Ask an insurance producer how they plan to complete their continuing education (CE), and many will immediately think of self-study courses.
They picture:
- reading course material,
- clicking through online lessons,
- taking a final exam,
- and checking a requirement off the list.
For many insurance professionals, that is simply what CE has become. But it wasn’t always that way. In fact, before continuing education became a widespread licensing requirement, most insurance professionals received continuing education very differently.
Before CE Requirements, Education Was an Event
For decades, insurance professionals attended educational programs hosted by:
- insurance companies,
- wholesalers,
- trade associations,
- and industry vendors.
These programs were often held:
- at hotels,
- conference centers,
- association meetings,
- or industry conferences.
Because attendance was voluntary, the education had to be worthwhile. If an agent was going to drive across town, spend part of a day away from the office, and sit through a presentation, the information needed to be valuable.
Many of these programs featured:
- experienced industry experts,
- emerging insurance issues,
- market trends,
- claims lessons,
- underwriting insights,
- and practical sales ideas.
The focus was often on learning something useful, not simply earning credit.
Then Continuing Education Became Mandatory
As states began adopting insurance continuing education requirements, demand for CE exploded. Suddenly millions of insurance professionals needed credits. The industry needed a way to deliver education quickly efficiently and at scale. New companies emerged to meet this demand.
Many focused on:
- correspondence courses,
- mail-order CE,
- self-study manuals,
- and eventually online self-study courses.
The model worked. Insurance professionals could complete CE requirements outside of work hours or whenever it was convenient for them. In fact, convenience became the primary selling point and quality become secondary.
The Downside of Convenience
The self-study model solved an important problem, but it also changed the nature of insurance continuing education.
As competition increased, many providers focused on making CE:
- faster,
- easier,
- cheaper,
- and more automated.
Over time, much of the industry shifted away from educational experiences and toward compliance experiences. For many insurance professionals, CE became something to endure rather than something to learn from.
The goal was often:
“How quickly can I get my credits done?”
instead of:
“What can I learn that will help me serve clients better?”
Not every self-study course suffers from this problem, but the industry as a whole moved toward convenience and volume rather than engagement.
Why Self-Study Became the Default Choice
Many insurance professionals entered the industry after self-study CE was already common.
They never experienced the earlier style of insurance education.
As a result, they often assume:
- CE means self-study.
- CE means reading.
- CE means taking a final exam.
- CE means working through material alone.
Many don’t realize there are other options available.
Webinar Technology Changed the Equation
For many years, live education still required significant travel and scheduling commitments. That began to change as webinar technology improved.
Modern insurance CE webinars allow professionals to attend live courses:
- from home,
- from the office,
- or from almost anywhere with an internet connection or cell service.
Today’s webinar platforms are dramatically different from early online meeting technology.
They provide:
- reliable audio and video,
- attendance verification,
- real-time support,
- interactive participation,
- and live instruction.
Most importantly, they allow insurance professionals to learn from actual instructors while maintaining the convenience of online access.
A Return to Real Education
Many insurance professionals who try live webinars for the first time discover that the experience feels much closer to traditional insurance education than self-study courses.
Instead of reading through pages of material alone, they can:
- hear examples,
- listen to real-world stories,
- ask questions,
- and stay engaged with the topic.
The result is often a more educational experience and a more enjoyable way to complete CE requirements.
Why More Insurance Professionals Are Discovering Webinars
As webinar technology continues to improve, more insurance professionals are rethinking how they complete continuing education.
Many appreciate that webinars can provide:
- structured learning,
- instructor-led presentations,
- practical industry examples,
- no travel requirements,
- and scheduling flexibility.
In many ways, webinars combine the best parts of traditional insurance education with the convenience of modern technology.
Final Thoughts
Self-study became the dominant form of insurance continuing education because it solved a major logistical problem. It allowed millions of insurance professionals to complete required education quickly and conveniently.
But self-study is not the only option.
Today’s live insurance webinars offer a different approach—one that combines modern convenience with the instructor-led educational experience that many insurance professionals enjoyed long before continuing education became mandatory.
For insurance professionals who have only experienced self-study CE, a live webinar may be worth considering before the next renewal deadline arrives.

