From Vendor to Partner: How to Be a Strategic Advisor to CFOs and CHROs
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Most brokers say they want to be viewed as strategic partners. Far fewer are actually positioned that way.
For many employers, the broker relationship still centers on transactions. Renewals. Market checks. Carrier negotiations. Necessary work, but not the kind that earns a seat at the executive table.
To become a true partner to CFOs and CHROs, brokers must shift how they show up, not just what they sell.

What CFOs and CHROs Actually Need
CFOs and CHROs are balancing competing pressures. Financial sustainability. Talent retention. Compliance. Workforce expectations. All while managing healthcare costs that feel increasingly unpredictable.
They are not looking for more vendors. They are looking for advisors who can:
- Explain financial impact clearly.
- Anticipate risk before it shows up at renewal.
- Translate complexity into actionable decisions.
- Help align benefits strategy with broader business goals.
Strategic partnership starts with understanding those priorities.
Why Many Brokers Stay Stuck in the Vendor Role
The vendor trap is not about capability. It’s about focus.
Many brokers remain tactical because:
- Conversations happen too late in the planning cycle.
- Recommendations are framed around products instead of outcomes.
- Complex topics like pharmacy are avoided or outsourced entirely.
- Success is measured by execution, not insight.
When brokers lead with transactions, clients respond accordingly.
Shifting the Conversation Upstream
Strategic advisors engage earlier and think longer-term.
Instead of leading with solutions, they lead with questions:
- Where is healthcare spend creating the most risk?
- Which benefits decisions have the greatest financial impact?
- What trade-offs are being made today that could create future problems?
- How well do current vendors align with organizational goals?
These questions resonate with CFOs and CHROs because they reflect how executives think.

Where Pharmacy Creates Advisory Opportunity
Few areas of the health plan offer more opportunity for strategic advisory value than pharmacy.
Prescription drug spend is rising, incentives are complex, and oversight is often limited. CFOs and CHROs know this, even if they do not always know where to start.
Brokers who can explain pharmacy economics in plain language; identify misaligned incentives; frame pharmacy as a financial and governance issue; and introduce oversight outside of renewal cycles immediately elevate their relevance.
What Strategic Partnership Looks Like in Practice
Becoming a strategic advisor does not require abandoning traditional broker responsibilities. It requires expanding them.

In practice, strategic partnerships include:
- Regular, proactive check-ins focused on risk and impact, not just utilization.
- Clear explanations of why costs move, not just how much.
- Documentation of decision-making to support governance and fiduciary oversight.
- Willingness to challenge assumptions when “industry standard” no longer serves the client.
This approach builds trust over time, not just at renewal.
Earning and Keeping a Seat at the Table
CFOs and CHROs grant partnership status based on value, not titles.
Brokers earn that trust by:
- Bringing insight before being asked.
- Framing recommendations in business terms.
- Helping leaders make informed trade-offs.
- Staying engaged year-round.
When brokers consistently add this level of value, the relationship naturally evolves.

The Opportunity Ahead
As healthcare continues to grow more complex, the gap between vendors and advisors will widen.
Brokers who remain transactional will compete on price and service. Brokers who step into a strategic role will compete on insight, trust, and long-term impact.
For those willing to make the shift, the path from vendor to partner is not only possible. It is increasingly essential.
