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What's New in
Cybertalk?
by
Jean Gora
May
1998
Note:
CyberTalk is a column that appears monthly in LOMA's Resource,
the magazine for insurance and financial services management. To
see more contents of the magazine and to see how to subscribe,
click on Resource.
Improving
the Internet Distribution System
Evidence is beginning to
appear that the Internet is a successful insurance distribution
channel. Several insurance company sources with significant Web
activities have told the author that Internet activities generate
both higher close ratios and higher-face-amount policies than
traditional sales activities do. This generalization applies both
to direct Internet sales and to sales generated by Internet agent
referrals. Although current volume is low, it is growing. These
sources attribute their success to several factors, including:
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Web user
demographics. Web surfers are more affluent
and better educated than the population in general. Hence
they are more willing to learn about insurance by reading
about it. Once they decide to buy, they are more able to
afford high-face-amount policies.
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Success stories
from other industries. Individuals who have
used or heard about Internet auto malls, travel agents,
and discount brokers are willing to apply what they have
learned to the purchase of insurance.
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Improved methods
of generating traffic. The chief improvement
in recent months has been the establishment of links
between the leading insurance mallssuch as Quicken
InsureMarket and InsWeband other relevant sites,
particularly personal finance sites. America
Onlines personal finance channel, which includes an
insurance section, is cited as a particularly valuable
source of leads that convert into sales. Apparently,
individuals that come to insurers sites from
personal finance sites/channels and file online requests
for insurance are serious insurance shoppers.
Specifically, these consumers are more likely to be
serious buyers than individuals who come through banner
ads appearing on non-financial sites. One source told the
author that these consumers are more likely to be serious
buyers than the individuals who find the site after
having been exposed to significant media advertising.
Insurance companies that
distribute through America Online (AOL) include CP (Colonial
Penn) Direct, Lincoln Benefit Life (Allstate), The Hartford,
Nationwide, and Prudential. Quicken InsureMarket also appears on
the same list. InsureMarket also provides two of the three
functions offered through this channelits insurance planner
and its comparison shopping service. As the table in this column
shows, many of the companies that distribute through AOL also do
so through InsureMarket and/or InsWeb. In addition to their
appearance on AOL, Allstate appears on both InsureMarket and
InsWeb, The Hartford and Nationwide appear on InsWeb, and
Prudential appears on InsureMarket.
Other Insurers on InsWeb
include CAMICO (professional liability for CPAs), Matrix Benefits
(Section 125), The McGraw Group (personal watercraft), RV Nuccio
(wedding), and Sullivan & Sullivan (motor cycle). Immediate
quotes are available from Matrix Benefits, RV Nuccio, and
Sullivan & Sullivan.
Quicken InsureMarket
and InsWeb
InsureMarket and InsWeb
have many common features but also many different ones. Both
sites allow the consumer to fill out an online request for
insurance. The request may be either for a price quotation or for
a referral to an agent. If the participating insurer tries to
sell directly, the request for a price quotation may be little
different from an application. Usually a paper application is
required at some point in the transaction. The consumer fills out
this request once. That consumer can then send the request to one
or more of the insurers that do business through the mall.
Many of the insurance
quote services that do business on the Internet base their quotes
on rates filed by insurers with the NAIC. In the life area,
InsureMarket supplies quotes using rates supplied to it by the
participating carriers. In the auto area, both InsureMarket and
InsWeb have online links to participating companies
underwriting systems. (At this writing, InsureMarket has an
operating online link to only one auto insurer
Travelersfor business in one state. InsWeb has online
links to eight auto insurers for business in 47 states.) InsWeb
also has such links for life products as well. Thus, the price
quotes generated by these services can be considerably more
accurate that those generated by the quote services. In the auto
insurance area, carriers can issue binding coverage on the
Internet in states that allow them to do so. In the case of
Travelers, InsureMarket:
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Interacts with
Travelers database to produce an individualized
rate quote.
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Verifies driving
records with states while a transaction is being
processed online.
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Processes payments
online.
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Provides immediate
notification to approved customers (when Travelers
conditions are met).
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Allows coverage to
begin as soon as after midnight of the following business
day.
InsWeb interacts with
insurers databases to produce individualized rate quotes,
but it does not execute any of the other functions described
above. It has focused much of its effort on providing quotes from
multiple carriersa feature the companys consumer
research reveals to be in great demand.
Although both InsWeb and
InsureMarket offer information about insurance, the information
offered by InsWeb is in greater depth. In its short life span,
InsWeb has had greater participation by property/casualty
insurers than life insurers. Until recently, InsureMarket
operated exclusively in the life market. Because InsureMarket is
part of the Quicken.com site, it offers greater access to
information about a consumers overall financial situation.
The two organizations
structure financial arrangements with carriers somewhat
differently. InsureMarket operates as an insurance agency and
takes commissions on sales. It also imposes a one-time set-up fee
and annual fees. InsWeb does not operate as an agent but charges
transaction fees plus an initial set-up fee and an annual
maintenance fee. The fees vary depending on the complexity of the
issues involved.
Because Intuit, the
provider of the Quicken household financial management software
package, owns InsureMarket, InsureMarket has had a recognizable
brand almost since its inception. InsWeb has had no such
affiliation. Thus, InsureMarket has benefited from Intuits
attempt to operate as an integrator on the Internet through the
Quicken.com Web site and a number of alliances with other heavily
traveled sites. In the last several months, InsWeb has announced
a number of similar alliances that suggests it is attempting to
pursue the same strategy.
Quicken
InsureMarkets Alliances
As noted previously in
this column, the Quicken software package serves as the front end
to several dozen home banking and bill payment services.
Investors can download daily portfolio performance data from a
dozen major securities brokers. Thus, even before Intuit
established Quicken.com, it had alliances with many of the major
financial institutions in North America. Intuit has established a
new alliance with the Integrion Financial Network that connects
banks to Quicken and other household financial management
software packages.
The banks that control
Integrion serve 75 percent of the retail bank population in North
America. In client/server jargon, Quicken functions as fat client
software. In the world of the Internet, fat server software
dominates. The logic of each application resides on Web servers
and not in the client Web browsers of individual surfers. The
user does not have to buy a software package in order to use the
application. Fearing that consumers would prefer the Internet fat
server model, Intuit has attempted to build a new business using
the fat server model. This new businesscalled
Quicken.comis that of a personal finance integrator. It
capitalizes on the Quicken brand.
At the Quicken.com site,
one can find not only InsureMarket but also
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Hyperlinks to the
sites of many of the banks and securities firms with
which Intuit already had alliances.
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A huge mutual fund
section with information and purchase capability.
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Hyperlinks to auto
loan and credit card sites.
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Quicken.mortgage, a
mortage shopping site through which six major lenders,
including Principal Residential Mortgage (owned by
Principal Mutual), offer online loans. That service,
which began in November 1997, had already received 10,000
mortgage applications by the end of March 1998.
Quicken.com claims 40
million page views per month. InsureMarket is publicizing data
that shows that as Quicken.com has expanded and entered the
alliances shown below, the ratio of insurance applicants to
visitors to InsureMarket has improved. Most interesting of all
are the alliances that Intuit has entered with other site
operators that feed traffic to Quicken.com. Partners include the
following:
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America Online
(AOL) has 11 million members and is probably the
largest single port of entry to the Internet for new
users. As noted above, Quicken.com and InsureMarket are
accessible through AOL's personal finance channels.
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Microsoft offers
Active Channels as part of its Internet Explorer Web
browser. Quicken.com is accessible through its financial
active channel directly from the browser.
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CNNfn is the
Web site of the CNN Financial Network. Intuit is
supplying a special branded version of Quicken.com to
CNNfn. CNNfn is, of course, linked to CNNs own Web
site, which is promoted through CNNs television
networks. A CNN employee told the author that during the
first week of the recent presidential scandal, the number
of people who visited the major CNN Web site equaled the
number who viewed its television programming. CNNfn
claims 53 million pages views/month.
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Excite is
the operator of two major Internet search engines: Excite
and Webcrawler. Internet search engines are among the
most heavily visited Web sites. Intuit has made an
investment in Excite and thus has the opportunity to
funnel people who use it to Quicken.com. Excite claims 75
million financial page views per month. Quicken.com
appears as part of the Excite Business and Investing
channel.
Together these alliances
are helping solve one of the Webs major
problemsattracting traffic to financial sites. Intuit is
also adding bill presentment software to the 1998 version of its
Quicken software package and could readily add such a service to Quicken.com.
InsWebs
Alliances
In the last several
months, InsWeb has announced an assortment of alliances intended
to draw traffic to its site. InsWeb provides its partners in
these alliances with comparative auto insurance quotations.
Following is a list of some of the alliance partners.
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BanxQuote is
a company that operates a network of co-branded banking
centers on the Internet in partnership with major media
sources. The network provides dynamically updated deposit
and loan rates, online banking and trading, global
electronic commerce and other market data. BanxQuote
banking centers appear on the Web sites of the following:
Bloomberg, Dow Jones, The Wall Street Journal, The
New York Times, USA Today, Business Week, The Washington Post, The New York Daily News,
The Boston Globe, Philadelphia Online, The
Houston Chronicle, NJ, Alabama Life, Oregon Life,
Michigan Life, Cleveland Live, Inside Denver,
Startribune.com, Pioneer Planet, Tulsa World, Infoseek, American
Banker, Womens Wire, Quote.com and Netscape
Guide by Yahoo.
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Recycler
Classifieds is a publisher of classified ads on the
Internet through two sites: Recycler.com and California
Classifieds (caclassifieds.com). Recycler Classifieds
claims to add 40,000 cars to its site every week; half
are sold within a week.
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AllApartments
is a provider of apartment listings and relocation
services on the Internet. According to AllApartments, 48
percent of people who move also buy auto insurance. Of
that group, 91 percent make the buying decision by the
fourth week after the move.
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Consumers Car
Club provides an Internet automobile shopping and
dealer referral service, also offering competitive rates
on auto leases and loans.
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Excite operates
on two Internet search engines and is also a partner of
Intuit. A link to InsWeb appears on the sites auto
channels.
Thus, InsWeb is also
well positioned to attract traffic to its siteparticularly
shoppers for auto insurance.
The consensus among
people who have inside knowledge of both the mall operators and
the insurers that do business on them is that Internet auto
insurance distribution is likely to take off within the next
year. All drivers are required to have auto insurance; many
believe they are paying too much for it and, therefore, have a
significant incentive to comparison shop. The underwriting
process can be completely automated. There is no need for a
medical exam. Both InsWeb and InsureMarket have many of the
systems in place required to do the job. The number of states
recognizing electronic signatures is growing.
However, there is also
likely to be movement in the life area, particularly in the term
life insurance market. At least some of the carriers
participating in the malls are exploring ways to dispense with
medical underwriting. InsureMarket is publicizing figures that
show that between October 1996 and December 1997, InsureMarket
requesters significantly altered their requesting behavior. In
the October 1996 to February 1997 period, 71 percent of
InsureMarket requestors sought agent referrals and only 29
percent wanted direct online quotations. (Only Lincoln
Benefitan Allstate subsidiaryand Zurich offered
products through the site at that time.)
In the September to
December 1997 period, the percentages were virtually reversed; 73
percent of requestors sought direct online quotations and only 27
percent requested agent referrals. (In addition to Lincoln
Benefit Life and Zurich, John Hancock, Prudential, and
Transamerica also offered products through the site at that
time). That switch represents a stunning change and is testimony
to consumers increasing willingness to deal with financial
institutions online and to their trust in familiar brands.
America Online (AOL)
When one considers the
alliances described above, one can readily see why AOL enjoys an
usually attractive position as a funnel of traffic. As an
Internet access provider, it engages consumers before they reach
the Internet. Its personal finance channels perform many of the
same functions as those available at Quicken.com. (As noted
above, some are in fact identical because of the alliance between
Intuit and AOL.) But the consumer does not have to wade through
the vast space of the Internet to find them. Thus, AOL is well
positioned to involve consumers in financial services before they
go further. The insurers that have a presence both directly on
AOL and on InsWeb and/or InsureMarket have an opportunity to test
to relative value of the various approaches
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GeneraLife and
General American: Using the Internet to Communicate with Agents
and Clients
Use of the Internet by
insurers to communicate with their agents and provide information
to the employees of group pension clients continues to grow.
Let's look at the activities of two companies: GeneraLife (one of
the first virtual insurance companies) and General American. The
two companies are affiliates.
GeneraLife allows its
agents to view in-force policies, pending policies, application
status and underwriting requests through its Web site. Agents can
print product brochures and forms necessary for policy
submission, policy changes, and policy-service-related functions.
Underwriting guidelines, current annuity values and current
production report information about individual agents are
available, and some types of agents may use the site to access
their agency information and appointments.
According to Randy
Curtis, director of technology at GeneraLife, agents can
"track the status of submitted business, find out what
information may be holding up issuance, and intervene. If there
is an outstanding physician statement, for example, the agent can
act to get the roadblock removed." The site also manages
online appoints for new agents. "At the general agent and
higher levels you can go in and fill out information
electronically, submit it to our appointment TPA, and they take
care of everything from there. It really reduces the amount of
paperwork and float time, and it makes the process a lot
easier," Curtis explains.
The system allows
GeneraLife to keep the most current and correct information at
the agents fingertips. This feature helps GeneraLifes
agents meet compliance requirements and do so rapidly. GeneraLife
has placed policy illustrations on its site, a measure that
ensures that its agents will all use the same illustration. This
practice also saves GeneraLife from having to distribute and
maintain illustration software.
In the future,
GeneraLife will produce online commission statements and more
extensive online reporting so that agents can run additional
predefined management reports as well as ad-hoc queries. These
features will be particularly helpful to small agencies.
GeneraLife will begin
business-to-customer Internet transactions. It will give
policyowners access to their policies and allow them to conduct
selected transactions. For example, these customers will be able
to make name, address, and beneficiary changes. They will also be
able to view current annuity values and cash values of permanent
life policies. They will be able to have email conversations with
the home office or agents. GeneraLife is also considering adding
Online Financial Exchange (OFX) technology to allow plan
participants to use Microsofts Money or Intuits
Quicken software to access their accounts through the Internet.
Agents like the service,
according to Curtis, because it gives them access to GeneraLife
24 hours a day. It also spares them from having to maintain
inventories of paper forms. GeneraLife can use the site to
determine automatically which types of products sell in which
locations by which agencies.
General American Life,
an affiliate of GeneraLife, is making use of the Internet to
allow retirement plan participants to view account information,
perform transactions, and plan for retirement. Plan participants
can visit the companys site, Retirelink.com, to check
account balances, track performance of funds, check their
investment elections, and model repayment schedules for plan
loans. Visitors to the site can access information regarding
sources of funds during retirement, time frames for saving,
taxes, levels of risk, life expectancy, and other relevant
topics. In the future the site will allow participants to make
fund-to-fund transfers, change investment elections, and apply
for loans.
Both GeneraLife and
General American Life make use of Genelcos WebHarbor Secure
Electronic Commerce Platform (SECP) and AuthenticateWeb.
GeneraLife also uses Genelcos AgentWeb. General American
uses AccountWeb. General American uses the products for
authentication, database access, Web site mail services and loan
calculation. When a 401k plan participant types a password on a
logon screen, the system verifies the password through
AuthenticateWeb and then accepts or denies the logon.
If the password is
accepted, the screens load data specific to that
participants account. In the future WebHarbor will
incorporate smart card technology and data encryption to allow
plan sponsors to access plan-level information and transfer data
files to General American.
Genelco introduced its
WebHarbor product line on March 8 at LOMAs Systems Forum in
Atlanta. Genelco is a subsidiary of General American Life.
Genelcos products are available for purchase by other
insurance companies. Thus, the number of software tools available
to help insurance companies use the Internet to communicate with
agents grows.
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