Customer experience

  • It's easy to define what manufacturers produce and sell. Toy makers make toys. Auto manufacturers make cars. Pharmaceutical companies make drugs. But what do insurance companies do?

    February 1
  • When Florida Combined Life decided to become a primary player in the dental PPO and fee-for-service business in that state, it had two major challenges: an aggressive timeline and an inflexible claims system.The Jacksonville, Fla.-based subsidiary of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Florida had been offering dental coverage as an ancillary product to its health insurance offerings, and it had been paying dental claims through its health claims system. But that system was inflexible, and would not meet the company's future needs, says Charles Brody, dental division vice president at Florida Combined Life.

    February 1
  • More than nine months after it was created, Wilmington, Del.-based Fusura Inc., a Web-based personal lines insurance agency formed by global insurance giants AIG, Kemper and Prudential, is finally preparing to go live.As it prepares to launch-expected to be no later than March 31-the consortium capitalizing the venture can't be accused of rolling out the program too hastily. Since its celebrated formation was revealed, Fusura has witnessed its share of tweaks and modifications-from putting a permanent executive team in place to choosing its technology platform.

    January 1
  • Millions of potential buyers are using the Web to shop for insurance.That's why carriers are reassessing how to use the Internet to build their brand.

    January 1
  • Until recently, insurance companies have developed many Web sites for various products and business units, with little attention paid to consistency in branding, according to Kimberly Harris, senior research analyst at Gartner Financial Services, a unit of Gartner Inc., a Stamford, Conn.-based research and consulting firm."But insurers are beginning to realize they need to focus on an enterprise brand and roll that down to the different channels," she says.

    January 1
  • Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center thought it had an efficient claims submission system. Half the claims from the nine-hospital integrated delivery system in Baton Rouge go to Medicare or Medicaid. Staff used to load the claims on magnetic tape each week and ship them to the government payers.

    January 1
  • In March 2000, seven major health care payers started earnest negotiations to create a joint company to enable providers to communicate with the payers via the Internet.By July 2000, MedUnite was formed with a goal of offering services within a year. MedUnite launched its services last September, only six weeks behind its original schedule. However, it's a different company from what was originally envisioned.

    January 1
  • Imagine how difficult it must be for an independent agent to locate a carrier that covers beekeepers or acupuncturists. Or, from a carrier's perspective, finding agents who will sell employee dishonesty or bailee coverages.MarketScout, a Dallas-based venture that was launched in June 2000, is using the Internet to help retail insurance agents get quotes and bind polices for more than 700 classes of business, primarily specialty insurance. Since it's inception, the company has registered more than 13,000 agents who have free access to information and quotes provided by 67 carriers, including such heavyweights as American International Group Inc. (AIG), Travelers Insurance The St. Paul Cos., Safeco, Cigna and Fireman's Fund.

    January 1
  • As world of insurance grows more complex due to competition from within the industry and from banks and other financial services providers, Allied Insurance has a simple business strategy: attract and retain quality independent agents."Agents are our primary focus. Everything we do is aimed at how we can help the independent agent do business better," says Nate Beyene, IT officer for e-commerce at the Des Moines, Iowa-based carrier. "If our automation is not good, our agents can go next door."

    January 1
  • Insurers can't understand the benefits of wireless technologies unless they experiment with it, as Progressive Insurance has done for the past year. At the same time, the lack of industry standards, coupled with current limits on how much data can be transmitted and received by mobile devices, limits the types of services that wireless devices can support."This is a technology that consumers are dying to use, except for claims and servicing," says Jamie Bisker, a senior insurance analyst with TowerGroup, Needham, Mass., and author of the recent report "Wireless Realities In Insurance."

    December 1