Analytics

  • As it faced the unenviable task of selecting and then implementing a systems integration solution across its various business components, Cincinnati-based American Modern Insurance Group discovered a modern approach to an age-old problem.In late 2001, AMIG adopted a program known as the Virtual Insurance Community (VIC), the brainchild of PwC Consulting, a business unit of New York-based PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. VIC is a pre-integrated, component-based e-business solution designed for processing insurance transactions.

    February 1
  • In 1999, when PwC Consulting formulated the blueprint for its Virtual Insurance Community (VIC), one dynamic that drove the initiative was its ability to provide insurance carriers with a pre-integrated best-in-class technology solution.The global management and consulting firm, a business unit of New York-based PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, developed VIC as a component-based e-business solution for property/casualty insurers-eventually to be offered to life, annuity and group health carriers. And while the Virtual Insurance Community offers best-of-breed solutions spanning a myriad of technology applications, carriers that adopt the program-via licensing or via an application service hosting model-will still be able to deploy various applications that they previously have built and mapped within their IT infrastructure.

    February 1
  • What if you could determine when policyholders were considering switching to another carrier and then identify which of those customers were profitable enough to justify trying to keep them? And what if you could determine the effectiveness of a marketing campaign while it was in progress, changing your strategy before investing a lot of money?

    November 1
  • In its attempt to create an enterprisewide view of its customers, the numbers were stacked heavily against New York City-based MetLife Inc.: a customer base amassing 100 million customer records stored in more than 30 disparate back-office systems.Furthermore, MetLife has three vastly diverse organizations-a retail bank, a mutual fund company and a newly-acquired property/casualty insurer. Data is spread across five different lines of business-property/casualty insurance, banking, institutional, brokerage and mutual funds.

    November 1
  • Web-to-host is a relatively simple approach that insurers often overlook as they scramble to build a Web presence for internal, business-to-business, and public-facing applications.However, many companies now realize that by adding browser access to existing back-end applications, they can quickly and adequately Web-enable mainframe and midrange applications.

    November 1
  • While recently examining data stored within one of its auto policy databases, executives with New York City-based Metropolitan Insurance Co. uncovered a troubling glitch. It was an irregularity that any seasoned IT troubleshooter would certainly have appreciated.

    October 1
  • Although asset management is a relatively new focus for carriers, they're on a steady course for targeting affluent customers with a wave of products and services.As the U.S. economy caught wind during the past decade, more consumers joined the ranks of the affluent population. Recognizing this socioeconomic shift, insurance carriers began steering their business strategies toward asset management services.

    August 1
  • Extensible Markup Language, or XML, has received a whirlwind of hype since its creation in 1998, promising the ultimate universal format for all exchanges of company data.But to seasoned technology experts, this promise was initially made more than a decade ago with EDI, which also portended massive efficiencies and savings in business-to-business transactions.

    June 1
  • Despite huge corporate investments in personal computers, electronic mail and document scanners, the paperless workplace is still a pipe dream. Indeed, the insurance industry in particular is drowning in a white sea of computer-generated documents, customer correspondence and faxes.

    April 1
  • The insurance industry was one of the last to open its private gates to the Internet. Apprehension about exposing confidential customer information and other proprietary data to the outside world prevented insurance companies from jumping too quickly on the e-business bandwagon.

    April 1