Nathan Golia is editor-in-chief of Digital Insurance and the chair of the Dig | In: The Digital Future of Insurance conference. Nate has been covering the insurance industry since 2010, when he was appointed as a senior editor for Insurance & Technology. Before that, stops in his journalism career included Direct Marketing News and The Toy Book. He lives in Texas with his wife and two children.
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Capgemini’s World Insurance Report revealed that trends were already heavily leaning toward digital before the COVID-19 crisis changed behavior further.
By Nathan GoliaMay 14 -
The coronavirus crisis has halted regular development cycles and thrown potential entrepreneurs out of their comfort zone.
By Nathan GoliaMay 13 -
LexisNexis compared more than two thousand homes with installed IoT devices vs. a million uninstalled.
By Nathan GoliaMay 12 -
Working with insurtech Azuga, the carrier’s PHLYTRAC program has been impactful in reducing poor driving habits for fleets.
By Nathan GoliaMay 6 -
Forrester analyst Ellen Carney joins the show to discuss how insurance companies are likely to spend their digital and technology budgets in the wake of COVID-19, in order to adapt to the current situation and beyond.
By Nathan GoliaMay 4 -
Three-quarters of a billion dollars were invested in startups in the first quarter of 2020, less than half the amount from the final quarter of 2019.
By Nathan GoliaApril 30 -
With insurers rapidly deploying digital capabilities in order to service socially distancing customers, Jamie Yoder of Snapsheet thinks these habits could stick and become status quo going forward.
By Nathan GoliaApril 27 -
Believe it or not, there was a time before coronavirus, and some insurtechs were able to land more cash.
By Nathan GoliaApril 20 -
Learn how data informed Allstate's decision to rebate auto insurance customers as COVID-19 kept cars off the road.
By Nathan GoliaApril 13 -
Join editor in chief Nathan Golia and Celent head of P&C Karlyn Carnahan for a discussion of the potential futures insurers could face after this crisis subsides.
By Nathan GoliaApril 2