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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Thursday that Britain and the EU had agreed a new Brexit deal, but he still faces resistance from other parties in parliament.
If a Brexit deal is finally agreed it will give insurers more time to set up EU subsidiaries, but domestic-focused and smaller firms are reluctant to do this because of the cost.
Another option for those insurers is to end their overseas operations and sell books of legacy business to a specialist insurer.
European insurer Darag – which specialises in buying closed books – has set up in Britain this year, and expects Brexit-related deals. The firm, which now has seven UK employees, has already had enquiries, its chief executive Tom Booth told Reuters.
Chris Fagan, CEO of insurer Catalina, another closed-book specialist, also told Reuters that Brexit could have a positive impact for his firm.
“Brexit is causing EU insurers to look at their structures and this brings non-core lines into focus, leading to opportunities for the acquirers,” said Andrew Ward, a director for insurance deals at PwC.
Fortitude Re, a vehicle set up by U.S. insurance group AIG with investment from private equity firm Carlyle to house AIG’s closed books, is also planning to buy or reinsure other closed books and expand into Europe, four sources told Reuters. AIG declined to comment.
There are nearly $800 billion in closed books of non-life insurance globally, including $300 billion in Europe, according to PwC. Around $9 billion changed hands across 34 publicly announced deals globally in 2018, the consultants said in its first annual deals report.
Closed book specialists take over old policies or reinsure them, reducing risk for the insurers.
The specialists say they can use economies of scale to manage them more efficiently. Some also invest more of the policies in alternative asset classes to increase returns.
“There is a reasonable margin to be made in this area of insurance,” Stephen Roberts, chairman of the Insurance & Reinsurance Legacy Association, said.
Outside the life insurance sector, insurers are usually keenest to offload books of business where claims may still be have to be paid years after an event.
The sector started off with asbestos-related business, but books of business sold these days include motor, medical malpractice and also employers’ liability, taken out by companies to cover compensation for work-related accidents or illness.
Zurich Insurance, for example, transferred UK employers’ liability policies totalling $2 billion (1.56 billion pounds) to specialist insurer Catalina in Dec 2018.
Lloyd’s of London’s decision last year to tell its members to ditch the worst-performing 10% of their business has led to a number of closed book deals, including in poorly-performing insurance classes such as marine.
They include specialist insurer Riverstone’s takeover of policies from Lloyd’s syndicate Advent Underwriting in January 2019.
The market for closed life insurance books is also a large one in Europe, with deals such as Italian insurer Generali’s sale of some of its German closed life business to private equity firm Viridium last year.
Life insurance is less likely to be impacted by Brexit, industry sources say, as the business is often more domestic, and larger life insurers have generally set up the relevant EU or UK subsidiaries.
But for overseas insurers with small UK life insurance business, Brexit could be a catalyst that “may cause people to look again” at their business, Simon True, group corporate development director at closed life insurance specialist Phoenix, said.
Cyber-risk is a unique problem for companies that need to transfer risk – and for brokers, underwriters and reinsurers trying to understand, price and manage that risk. In spite of this, the market for cyber-insurance continues to grow, with forecasts of $7.6 billion in 2023 from around $4.2 billion in 2017. As the market grows, high-profile companies, such as Marriott, Merck and Equifax, are becoming victims of cyber-attacks and claims costs are rising to hundreds of millions of dollars.
The body of cyber-claims data is much smaller than more established insurance classes. This is combined with the issue of claims data quickly going stale, as cyber-attack vectors rapidly change. As a consequence, actuaries face significant data limitations when predicting the frequency and severity of cyber-attacks.
“ThreatInformer plugs the cyber-data gap for insurance, giving brokers, underwriters, and reinsurers the data to understand and make decisions about cyber-risk”, says Ryan Jones, founder and CEO of ThreatInformer.
ThreatInformer needs just a company name and website to identify an organisation’s external IT systems and collect key risk data from them. ThreatInformer brings together tens of thousands of raw data points to create a unique picture that shows cyber-risk data for any organisation, of any size, anywhere. ThreatInformer’s data shows insurers what’s at risk, the business context, and the level of protection.
When working with reinsurers we’re helping to add depth outside of the traditional aggregate data points of industry, geography, and revenue to manage accumulation risk across portfolios.
“ThreatInformer was developed to meet our clients’ needs across the cyber-insurance value chain. We help brokers to engage with their clients on cyber-risk and get the right levels of protection, as well as giving risk management advice to add further value to their role. Underwriters see the assets of a proposer and their cyber-risks pre-bind to enable confident pricing decisions using consistent, verifiable data. When working with reinsurers we’re helping to add depth outside of the traditional aggregate data points of industry, geography, and revenue to manage accumulation risk across portfolios.”
Ryan Jones, CEO of ThreatInformer, said: “Our priorities in the development of ThreatInformer’s technology were those of our customers. We found a lot of problems with existing risk management vendors in the market, with off-the-shelf solutions that provide subjective metrics, ambiguous risk scores, and black box models.
“ThreatInformer is transparent with our data, allowing our customers to customise our data to their portfolio and consume it in a way that fits how they work.”
Jones saw the need the need in the insurance industry for a scalable and reliable way to gather data while delivering cyber-assessments and incident response at KPMG for leading insurers.
Richard Wells, CTO and co-founder of ThreatInformer, has analysed cyber-threats for the UK government and designed platforms for open-source intelligence gathering and processing for decision makers.
ThreatInformer has clients among brokers, insurers and reinsurers who are using ThreatInformer’s cyber-risk data to make risk decisions throughout their insurance operations.
by Ryan Jones, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, ThreatInformer
The insurance sector is facing significant waves of disruption. Important decisions about market positioning, ecosystem relationships, technology investment and skills requirements need to be taken.
Key drivers of change include the evolving nature of risk and liabilities. Advances in technology are also opening up new ways of doing business. In addition, customers increasingly look for simple, intuitive and frictionless interactions with insurers when buying policies and making claims.
Technology is key to helping insurance companies not only respond, but also take forward-looking strategic decisions about their business models. By investing in technology, insurers can give personal lines, customers and SMEs the automated, straight-through, low-touch digital experience they seek. For more complex commercial lines, technology will be required to support individual underwriting and global risk-transfer mechanisms. Insurance firms need to adopt a “digital-first” mindset – understanding what their customers demand and then designing a digital solution.
Insurers are already feeling the benefits of past investments in robotic process automation and digital assistance chatbots. Cloud-based technologies or blockchain could bring new future benefits, and a number of use cases have been developed. At EY, we’ve invested in creating Insurwave, a blockchain platform which can be used to establish smart contracts.
If blockchain and other technologies provide real-time exposure data to all parties, the annual cycle of today’s marketplace could be replaced by continuous contracts
Future developments could transform the insurance sector. If blockchain and other technologies provide real-time exposure data to all parties, the annual cycle of today’s marketplace could be replaced by continuous contracts. Underwriters could use the availability of mass data to develop more granular and bespoke underwriting capability. The development of smart contracts with embedded controls and pricing could create a more seamless experience for all parties – increasing effectiveness, while reducing costs.
There is no one-size-fits-all solution for insurers when responding to the disruptive forces of today and tomorrow, and embracing digitization. However, for many insurers, creating a “smart claims” function offers significant benefits and must be a priority. Data and technology can be used to reimagine the claims process – up to perhaps 60 per cent of claims could be handled digitally. For other more complex claims, artificial intelligence and digital dashboards could help claims handlers make faster decisions.
Achieving such change will require substantial financial investment and human resources. Insurers face challenges in accessing the skills and capabilities needed for new operating models and more automated processes. In claims functions, for example, some roles will require a greater number of highly skilled individuals with stronger analytical ability.
Looking ahead five or 10 years, further consolidation could create a more segmented insurance market with larger players. We could see the development of global ecosystems grouped around broad sectors such as retail, travel, mobility, health and wellbeing, where insurers work together with other entities to create more integrated services and products that bring them even closer to their customers.
Change is certainly coming. Insurers have the opportunity to build competitive advantage by anticipating future disruption and the opportunities that accompany it – using technology in combination with human capabilities to develop customer-focused, efficient and effective operations.
by Peter Manchester, Global Insurance Advisory Leader and EMEIA Insurance Leader, EY
To find out more, click here.
*Disclaimer: The views reflected in this article are the views of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the global EY organisation or its member firms.
Intelligent Insurer asked decision-makers in reinsurers and brokers which breakthroughs had the potential to revolutionise their companies. Here’s what they said…
“Blockchain will boost networking between brokers, companies, primary insurers and the reinsurance business,” says Michael Rohde, member of Deutsche Rück’s board of executive officers.
“By using smart contracts, the industry will eventually be able to handle primary and reinsurance contracts in a fully automated way. Claims handling could profit from efficiency gains. It may lead to lower premiums, and faster underwriting decisions and claims management.”
Paul Lobo, deputy general manager of Indian reinsurer GIC Re, says that it is thanks to blockchain technology that cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin are possible. It can apply to the risk chain in reinsurance, helping maintain transparency in the chain from insurer to reinsurer to retrocessionaire including intermediaries, and potentially managing quotation, placement, endorsement, claims intimation, processing, accounting and settlement.
“As soon as data input is made at the point of origin for a transaction, every participant associated with the transactions maintains a copy of the same ledger,” says Lobo, “and the need for third party involvement to confirm a piece of the transaction is eliminated.”
“Blockchain will boost networking between brokers, companies, primary insurers and the reinsurance business,” says Michael Rohde, member of Deutsche Rück’s board of executive officers.
“By using smart contracts, the industry will eventually be able to handle primary and reinsurance contracts in a fully automated way. Claims handling could profit from efficiency gains. It may lead to lower premiums, and faster underwriting decisions and claims management.”
Paul Lobo, deputy general manager of Indian reinsurer GIC Re, says that it is thanks to blockchain technology that cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin are possible. It can apply to the risk chain in reinsurance, helping maintain transparency in the chain from insurer to reinsurer to retrocessionaire including intermediaries, and potentially managing quotation, placement, endorsement, claims intimation, processing, accounting and settlement.
“As soon as data input is made at the point of origin for a transaction, every participant associated with the transactions maintains a copy of the same ledger,” says Lobo, “and the need for third party involvement to confirm a piece of the transaction is eliminated.”
The reinsurance industry has long pondered packaging risk in a way that could allow it to be freely traded in the same way as equities and bonds.
“Almost every financial market in the world has an index that tracks the performance of the market,” says Jonathan Prinn, group head of broking at Ed Broking. “These indices provide instant overviews of market trends and allow investors to trade the actual index, or benchmark other investments. For the reinsurance market this type of technology is coming, and it will revolutionise the insurance part of my company and also the industry itself.”
“Indices lead to ‘market trackers’ allowing, for example, individual underwriters to have their own performance benchmarked, in terms of combined ratio and from a client perspective in respect of rate,” Prinn continues. “As these indices appear, our market will be turned upside down by other investors looking to hedge their own investments.”
Ryan Jones, head of innovation at BMS, a wholesale insurance and reinsurance broker in specialty commercial lines, believes one approach which could revolutionise his company over the next five years is a change in the way it communicates. “Email enabled the fastest economic growth since the industrial revolution, but it now feels inefficient, slow, and distant,” Jones says.
“Social media platforms are more experimental – sometimes you get unicorns such as Twitter and Instagram, and then our lives and expectations change.”
Now, collaboration platforms such as Slack have found traction as they bridge the divide between email, messaging, and document-sharing. “That open structure means you need to learn how the platform works, but also how you want to use it,” explains Jones. “The next communication technology which changes our game may not even have been invented yet.”
“Cloud software as a service, which has been in use for more than seven years, will continue to revolutionise insurance,” says Bart Patrick, managing director of Duck Creek Technologies Europe. “But systems must not be closed boxes, which are vulnerable to becoming out of date and out of maintenance.”
Patrick argues that a revolutionary system is one that allows insurers to rapidly release new products, analyse customer data and harness insights to make better underwriting decisions.
“It will move with the times, interoperating with other emerging technology such as big data sources,” he points out. “Almost all new insurtech platforms are hosted in the cloud.”
If you’ve ever bought a property, you’ll understand just how complex the process can be. The government has, however, pledged to improve the way transactions are handled, and there is a lot of work happening behind the scenes in the industry to make this a reality.
Consumer expectation has changed, and in today’s digital world, they expect to be able to monitor property transactions in real time, access quotes for legal services online at any time, or contact agents or solicitors when convenient to them. This is creating pressure on law firms to provide a more modernised service.
With this in mind, the way solicitors and conveyancers manage property search requirements is also changing, and they are turning to technology to help streamline the process. At SearchFlow, for example, a significant transformation programme has been undertaken, resulting in a new online ordering platform that responds to the changing times.
Led by Kris Clark, SearchFlow’s former Head of Product and Interim Head of Operations – who has since transitioned to Head of AI for SearchFlow’s parent company – the programme focused on bringing the service model in line with the product roadmap, creating opportunities to re-engineer processes and to run a leaner digital-by-default customer operation. The aim of this was to speed-up and simplify the ordering and delivery of property searches for solicitors, using advanced mapping and an intuitive dashboard.
“SearchFlow is a complex business, working behind the scenes in what is a very busy, time-pressured housing transaction market,” Clark explains. “Yet it provides over one million searches and legal reports every year, supporting around one in every four property transactions.
“By the very nature of property transactions, SearchFlow needs to act quickly to minimise any delays in the process.”
Our online ordering platform has the back-up of exceptional customer care from the team and we have empowered staff by reducing areas of responsibility and providing training to improve overall competency and retention
The results of the transformational programme has led to the firm winning two UK Customer Experience Awards: a gold award for Best Contact Centre – Small, and silver in the Transforming the Customer Experience category.
“Outwardly, things seemed okay, but when we scratched below the service we found our team was struggling to keep up with a host of issues resulting in a backlog of work,” continues Clark. “We recognised that we needed to relieve pressure on the team and create a solution that would prevent issues from reoccurring.”
A new search ordering platform has launched that gives SearchFlow’s customers full visibility of transactions online. Case progression can be tracked with hands-on support from the team.
Katriona O’Hare, Customer Experience Manager, adds: “Our service delivery model now aligns to market segments – this gives everyone direct ownership and responsibility for specific actions. The service is more seamless and streamlined. There are no gaps, everyone is aware of their role and we have a motivated team as a result.
“Utilising Microsoft Power BI to bring together all our different inboxes, we created dashboards that provide real-time performance management. We can monitor orders, track KPIs and benchmark all activities against SLAs, even using our mobile phones.
“Now, we go home every day with the satisfaction that all work queues are cleared, we’ve hit KPIs and the board is showing green.”
Tracy Burtwell, SearchFlow’s Sales Director, confirms: “I think it is fair to say we transformed the customer experience from a reactive call centre to a proactive order fulfilment model. Our online ordering platform has the back-up of exceptional customer care from the team and we have empowered staff by reducing areas of responsibility and providing training to improve overall competency and retention. Most importantly, it is delivering what our customers need – the right search, at the right time.”
SearchFlow is now spending 40 per cent less time on support calls, responds to emails faster, and internal escalations have reduced by 80 per cent.
“To win two UK Customer Experience awards is an achievement we are all proud of,” Burtwell concludes. “It recognises our efforts in transforming our approach, using technology, people and better processes.”
by Kris Clark, Product and Operations, Tracy Burtwell, Sales Director and Katriona O’Hare, Customer Experience Manager, SearchFlow
For more information please contact 0870 423 2922 or visit searchflow.co.uk
We waste 1,500 hours a year working inefficiently, unable or ill-equipped to grasp the opportunities that can be unlocked in the digital workplace. Many businesses continue with practices such as document version control, isolating the exchange of information (a process more commonly known as emailing), bouncing between local hard drives and the cloud, and so on. All in all, according to Gartner Research, 61 per cent of our valuable time is spent “managing” work and 39 per cent doing the actual work itself. But it doesn’t have to be like this!
The proliferation of applications and piecemeal digital solutions, while well intended, end up fuelling the fragmented workplace and piling more stress onto harried employees. The current mindset in the modern workplace is a strong desire to deploy an intelligent workplace platform (basically an intranet supercharged with intelligence) that accelerates our shift towards a singular, seamless experience where employees have all they need to do their best work. Here is how we can achieve this.systems.
Improved “intelligent” technology solutions underpinned by artificial intelligence will reduce the noise of the modern workplace and pave the way for the resurgence of vibrant online and offline communities, which give users everything they need to do their job.
Employees are paving the way for the creation of a personalised portfolio of applications, supplemented with role-based functionality. The new digital workforce wants to work smarter, not harder. The goal of this transformation is to deliver a unified digital, physical and human workplace experience that catalyses collaboration and productivity while delivering an incredible employee experience.
Governance of sprawling digital infrastructure and the proliferation of solutions and platforms must be the new normal if we are to realise the potential the modern workplace holds for collaboration and productivity. To reach this promised land, one of the most important prerequisites will be to put in place systems that prevent the explosion of multiple channels, mute the noise of disconnected and distracting applications and set businesses up for success as they accelerate their digital workplace journeys.
Governance and compliance are bedfellows of effective collaboration and productivity. Businesses and their IT departments need to roll out processes and systems, governed by pre-determined rules of engagement, that mitigate the chaotic spread and duplication of channels. The good news is that smart governance systems exist and can be integrated into your existing or future operating systems.
Intelligent intranets are content services platforms that ignite engines of collaboration and innovation across organisations. While the term “intranet” is still broadly understood by a diverse range of professionals and verticals, it understates the increasingly strategic value of intranets in the modern workplace – especially when we consider a workplace set to go through the biggest changes in content management in more than 20 years. Intelligent AI-enabled solutions can solve the business-critical need to ensure content is delivered, shared and measured through the optimum (and most secure) digital channels, further enhancing engagement and employee experience.
Digital transformation is essentially about change management, and change management is essentially about people. The issue of execution and adoption of digital workplace platforms is often the biggest challenge for our customers.
Understandably some employees can negatively perceive new technologies, or siloed teams might see collaboration as a threat. This can be mitigated by better understanding and addressing the ecosystem of employee workplace influences and touchpoints, and ensuring your people are involved and empowered from the earliest phases of planning.
This feedback from our customers has led us to introduce discovery sessions for our clients. During these sessions we delve into the specific challenges and requirements that an individual organisation may be faced with. This could be the need to slowly transition legacy systems, to prioritise front-line workers, or the obligation to put governance and compliance in place before rolling out digital platforms.
These sessions have become an extremely enriching part of our work. We are now better equipped to provide solutions precisely to our customers’ problems, taking into consideration where they are on their digital journey, where they see themselves going and their absorption capacity for change.
Over-hyping AI or digital solutions helps nobody, and the most effective digital transformation projects will include people from all levels and stages. It may take more time, but it will inevitably be more cost-effective, successful and sustainable.
written by Karl Redenbach, Co-Founder and CEO, LiveTiles
To learn more about how intelligent intranets can drive collaboration and productivity in the modern workplace please visit:
www.livetiles.nyc/intelligent-intranet
Karl Redenbach, Co-Founder and CEO, LiveTiles
Britain’s banks may not be able to deal with their remaining complaints about mis-sold loan insurance until next summer, the Financial Conduct Authority said on Wednesday.
Banks had hoped to draw a line under a decade-long scandal by the end of this year.
Loan insurance, or payment protection insurance (PPI), is Britain’s costliest retail financial scandal. Banks have paid out more than 43 billion pounds in compensation so far.
“We are aware that the volume of PPI checking enquiries and complaints sent to firms increased significantly during August 2019 in the run-up to the complaints deadline on 29 August,” the FCA said in a statement.
Banks have said they received hundreds of thousands more complaints than they expected in August.
“As a result, firms will not be able to meet their normal complaint handling times,” the FCA said.
A number of firms have said that customers may not get a final response to their claim until summer 2020, the watchdog said.
“We are challenging firms to deal with these complaints as quickly as is reasonable, given the very large volumes,” the FCA said.
Claims will be entitled to interest on the amount due, typically 8%, which will include the length of time it took to respond.
Source: Huw Jones, Reuters Connect
As we approach the latest deadline in the Brexit saga, there is a huge amount that remains uncertain.
Although the possible outcomes open to this or any future government are still very wide, it is still best to think about Brexit in terms of the most disruptive scenario – a no deal – and the most important stakeholder – the public.
For consumers, the most immediate impact of a no-deal Brexit scenario will be on travel insurance, specifically in relation to the European Health Insurance Card (EHIC), which will no longer retain any validity.
The EHIC is likely to be suspended from day one if we leave the EU in a no-deal scenario, as no implementation period or replacement system will have been agreed, and both treaties and legal agreements between the UK and the EU27 will no longer apply.
Although changes to travel insurance may seem like a relatively trivial issue compared to some of the scenarios considered in the government’s planning for no deal, it is worth remembering that for millions of UK citizens, it provides the their only affordable access to healthcare when they go on holiday.
The key risk is that people who have never bought travel insurance when travelling to Europe may continue to ignore the need for cover, either out of habit or out of a lack of awareness of the implications of a no deal. For those that go on to have a health emergency while travelling, the cost of not having cover could be financially disastrous.
For those that go on to have a health emergency while travelling, the cost of not having cover could be financially disastrous.
The machinations of the wholesale insurance market, which is focused on larger, and often multinational clients, may seem more distant to the public, but they still have a huge impact on our lives, providing the risk management tools that enable industry to function and vital services to be carried out.
This part of the market faces its own challenges in a no-deal scenario, and although firms in this sector have the resources to develop workarounds that will allow their business to function in extreme circumstances, a huge amount of management time and effort has already been spent in no-deal planning. Much of this effort has focused on the corporate governance changes needed to provide contract certainty to clients across Europe. This vital work has averted chaos for the public, but it is hard not to think that this effort could have been better spent on developing new products and services if the Brexit transition process had been less chaotic.
As this chapter in the Brexit story draws to a close, it is important that we all resolve to create an environment where confidence and the supply of vital products and services for the public takes precedence over political brinkmanship.
by Dr Matthew Connell, Director of Policy and Public Affairs at the Chartered Insurance Institute
The rapid advancement of digital technology is ushering in new ways to sell, buy, service and settle insurance. For some time, insurtechs, with their nimble, digital-first operating models, have challenged the status quo. In the early days, many believed insurtechs were disruptive to the industry, but the view has shifted. Insurtechs provide digital roadmaps to a sector that has been slow to invest in digital solutions, and they are digitising the customer life-cycle and enabling insurers to elevate customer experience. They are also bringing to market solutions that simplify business processes such as underwriting and claims. And insurers are paying attention.
According to Venture Scanner data, since 2009 around $31 billion has been invested in insurtechs, and 2019 is shaping up to be the strongest year for funding since 2014. There are nearly 1,600 insurtechs globally, with about 70 per cent based in the United States and Europe. Most insurtechs – about 20 per cent – are insurance marketplaces/comparison engines, such as Confused.com in the UK or CHECK24 in Germany. These start-ups connect buyers with sellers, but don’t often sell insurance or underwrite policies.
Considering where funds are being invested, 65 per cent of cumulative funding has accrued to digital property and casualty (P&C), life and health insurance companies. These digital-first insurers pride themselves on developing innovative ways in which consumers can buy and use insurance and initiate and settle claims, with mobile functionality and applications being key differentiators relative to the old guard. A great example is late-stage US-based Trōv, a P&C insurtech that allows customers to obtain on-demand coverage for simple assets such as cameras and bikes with a swipe on their smartphones. Another example, late stage US-based Lemonade, an insurtech that focuses on home and contents insurance, enables its customers to buy insurance and settle claims using their smartphones. Lemonade recently moved into Europe, so it’s one of the first insurtechs to scale globally.
For insurers, insurtechs will drive automation in their business processes that drive profitability and operating efficiency
But it’s not just about direct-to-consumer opportunities. About 15 per cent of insurtechs focus on insurance infrastructure and back-end insurance solutions. These insurtechs are bringing capabilities to market that enable insurers to underwrite and bind policies faster and expedite claims settlement. For example, seed-stage Israel-based Binah.ai has a solution that enables life insurers to get real-time health evaluation insights from customers via their mobile phones – insurers can ask fewer questions, thus expediting the policy application process. Early-stage Canada-based Chisel.ai has a commercial insurance capability that enables brokers and carriers to automate high-volume, routine underwriting and brokering tasks. And late-stage France-based Shift Technology has solutions that leverage artificial intelligence to help insurers detect fraud and pay claims faster.
Incumbents have not been blind to the rapid emergence of insurtechs – they understand the opportunity they present and their strategic objectives have adjusted to a new paradigm where insurtechs become a part of their ecosystems through various financial mechanisms. Insurers have established venture funds for direct investments (such as France-based AXA Venture Partners), they have created incubators/accelerators to invest in and mentor insurtechs that fit within their business ecosystems (such as US-based Metlife’s Metlife Digital Accelerator), and they are buying insurtechs outright to build capabilities quickly (such as Germany-based Allianz, which acquired Finanzen.de, a B2B insurance leads marketplace). In addition, the sector has consortiums in place to advance innovations, such as the Blockchain Insurance Industry Initiative (B3i).
Most insurtechs are in the early stages of development and Forrester thinks many won’t survive. Those that do will continue to bring to market digital capabilities that enable customers to engage with their insurers, when, where and how they prefer. For insurers, insurtechs will drive automation in their business processes that drive profitability and operating efficiency. With continued advancements in the capabilities of artificial intelligence, machine learning, data capture and analytics, insurance will become personalized, customisable and on-demand, and priced using real-time data. Insurtechs will, undoubtedly, play a major role in shaping this future.
by Jeffery Williams, Senior Analyst, Forrester
Wikipedia defines an electric light as “…a device that produces visible light from electric current”. Many of us would have never read this definition, yet all of us use electric light every day and have accepted it as an omnipresent enabler of many of our activities. It appears hard to believe that only a little more than 100 years ago, electric light was considered as modern and ground-breaking as data-driven decision making in insurance companies today.
So what transformations has the electric light undergone in the past 120 years? It has turned from a cutting-edge, exclusive and luxuriously expensive technology into an affordable everyday commodity – electricity itself is used without wasting a thought on how it got to where we want to use it. We take it for granted that it is supplied in every room of every building, can be easily controlled, and operated safely by people who aren’t electricians.
The same revolutionary transformation is about to happen to the usage of data as the fuel to virtually all modern insurance decision-making processes. No longer are insurance executives willing to accept that ad-hoc reporting requirements can only be addressed after lengthy data-gathering and compilation exercises. No longer can they rely on projects that take years to execute and cost an enormous amount of money. Insurance companies are no longer able to afford the current situation and the time for change is now.
In the coming years, the insurance industry will demand from their IT suppliers that all analytical activities will be instantaneously fuelled by data readily available across departments and independently of data source, just like electricity is available in every room today. We will see a focus shift from the development of data exploitation and analysis techniques to using active data management as the only means to achieving sustainable and universally reliable data provisioning.
This data revolution in the insurance industry will be powered by technology. It will represent a quantum leap in the way the industry operates, and early adopters will have a clear competitive advantage. The return on investment is achieved when well-informed decisions can be taken on a reliable and trustworthy basis. At Systemorph we work hard to help insurance companies achieve this goal and bring their data to light.
by Dr Roland Bürgi, Chief Executive Officer and Dr Daniel Trzesniak, Head of Marketing, Systemorph
Have a 1-month Proof of Concept with us and experience the data revolution.
Subscription services have given us new ways to watch films, go shopping and even drive cars – but how we protect ourselves from risk hasn’t changed in 200 years…
The world is moving towards a subscription model – subscription films (Netflix), subscription razors (Dollar Shave Club), subscription everything (Amazon Prime). So why shouldn’t everyone get their insurance via a subscription, too?
That’s why Sherpa has launched the first subscription insurance business. Now insurance can be flexible – tailored, and change as life changes. Sherpa provides free advice with no conflicts of interest. And we won’t force people into long-term contracts either – insurance can be switched on and off at will.
This is nothing short of a revolution in insurance. Sherpa has big ambitions, and is starting with one of the least-insured parts of society – the self-employed. Based on their own experiences as freelancers, contractors and entrepreneurs, Sherpa’s founders believe the self-employed are currently unloved and unwanted by mainstream financial services. Sherpa is there to provide the protection that those who work for big companies take for granted.
Death in service? Tick. Sick pay? Tick. Paying off your mortgage if something serious happens? Tick. All via a simple and quick online process. No more fixing appointments with an IFA or broker; no more filling in form after form after form. Sherpa advises on how much of what type of insurance is required. It sources that insurance from its reinsurance partner, GenRe, getting its members wholesale prices.
Sherpa makes insurance easy to buy, and easy to manage. Its promise to members is nothing less than the insurance you need, in 10 minutes or less, and 20 to 40 per cent cheaper than going through a broker. And we guarantee you’ll never be asked the same question twice! Sherpa has launched in the UK to much critical acclaim, and is expanding rapidly to cover more risks for more people in more countries. Its ambition? Nothing less than perfect, painless protection for everyone on the planet.
by Chris Kaye, Founder and CEO, Sherpa
Visit Meetsherpa.com and get free, regulated, advice and your own personal, tailored insurance account. All done in minutes.
Polaris was established in 1993 by insurers and brokers as a collaborative, not-for-profit venture to encourage the adoption of new technologies, with the aim of delivering a more efficient and cost-effective broker channel.
Today, Polaris serves over 100 clients, and while its role remains the same, the type of client it serves and the range of technology solutions it supports has grown.
Polaris Managing Director Martin McLachlan explains: “Our original focus was the broker channel, and our clients were insurers and the broker platform providers. That community and its profile have grown over the years. Polaris Market Standards and ProductWriter are also used in the direct and corporate channels today, and by a myriad of new clients such as insurtech start-ups, data providers, aggregators and MGAs. Today we estimate over 70 per cent of general insurance quotes in the UK are powered by ProductWriter and, by default, using the Market Standards.”
Just as Polaris’s client base has changed so has the company’s product offerings. McLachlan adds: “Our imarket proposition, which delivers real-time connectivity for commercial insurers and brokers, has seen exponential growth in recent years and goes from strength to strength. We also recently launched our Good Customer Outcomes service. This reviews insurance products and the platforms they are sold on to help find improvements that would benefit customers buying online. And we are now in the process of launching our latest service, the Polaris Sandbox.”
McLachlan continues: “Sandbox is deliberately designed to allow new technologies and propositions to be road-tested in an environment that duplicates the current broker channel e-trading model. It is designed with start-ups and insurtech companies in mind, where getting the attention of market incumbents is incredibly challenging. Sandbox helps to demonstrate to existing market players that new technologies and propositions can work, technically – therefore de-risking decisions by insurers and brokers to trial new propositions”.
The Polaris Sandbox will be launched in Q1 2019.
by Martin McLachlan, Managing Director, Polaris UK Limited
Contact Polaris UK Limited to find out how we can help you to get your insurtech proposal to market faster. Polaris e-trading Standards are proven and will enable you to more easily build a proposition that can communicate and work with insurer and broker platforms. In addition, the Polaris Sandbox, which emulates the existing e-trading eco-system, will enable you to test your proposition in a “real world” environment much sooner in its development cycle.
It’s been more than four years since the term insurtech was coined. Back then, a surge in interest in deploying new technology, data and analytics to improve all parts of the insurance buying process held the potential for radical change. Disruption in financial services saw the emergence of challenger banks. Today, costs have been reduced and customer experience has improved. If even banking could be fun, surely insurance would be next?
The message has got through – few in the insurance industry would claim that better data, analytics and technology are not a critical part of their future success. The recently published Blueprint One by Lloyd’s of London identifies how it will deliver on the Future of Lloyd’s manifesto. It provides an excellent vision for any insurance organisation of how the world should look a few years hence.
But don’t mistake a clear view for a short distance. Just because we know what the future looks like doesn’t mean it’s going to be easy to get there, nor does it mean it will happen fast.
Insurance is a grudge purchase. Other than the risk-obsessed or the highly analytical, few people, or companies, want to spend money on it. The future of insurance is not going to be about making buying insurance fun, it will be about making it disappear.
Most of us are terrible at assessing the true risks around us. We overestimate the true risk of what has happened most recently, the things that have impacted us personally and what we can’t control. We underestimate the impact of events that happen infrequently, that have happened to other people and those we think we control. People are often more scared of flying than driving to the airport, yet there is a far greater likelihood of having a fatal accident in a car journey than in a flight of the same duration. Some of the innovations in insurance in recent years have failed because they assumed people wanted more options about how to insure their possessions or insure against bad things happening. The reality is that we don’t want to have to make more decisions about insurance. It’s painful thinking about potential losses, and we see no immediate benefit from spending money on insurance. We tend to ignore it if we can.
Most of us buy insurance because it’s a required condition of something else, such as car insurance in order to drive, household insurance to get a mortgage or liability insurance to run a business. We’ll accept it if we get it for little or no cost (health insurance as an employment benefit, for example).
Some of the innovations in insurance in recent years have failed because they assumed people wanted more options about how to insure their possessions or insure against bad things happening.
It’s often painful to buy insurance – and even more so to make a claim. We can spend hours providing information online or by phone to get cover that reflects our needs. Or we can buy on an app on our phone and risk something that doesn’t match our needs. Either way we rarely properly understand what we are actually covered for and suspect (often correctly) that we are duplicating our cover between different insurance policies in some areas, and have glaring holes in others. Traditionally, it was the role of the broker to ensure that we had adequate cover across all areas of our lives and businesses.
That worked fine when most of our risk came from physical assets (houses), or lives, where a loss was generally beyond doubt (your house burns down or you die) and the risk could be assessed by actuaries and understood by the policy holder. Today, much of our value lies in the intangibles of our digital lives. It’s much harder to know what our exposure to cyber-risk is, or reputation, or liability is. At the same time, the old broking advisory business model is proving expensive and unable to deliver the depth of advice to keep up. Individuals and small businesses are being encouraged to go directly to the insurer and corporations are looking beyond their brokers for advice. Unless we have to buy the insurance, people (and companies) often ignore it or defer the decision.
So where does that leave the future of insurance? As consumers and companies we want to avoid the pain of a loss, but we are rarely prepared to pay the “fair” price to offset that pain. We are also not great at risk management. It’s hard emotionally, and accurately, to assess the cost benefit of paying for risk mitigation measures in our lives to prevent future losses.
The easiest way to do something is not to do it all.
Human nature isn’t going to change anytime soon, so insurance needs to. The core fundamentals of insurance aren’t going away, but they will look very different. At some point the concept of buying insurance as a separate protection will vanish. Insurance will become embedded into our purchases and corporate spend. Regulation will ensure the protection for loss still it exists, but the onus will be on the provider of the services not the buyer. The easiest way to do something is not to do it all. We will not have to grapple with understanding our various insurance policies, because they won’t exist. If we lose, burn, break, flood, crash or hurt things, they will be put right, sometimes before we even realised we had a problem.
It’s not going to happen soon, but in the meantime, look out for the insurers, innovators and technologists that are making insurance easier and clearer. A few might succeed in making it fun, but the best will be making it invisible. They are the future of insurance.
by Matthew Grant, Partner at Instech London and Executive Director at Abernite
The possibility of a fiscal crisis is the biggest risk to doing business globally, according to a survey of World Economic Forum business leaders published on Tuesday, though there were strong regional differences in views of the biggest risk.
In North America and Europe, cyber attacks were considered the biggest risk. Environmental risks were the top concern in South Asia, which highlighted water crises, and in East Asia and the Pacific, which identified natural catastrophes.
Overall, the executives put fiscal crises as the top risk over the next 10 years, followed by cyber attacks and unemployment or underemployment, the WEF’s Executive Opinion Survey showed.
The survey of 12,897 business leaders from 133 countries makes up part of the WEF’s global competitiveness report, published before the January Davos forum.
“At a time when global economic growth appears fragile, business leaders are deeply concerned by their governments’ fiscal resilience,” said Emilio Granados-Franco, head of globalrisks and geopolitical agenda at the World Economic Forum.
“Meanwhile, cyber threats remain a major risk due to their rapid evolution and increasingly disruptive potential.”
The survey was published by WEF together with Marsh & McLennan and Zurich Insurance.
Source: by Carolyn Cohn, Reuters