Predict & Prevent® Podcast Episode 28: Turning Water Damage Prevention Into a Trust Business
Water damage is the most frequent preventable cause of homeowners insurance claims, yet millions of homes with smart protection devices installed may not actually be protected at all.
That sobering reality sits at the center of a new episode of the Predict & Prevent podcast from The Institutes, where host Pete Miller, CEO of The Institutes, speaks with Paul Vacquier, founder and CEO of Beagle Services Inc.
Vacquier brings an unconventional background to the plumbing industry. A California-barred attorney by training, he spent years building the insurance and partnership strategy behind the Flo by Moen smart water shutoff valve before launching Beagle Services to address a problem he had watched develop firsthand. Getting the technology into homes, he found, was only the beginning of the challenge. Ensuring they remained connected, and monitoring for problems, were also key to protection.
Beagle operates as a full-stack water damage prevention company, meaning its work extends well beyond installation. Once a smart valve is in place, it begins alerting homeowners to issues like high water pressure, small drips, or failing supply lines. Beagle’s technicians follow up on those alerts, helping homeowners resolve minor problems before they become catastrophic losses. The company also employs its staff directly rather than relying on contracted labor, a deliberate choice designed to ensure reliability and consistent service regardless of a client’s ZIP code or the size of the job.
“We wanted to ensure that we could provide trust to our partners, meaning insurance carriers, insurance agencies, valve manufacturers, that when they wanted to deploy the technology at scale, they could have a plumbing labor force that they could trust would show up when they said they were going to show up,” Vacquier explained.
Through Beagle’s Watchdog monitoring product, the company discovered that somewhere between 30 and 50% of installed smart water devices are offline at any given time. Homeowners unplug them after a false shutoff, forget to reconnect them after changing a Wi-Fi password, or simply lose track of whether the device is functioning. Meanwhile, insurers are underwriting those properties as though the devices are actively protecting them.
Vacquier shared a specific example of this “protection gap”: a $900,000 claim resulting from a toilet supply line failure on a third floor that went undetected for days. A smart valve was present in the home. It simply was not plugged in.
The episode, which is sponsored by The Hartford, also covers how agents are shifting from product-focused conversations to genuine risk advisory roles, how some home real estate sales have fallen through because buyers could not obtain insurance without a valve installed.
Listen to the full episode, “Turning Water Damage Prevention Into a Trust Business,” at predictandprevent.org or search for Predict & Prevent on any major podcasting platform. &


