by our industry to the level of
multiple choice exams and affiliation by membership.
Maybe Dave's right and it will garner interest and bring in a new generation of participants, however, the
newbies will never understand what it was like to have to carry your horse through the snow uphill
both ways to get to and from school.
Don (fully retired from everything but golf)
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Er... Aren't 2 and 5 the same?
I thought there were only four:
Or something along those lines. Pretty sure they were different words, but I thought that was the process.
You can avoid any risk if you simply stop doing something, but that does tend to make the economy grind to a halt ;-)
Dave
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My own experience verifies your observations, Scott.
My underwriting training began right after university graduation. The first requirement – complete the CPCU curriculum (the 5 Parts) within 3 years which I did. After 3 years I was an underwriting supervisor for a year then an underwriting manager for 2 years. Then went into Risk Management, eventually being hired to “straighten out” an international energy company’s captive operation. It was a mess, but I sorted that one out by splitting out the underwriting and the investment functions and installing a risk management culture by forming a risk management company. All of this led to the realization that risk management was greater than what I had learned/been taught. So, I changed directions and went to work in the financial area of an international company to hone my computer and financial skills and ended up taking a company out of bankruptcy.
Long boring story but the end is enterprise risk management which brings organizational strategy into the mix. While the ERM movement has made small steps over the past 25 years, there is still a long way to go. In ERM we group insurance in the Risk Transfer category and refer to captives as Risk Finance Facilities.
Greg
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Marshall & Swift book was used by many insurance professionals.
Pauline Thomas, CRM, CIC, ARM, CISR, FSRMC
CA License # 0519678
Effective Risk Management
Independent Insurance & Risk Management Consultants – No Insurance Sold
Phone 949-251-1500
From: 'AOL! EMAIL! SERVICE!!!' via RiskList <risk...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, December 20, 2025 9:56 AM
To: risk...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RiskList] CPCU Society
What was the name of the book used to estimate building cost? Getting old is sometimes difficult
On Saturday, December 20, 2025, 12:34 PM, Dave Morgan <da...@morganbishop.co.uk> wrote:
Sadly, my experience of broking suggests that it isn't.
Actually, despite underinsurance being a big thing here in the UK at the moment, it's mostly a case of "let me have your current schedule so I've got the sums insured".
That's one of the reasons I decided to get out of the game.
I was mostly doing wholesale stuff during my last tour of duty. I'd be going back to the sub-brokers and suggesting that there's no way the figures were right.
The response was generally, "I've been in this business for 25 years and you're criticisng my judgement?!"
I had one where the the sub-broker asked me for a quote to increase the buildings sum insured from £400k to £600k and another quote to increase it to £800k. So I asked what it should actually be.
A quick look on Google suggested to me that it should be £2.5m. A couple of people I worked with agreed.
I said I wasn't renewing without a valuation survey That came in at £4.5m.
The sub-broker's response?
"How am I supposed to tell the client that they need to insure for £4.5m?"
Dave
-------- Original message --------
From: Bill Wilson <Insurance...@outlook.com>
Date: 19/12/2025 05:26 (GMT+01:00)
Subject: Re: [RiskList] CPCU Society
I assumed that was a given.
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On Dec 20, 2025, at 12:40 PM, Greg Sosbee <gr...@sosbee.net> wrote:
My own experience verifies your observations, Scott.
My underwriting training began right after university graduation. The first requirement – complete the CPCU curriculum (the 5 Parts) within 3 years which I did. After 3 years I was an underwriting supervisor for a year then an underwriting manager for 2 years. Then went into Risk Management, eventually being hired to “straighten out” an international energy company’s captive operation. It was a mess, but I sorted that one out by splitting out the underwriting and the investment functions and installing a risk management culture by forming a risk management company. All of this led to the realization that risk management was greater than what I had learned/been taught. So, I changed directions and went to work in the financial area of an international company to hone my computer and financial skills and ended up taking a company out of bankruptcy.
Long boring story but the end is enterprise risk management which brings organizational strategy into the mix. While the ERM movement has made small steps over the past 25 years, there is still a long way to go. In ERM we group insurance in the Risk Transfer category and refer to captives as Risk Finance Facilities.
Greg
From: risk...@googlegroups.com <risk...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Scott LeMay
Sent: Wednesday, 17 December, 2025 13:25
To: risk...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [RiskList] CPCU Society
Greg --
I'd say risk management and insurance are two circles of a Venn diagram that intersect to varying degrees.
The Risk Manager should recognize the use of insurance, and how risk management can affect the availability and cost of insurance.
The Insurance Practitioner should be aware of those perspectives from the other direction.
In the smallest businesses, the insurance buyer could be the business owner who also has the risk management duties, even if by default. The insurance practitioner may be in a position to provide insurance policies, but not consultation on risk management issues.
Things change greatly as the business revenues and employee counts increase. Managing risk and insurance for that risk becomes more formalized inside the business entity.
-- Scott
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