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From Resource, August 2006
Copyright by LOMA

Strategies, Technologies and Your Future
Speaking at the Systems Forum, industry analysts discuss the current tools and techniques that can help insurance companies do more, be more and to reimagine their future. 

By Tammy McInturff  

Today, insurers are presented with a wide array of tools and technologies to rearchitect their systems and reimagine how they do business. Web services, SOA, business process models, and new strategies arm business and technology professionals with an arsenal of tools. At the 2006 ACORD LOMA Insurance Systems Forum in Las Vegas, NV, a panel of industry analysts discussed the current tools and techniques that can help insurance companies do more, be more and to reimagine their future. The analysts tackled many topics including competitive advantage, business and IT alignment, enterprise architecture, Web services and services oriented architecture (SOA).  

Leapfrogging

As the insurance industry continues to change, some carriers are struggling to keep up. One industry challenge the panelists discussed was the concept of “leapfrogging.” Some carriers are worried about being left behind by their competitors who are leveraging technology to their advantage. 

Cynthia Saccocia, insurance research director for TowerGroup, said that TowerGroup has conducted over 200 interviews with industry executives and leading vendors who are helping insurers transform their business. She explained that in these interviews, executives were continually telling TowerGroup that they were worried about getting leapfrogged by the competition. “The bar has been raised,” she said. “Technology has changed substantially and people are doing a lot of big things with it.”

Matthew Josefowicz, manager of the insurance group at Celent, LLC agreed with Saccocia, but added some insight into why more insurers haven’t updated their technology. “As we talk to established carriers with large market share and large pools of agents to support, they find they have a hard time modernizing their technology because the cost can be very high. It may also be perceived as unsupportable by management.  There is really a big job that IT and also the different components of business need to do to be able to communicate what the long term value is going to be of technology investments.”

Josefowicz also added that the anonymity of the Internet helps level the playing field for smaller carriers that might not have the resources to fully modernize. “On the Internet, no one knows you are a $20 million carrier,” he said. “You’ve got the same screen real estate to present yourself to an agent as the top five insurers. So if you are a start-up carrier with good capabilities in a particular niche market, if you are focused on distributor service and ease of doing business, you have a real opportunity to erode share from some of the large players. Large players who don’t invest in keeping their edge in ease of doing business and in pricing competitiveness risk being leapfrogged by smaller upstarts, or risk having their market share erode.”

However, small and medium-sized carriers have to have key technologies in place to compete with the larger carriers. “Portals are no longer a competitive advantage,” Saccocia said. “They are a cost of doing business. You have to be present with a Web site that enables ease of use. If you don’t have those tools then you are not even in the game. So there are a lot of key structures that have to be present today in order to survive as a small or medium-sized carrier against a large global player that has a lot of resources.”

Saccocia also added that for smaller niche, regional companies “this isn’t just about technology.” “It is about the value you can provide, what you can provide to the industry that is unique,” she said. “Technology plays an important role as an enabler but if you don’t have the strategy, the plan and the path you are not going to make it.”

 

Legacy Systems

Legacy systems were another topic discussed by the panel. Many insurance companies are still struggling with what to do with their old, outdated systems. In most cases companies cannot effectively replace all of their legacy systems because it is cost prohibitive. Panel moderator Denise Garth, vice president of membership and standards, ACORD, asked the panel to comment on the idea that “40 years of IT investments have hindered innovation” for insurance companies.

“It is a very complex process,” said Saccocia. “There is no easy answer and there is no one answer for all of the industry.” She said she is often asked by insurance companies about what the trends are around legacy replacement and what competitors are doing about them. “In some respects it really doesn’t matter what your competitors are doing,” she said. “How does that affect what it is that you are doing?” She explained that the focus needs to be on the company’s own strategy. “Not everybody has 40 years of IT investment,” she said. “There are those that have started far fresher and those that are much further down the reengineering path. But there needs to be some strategic direction.”

Stephen Forte, senior research analyst, Gartner, agreed that innovation has certainly been hindered by legacy systems. “If a company is getting into a situation where they are spending 70-to-80 percent of IT budgets on maintaining legacy systems and they have 15 percent or so to transform their business then there is no way they are going to compete with the larger guys,” he said. As for the right percentage to spend on IT maintenance, Forte said there are no magic numbers. “It really depends on what your business strategy is. Certainly if you’re spending more than 2/3 of your IT budget on maintenance you have to think about why and you have to think about what the opportunity cost is that you are missing out on. Most of the companies that we talk to are aspiring to a 50/50 or beating a 50/50 ratio between maintenance and new types of projects.”

 

Competitive Advantage

Josefowicz talked about what is happening in the industry in terms of competitive advantage or as he called it, “the technology foundations for advantage.” “Our perspective is that advantage in the insurance sector is supported by two pillars—service and risk management,” he said. “Service isn’t just customer service; it is service to your agents, distributors, policyholders, business partners and internal employees—anything that gives people information and transactional capability to do what they need to do to interact with your product. Risk management is everything else that insurers do—pricing, actuarial, claims, asset management, reinsurance, everything that has to do with managing risk and money.”

According to Josefowicz, those two pillars are supported by three foundations; the most basic one is treating data as a strategic asset. By this he means that companies need to understand that the insurance business is a data business and that information only comes from having transparent accessible and high quality data throughout your enterprise, whether it is operational data, customer data, or risk data.  “Straight through processing is a term we resisted for a long time in the insurance sector because it has such a specific meaning on the security side of no human touch,” he said. “Most commercial lines insurers or high value life insurers do not like the idea of no human touch. But that is not what we mean by straight through processing; rather than try to popularize a new term we decided to go with this one. But the caveat is what we mean is that information remains consistent and electronic throughout the entire value chain; it never goes into a cul-de-sac. It never leaves the electronic pathway. It maintains a consistent electronic form and that supports the data quality and accessibility that is so important to treating data as a strategic asset. It also supports frictionless communication, reducing the cost of every transaction whether it is an agent inquiring about their commission check or a policyholder inquiring about their claims status.”

Saccocia noted that to be competitive insurance companies need to be aware of the changes that are happening in the marketplace. “We have to be in an environment where we are providing services that are addressing the marketplace demand,” Saccocia added. “The business of insurance isn’t just about the business of insurance; it is completely influenced by the surroundings. The work force is changing. We don’t hire people for data entry anymore. Demographics are changing the way in which our customers are going to look for services from the insurance carrier. Technology is changing how consumers interact with their providers. You have to move from product-centric focus to service-centric focus, where you are addressing services and the experience for the producer, the customer and the employee.”

Saccocia pointed out the changes that have occurred since she started working in the insurance industry. “I used to type letters to clients when I started over 20 years ago in the insurance industry,” she added. “I don’t type letters anymore; I’m actually communicating in real-time with these customers. It completely changes your customer service environment. We talk about this single customer focus, how are you going to staff for someone who needs to address the life, annuity, and a property question all at the same time? Are we really going to be ready to start paying our service personnel upwards of $70,000 a year to service a multi-product client, to be able to upsell and cross-sell and to actually address the client’s needs as opposed to talking to them simply about the products?”

Forte agreed with Josefowicz that data is a strategic asset. “Data drives underwriting and claims and all the functions within an insurance company, but do insurers today really have a grasp on what their data is and how they can get at it? Data is trapped in silos they have no idea how to take it and slice it and dice it and use is for a competitive advantage.”

Saccocia disagreed. “There clearly are insurers that are on the path,” she said. “And there are some vendors that are very focused on data and they get it too.”

“Our last CIO survey showed more than half either had an enterprise data standard in place or were working on one,” Josefowicz added. “And almost every single respondent to our survey had some kind of enterprise data warehousing and business intelligence initiative in progress. So even though they haven’t achieved the nirvana in that area, they all are going towards it; some are going faster than others.”

 Top Initiatives and Operational Priorities

Garth asked the panel to comment on the top initiatives and operational priorities for the industry.

Josefowicz said that Celent’s research shows that distribution and e-business are among the top initiatives for 2006 among insurers. He said many carriers are focused on ease of doing business, making distribution faster and easier while also reducing costs. “The Internet has leveled the playing field to some degree in terms of distributor communication,” he said. “Top initiatives folks are really focused on how they can make life easier for their distributors and how they can let distributors do business with their company easier and faster and with less cost to them than our competitors. It is very difficult to innovate in a sustainable way against your three closest peers on price, product and commission but in terms of ease of doing business that is all about execution and that is an open race.”

Saccocia said that distribution needs to be personalized for different customer audiences. “We have a polarized customer base—those over the age of 50 and those under the age of 50. Those over the age of 50 are going to transact business very differently than those who were brought up on Game Boy.” She said that companies need to be conscious of the way these different groups want to transact business. “Older individuals tend to read the screen from left to right and they read everything on the screen,” she noted. “The younger generation reads everything all at once; they only want to find exactly what they are looking for.” She said the challenge is personalizing that experience for different types of customers. “They are two completely different demographics; their needs are completely different and their focus is completely different,” she said.

Josefowicz added that another trend he has seen lately is “the focus on data mastery which supports the shift towards treating data as a strategic asset.”

 

IT and Business Alignment

IT and business alignment is continually a topic of interest for insurance companies. While some companies have made significant strides in improving their IT and business alignment others are still struggling with improving operations and communication between the two.

“How do we want our business to run?” Saccocia asked. “The employment landscape is changing; demographics are changing and technology is changing. When are we going to start changing the business model? When are we going to set up enterprise services of those noncommoditized types of the business and focus on the service-centricity that is necessary? You are going the wrong way if you are starting in IT and moving towards the business architecture. You are going to run into a lot of obstacles. We need to start with business architecture.”

Josefowicz noted that advancements in technology allow insurers to “trim down the service group to high-value people who are providing high-value services. Anywhere that a human being is serving as an interface layer between my phone and the computer screen at the carrier that person should be turned into a computer,” he said. “But when I have a high value question, and the CSR is going to do something besides just read the screen to me; at that point I want to talk to a person.”

 

Enterprise Data Strategies

The panel also discussed enterprise data strategies. For insurance companies, an enterprise data strategy is a design for improving the way the organization leverages its data. Having an enterprise data strategy allows the company to turn its data into information which can produce measurable enhancements in business performance.

“In terms of how companies are approaching enterprise data strategies there are a couple of differ-ent areas,” Josefowicz said. “First, we see a lot of focus around enterprise data standards in a lot of cases those are based on the ACORD standard. There is nobody that I’ve talked to that has said that the ACORD standard is 100 percent sufficient for what they need it to be for an enterprise data standard. But even if it gets you 50 percent of the way there, that is a lot of work you don’t have to do yourself. And it is a common starting ground for your internal departments who are used to managing their own data structures. Enterprise data warehousing is certainly something we continue to see especially with an initial focus on a specific area like customer data or claims data. But we continue to see insures maintaining a long-term vision. Long-term, many companies plan to consolidate data across the enterprise.”

“You do have to have customer focused data and you do have to consolidate it,” Forte said. “Most insurers don’t understand how corrupt or bad the data is until they actually go in and do a policy or claims replacement type system. They go in there and find they have missing data fields or there are fields with random characters filled in instead of data because no one had the information at the time.”

 

Service Oriented Architecture

Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) is currently a popular topic in the insurance industry. However, there is still some confusion and misunderstanding of SOA within the industry. There are some real short-term opportunities for SOA, as well as long-term innovation possibilities that can add real operational efficiencies to the business.

The panel discussed SOA and tried to clear up some of the general misconceptions that exist.

“We are seeing a lot of focus on SOA and internal Web services,” Josefowicz said. He noted that companies really need to “focus on solving the integration problem that the industry has been dealing with for the last 20 years and trying to figure out how to get all their different systems to communicate.  How do we avoid doing point-to-point integration to share transactional capability and data between systems? So that is driving a lot of the interest in SOA.”

“SOA is a concept,” added Saccocia. “SOA is governance; it enables you to have forethought as to where you are going. Vendors are not SOA vendors; they support and they provide services. SOA is an architectural strategy. You cannot go buy SOA and not everybody is an SOA genius.”

“But what has really changed to drive SOA now,” asked Forte. “SOA is a concept that has been around since the mid-1980s. I think that most insurers feel like this is a path that they want to go down but they are waiting to see if others are successful at it first.”

Saccocia disagreed; she said “many life insurance carriers and small insurance carriers are on that path and are already working with SOA. There is a clear direction in which this industry is moving. The technology is far more ready than it ever has been and the standards are much further along than it ever has been. Change is the only constant and change is here.”

Josefowicz agreed with Saccocia. “When we did our CIO survey last year more than half of respondents had services architecture life in some mission critical system. It doesn’t mean they’ve reached an SOA nirvana and that is the only way that they integrate systems in their infrastructure, but it is a mission critical tool,” he said.

“There was a lot of confusion about SOA and Web services early on because a lot of the hype in the general business press and technology press about Web services was about open business practices,” Josefowicz said. “Radically, on demand type business models where different partners were going to be coming together and coming apart in a very dynamic way which is not something that the insurance industry really had a lot of appetite for, nor should it. There is one sentence that is why SOA and Web services are important for the insurance industry. It is open, faster, and cheaper.”

Saccocia agreed with Josefowicz. “Three years ago business was really afraid of this new acronym and what it actually meant,” she said. “They are less afraid now. IT has been on this path doing components, creating new ways of integrating their applications and their data and now there is means by which they can educate the business on what that means. But you have to be clear; you have to have your strategy and your plan. Otherwise, you are going to run into a spaghetti mess. Your business needs to decide how you want to do business. There is the opportunity now to actually do business in a really different way, in a way that focuses on the services that you are providing that the products are a component of that. You are very much focused on the customer, the producer and the employee experience. Lowering your cost does not create a sustainable advantage,” she added. “New products, new services, retaining customers and growing up is a sustainable advantage.”

 

Advice for Carriers

Josefowicz offered some advice for carriers. First, he said it is important to treat data as a strategic asset—making sure that the quality and the transparency and accessibility is there. He said it is also important to continue focusing on straight through processing—letting data flow seamlessly through the organization. “Companies need to think about how those things in every IT initiative that you undertake reinforces your brand promise and reinforces your company’s strategy. If you are a low-cost personal lines, commodity product your IT strategy is going to be very different then if you are a high touch advisor network.”

Forte added, “And it is also business and IT people understanding each others goals and objectives when going on any sort of strategic project whether that be replacement of full policy admin system or adding a distribution channel or creating a new product.”

“The business side needs to be clear about what they want to do how they want to position their products, what demographics they want to be going after and how they want to service those clients,” Saccocia said. “Technology is in a completely different place today. It can really transform the way in which you are executing and positioning yourself if the business is not clear and the business does not provide the strategy. IT is continuing to be reactive and tactical and they are not on a strategic path with you.  Business owns this, business needs to take responsibility. The point is that business needs to articulate the strategy and then they can come together in a path. That is where the concepts of SOA have enabled that conversation to be something different and that is where we hope the business services architecture will align and set up the structure for the application, the information and the infrastructure.”

 

Advice for Vendors

“We have a lot of pervasive very qualified vendors in the industry that are coming with advancements in their applications,” Saccocia said. “Vendors are coming with services to help carriers but there has to be a path to get from all this pervasive 40 years of IT investment that the carrier is not only responsible for but also that you as a vendor are responsible for because you provided it. All of our vendors struggle with dropping off boxes verses really selling solutions. They need to be engaged in that process.”

Josefowicz added, “Understand where you are going to fit in your prospects architecture; you are not going to have a green field. You are not going to take over everything unless it is a brand new startup and you are the first system they are buying. Understand how you are going to integrate and get a sense of that as early as possible in the process. The second thing is to focus on communication and messaging. It is no good to position yourself in what you think is the hot category that the analysts are talking about and get to the sales meeting and when people actually drill down on what you are offering it is one small component of that. It is much better to under promise and over deliver then to blow a lot of smoke. Just be honest; be as transparent as possible in your marketing and your sells.”

“One other key point for vendors is to understand what is going on in the vendor marketplace and understand how carriers are viewing you,” Josefowicz said. “Carriers have to understand not only your product but your strategic future. Are you going to get bought? Are you going to be putting more R&D into this product? You need to be able to address those concerns because those are on everybody’s mind.”

The industry is changing. Carriers have to keep up with the advancements in technology and the changes in the marketplace. There is a chance of being left behind, not just from a carrier perspective but from a vendor perspective as well.

 

NOTE: The 2007 ACORD LOMA Insurance Systems Forum is scheduled for May 20-22 in Orlando , FL at the Walt Disney World Dolphin Resort.

 

       

 

Contact Resource at resource@loma.org

 

 


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