The power of word-of-mouth and referral-based marketing takes on a whole new meaning in this episode of Marketing Vanguard. Tune in as Amica Insurance EVP and CMO Tory Pachis reveals how their Rhode Island-based challenger brand competes against massive incumbents by doubling down on empathy, service, and human-led experiences while building relevance with younger consumers.
What you’ll learn:
- How to leverage brand heritage as a competitive moat
- Why share of voice matters more than market share in commoditized categories
- The “consumer as hero” creative framework
- How to use AI for product discovery, not just operational efficiency
- The player-coach leadership model for scaling transformative change
- Why do direct distribution models require different marketing investments
Amica Insurance is the nation’s oldest mutual automobile insurance company with 119 years of heritage. With 27 years of experience in the insurance industry and previous leadership roles at Travelers Insurance and Hanover Insurance, Tory brings deep expertise in brand transformation, direct-to-consumer marketing, and building customer loyalty in highly competitive categories.
His work modernizing Amica’s brand platform while preserving its legendary customer loyalty culture makes his perspectives essential listening for marketing leaders seeking to balance heritage with innovation.
Episode Highlights:
[00:01] If You Can Sell Insurance, You Can Sell Anything — Tory argues that mastering insurance marketing—an invisible, government-regulated product costing thousands of dollars that consumers actively avoid until they need it—equips you to market virtually anything else. This framework transforms a perceived limitation into a competitive advantage by forcing marketers to develop sophisticated persuasion and value-communication skills. CMOs facing commoditized categories or low-consideration products can apply this principle by recognizing that excelling in hostile marketing environments builds unparalleled expertise.
[12:10] If You Can’t Compete on Price or Features, Leverage Emotional Storytelling — The insurance industry employs a standardized playbook of humor, jingles, and mascots, creating a commoditized creative landscape, whereas Amica deliberately pivots toward emotional, empathetic messaging with the tagline “empathy is our best policy.” Tory emphasizes how this contrarian creative strategy allows a challenger brand with a limited budget to cut through clutter and resonate with customers who feel proud associating with the company’s values. CMOs facing entrenched competitors with larger budgets should identify the dominant creative convention in their category and systematically move in the opposite direction.
[18:25] Organize Marketing Teams with Intentional Tension in OKRs — Tory reveals how Amica structures its 160-person marketing organization into five centers of excellence (brand/creative, media, data/analytics, digital and product) with aligned leadership and designated liaisons to agency partners, unified by five OKRs that intentionally create healthy tension forcing strategic trade-offs. This design prevents siloed decision-making and ensures that brand-building, performance optimization, funnel conversion and product innovation all communicate toward shared business outcomes while maintaining creative friction. By designing organizational structure around competency clusters rather than functional silos, you create accountability, accelerate decision-making and ensure that every team understands how their work contributes to overarching business objectives.



