InVEST, the insurance industry’s premier classroom to career education program, recently appointed Lynn W. Mathis, CPCU, to its national board. Mathis is president and chief operating officer of Williams, Turner & Mathis, Inc. in Atlanta, Ga.
“InVEST is proud to announce Lynn Mathis has joined our distinguished group of board members,” says Heather Minkler, InVEST board chair and CEO of Clark-Mortenson Agency, an independent agency in Keene, N.H. “Lynn’s dedication to the industry through her leadership at the association level and as the principle of an independent insurance agency will be a huge asset to the InVEST board.”
Mathis began her insurance career in 1978 and became a principle of the Williams, Turner & Mathis agency in 1983. She has been an active volunteer with the Independent Insurance Agents of Georgia (IIAG). Her first exposure to InVEST came when serving as chair of the Georgia Young Agents in 1991 when she chose InVEST as the chairman’s project. She then served on the National Young Agents Committee and was chair of that committee from 1993 to 1995. In 2000, Mathis was elected as the first female IIAG president and in 2005 she was the recipient of the IIAG Edgar Dunlap Award for Community Service. She was elected as Big “I” national director for Georgia in 2011. Mathis is a graduate of the University of Georgia. She and her husband, Russ, have two children.
“InVEST is critically important not just to the future of the independent agency system, but to the insurance industry as a whole,” says Robert Rusbuldt, Independent Insurance Agents & Brokers of America (IIABA or the Big “I”) president & CEO. “Survey results from the Agency Universe Study by Future One (a collaboration of the Big ‘I’ and leading independent agency companies) pointed to InVEST as a solution to save the future of the industry, with a majority of respondents stating the insurance industry should encourage high schools and community colleges to help students plan for insurance careers. Educators, volunteers, agents and industry leaders, like Lynn Mathis, are key to the success of this program.”