You're evaluating FMOs (Field Marketing Organizations) to represent. Maybe you're brand new. Maybe you're unhappy where you are. Either way, not all FMOs are built the same. Some are predatory. Some are mediocre. Some are genuinely built for agent success. How do you tell the difference? Ask these 7 questions. The answers will make it obvious.

Why This Matters

Your FMO choice determines: your commission split, your access to technology, the support you get, whether you own your book, and how much money lands in your pocket. Choose wrong and you lose $10,000–$30,000+ per year. Choose right and you have a partner in your growth. This isn't a small decision.

Question 1: Do I Own My Book? What's the Release Letter Process?

Question 1
Do I own my book of business? If I want to leave, what's the process?
Why you're asking this:

Your "book" = the clients you've enrolled. If you don't own it, you're renting. Leave the FMO and your clients stay behind. That's catastrophic.

Good answer looks like:
"You own 100% of your book. If you want to move to another FMO, we issue a release letter within 5 business days. You take your clients and their renewal commissions with you. That's the agreement."

Translation: They're confident in their service. They know they can keep you by being good, not by trapping you. Agents typically build 30–50% more valuable book in 2 years. That's yours to take.

Red flag sounds like:
"We own the book and share renewals with you, 50/50" OR "You own the book but it takes 30–60 days to get a release letter."

Translation: They own your clients, not you. Leave and you lose 50% of your renewal income forever. Slow release processes are designed to discourage you from leaving. Red flag.

Question 2: What Are the Commission Levels — Street or Net?

Question 2
What are your commission splits? Are these street-level commissions or net-after-your-FMO-fees?
Why you're asking this:

"Street level" = what the carrier pays. "Net" = what you keep after the FMO takes their cut. An FMO that quotes you "60% street level" sounds better than "50% net" until you realize the street commission is only $30 per enrollment. You keep 50% of that = $15. Compare apples to apples: what's YOUR take-home?

Good answer looks like:
"We pay you 50–60% net of whatever the carrier pays us. So if Blue Cross pays us $50, you get $25–$30. We also provide the carriers, training, and sales support so you don't have to negotiate."

Translation: Transparent. They're clear about what you take home and what they keep. Net commission around 50% is market standard for quality FMOs.

Red flag sounds like:
"We pay 60% street level, but some carriers have lower rates" OR they can't clearly explain street vs. net in writing.

Translation: Bait and switch. They quote you a high percentage knowing most carriers don't pay at the high end. If they can't explain it clearly, they don't want you to understand it.

50–60% net commission = market standard for quality FMOs.
<50% + desk fees = you're being overcharged.

Question 3: Who Is My Support Contact and How Many Agents Are They Managing?

Question 3
Who will be my primary sales manager or support contact? How many agents do they manage?
Why you're asking this:

A Sales Manager with 5 agents can coach each one. A "sales manager" (really a dispatcher) with 50 agents can't. You need someone who knows your pipeline and can listen to your calls. The ratio matters.

Good answer looks like:
"Your Sales Manager will be [name]. They manage 8 agents right now, all in Medicare. They'll have weekly check-ins with you, listen to 2–3 of your calls per month, and give you feedback. Here's their number."

Translation: Personal attention. The SM is real, has time for you, and has skin in your success.

Red flag sounds like:
"Your support contact is our general team — we'll assign someone" OR "Your SM manages 25–30 agents, but we have group training" OR they can't name a specific person.

Translation: You're a number, not a person. Group training ≠ personal coaching. You'll struggle in month 2–3 when it gets hard.

5–10 agents per Sales Manager = quality coaching.
15+ agents per SM = stretched thin.

Question 4: What Technology Is Included vs. What Do I Pay For?

Question 4
What tools come with my contract? CRM, dialer, quoting software, compliance? Which ones do I pay extra for?
Why you're asking this:

Some FMOs bundle everything. Others charge $200–$500/month for CRM, another $50/mo for the dialer, another $100/mo for quoting. Those fees add up to $400–$700/month = $4,800–$8,400 per year. That's real money from your pocket before you've even made a sale.

Good answer looks like:
"You get CRM, dialer, quoting tool, and compliance library included. No additional monthly fees. The only thing you pay for is leads if you want to buy them, but that's optional."

Translation: Everything's included. Your costs are predictable. You're not nickel-and-dimed.

Red flag sounds like:
"CRM is included, but dialer is $100/mo" OR "We have several tech packages" OR they're vague about what's included.

Translation: Modular pricing. You'll end up paying $500+/month in "essentials" that should be bundled. This is extraction.

Question 5: How Are Leads Generated and What Do They Cost?

Question 5
If I buy leads, where do they come from? What's the cost per lead? What's the typical close rate?
Why you're asking this:

Some FMOs have proprietary lead sources (better). Some resell leads from 3rd-party vendors (okay, but risky if quality varies). Some charge $2–$5/lead (reasonable). Others charge $10–$15 (overpriced). Buying 100 bad leads at $10 each = $1,000 wasted. You need to know what you're buying and whether it's worth it.

Good answer looks like:
"We have partnerships with [carriers/data vendors]. Leads are $3–$5 each. Our agents typically close at 15–25% depending on effort and market. You're never forced to buy leads — plenty of our agents build with warm prospects and cold calling."

Translation: Transparent sourcing, reasonable pricing, not mandatory, realistic close rates. They're not selling you a dream.

Red flag sounds like:
"Leads are $10–$15 each" OR "You have to buy a minimum of 100 leads per month" OR "We get leads from multiple sources and quality varies."

Translation: Overpriced leads, forced purchases, inconsistent quality. They're making money off your lead purchases, not from you succeeding.

Question 6: What's the Contracting Timeline? How Long Until I Can Start Selling?

Question 6
Once I'm licensed, how long until my carrier contracts are approved and I can enroll people?
Why you're asking this:

You need contracts with carriers to legally sell. Some FMOs have pre-negotiated master contracts and can get you contracted in 1–2 weeks. Others make you wait 4–6 weeks. That's time you're not earning. Every week you wait is money lost. In a 90-day sprint, a 4-week delay is catastrophic.

Good answer looks like:
"You'll be contracted within 2–3 weeks of submitting your background check and signed contracts. We have pre-negotiated agreements with all major carriers. Your job is to sell while we handle the carrier relationships."

Translation: Fast, efficient, FMO owns the carrier relationships. You can start selling in week 3.

Red flag sounds like:
"Contracting usually takes 4–6 weeks" OR "You need to negotiate your own contracts with some carriers" OR they're vague about the timeline.

Translation: Slow, inefficient. You could spend 1–2 months not earning. That's unacceptable for a new agent.

Question 7: What Happens If I Want to Leave? What Does Non-Compete Look Like?

Question 7
If I decide to leave, are there any non-compete agreements? Restrictions on where I can work or how I can contact my clients?
Why you're asking this:

Some FMOs lock you in with aggressive non-competes. "You can't sell Medicare in a 50-mile radius for 2 years." That's controlling and usually unenforceable, but it creates friction when you want to leave. Good FMOs don't need non-competes because they retain agents through quality, not coercion.

Good answer looks like:
"No non-compete. You own your book. Once you're released, you can take your clients anywhere. Our job is to be good enough that you want to stay."

Translation: Confident. They're willing to compete on service, not restrict you legally.

Red flag sounds like:
"You'll have a non-compete for 1–2 years within 50 miles" OR "You can't solicit clients for 12 months after leaving" OR they won't put the exit terms in writing.

Translation: Controlling. They know they can't retain you on merit, so they're locking you down legally. Red flag.

Bonus: The Vibe Check

After you ask the 7 questions, here's what you're evaluating:

What the Answers Obviously Point To

If you ask these questions and get consistent "good" answers — transparent pricing, reasonable commission splits, personal coaching, included technology, fast contracting, no non-competes — you've found a solid FMO. Most will combine 5 out of 7 well. The ones that nail all 7? Those are rare. That's your signal to move fast.

Don't let anyone pressure you. "You need to decide this week" is a sales tactic, not a real deadline. Take the time to get these answers in writing. Talk to agents already there. Ask if you can shadow a successful agent for a day. The FMO that's right for you will have nothing to hide and everything to prove.

Final Thought

Choosing an FMO is choosing a partner for the next 2–5 years (or however long you want). The difference between a good FMO and a bad one is $10,000–$30,000+ per year in your pocket. That's enough to matter. Ask the questions. Get the answers in writing. Then decide.

You're not being difficult by asking hard questions. You're being smart. Any FMO worth joining will respect that.