Subject Root Tag

  • New York — The need to comply with Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) is only having a minimal effect on enterprise risk management (ERM), new research has found.

    August 14
  • New York - A subsidiary of New York-based American International Group, Inc. (AIG) has entered into an agreement to acquire Wurttembergische und Badische Versicherungs-AG (Wuba), its major subsidiary DARAG Deutsche Versicherungs- und Ruckversicherungs-AG (DARAG) and other minor subsidiaries from entities associated with J.C. Flowers & Co. LLC. Subject to regulatory approval from insurance and cartel authorities, the transaction is expected to close later this year. Terms of the agreement have not been disclosed. "We are pleased to have reached an agreement to acquire Wuba and its subsidiaries," said AIG President and Chief Executive Officer Martin J. Sullivan. "The transaction both reaffirms AIG's commitment to growing in the German marketplace and greatly enhances our insurance offerings to small and medium sized companies." Based in Heilbronn, Germany, Wuba offers property and casualty, marine, personal lines, and accident & health insurance through its 2,500 broker relationships across the country. "Wuba is an experienced and highly respected German insurer with a strong brand," said Nicholas C. Walsh, Executive Vice President of Foreign General Insurance for AIG. "We plan to continue their commitment to superior customer service, broker focus, distribution management and technology." AIG serves commercial, institutional and individual customers with insurance products, with operations in more than 130 countries and jurisdictions. Source: AIG

    August 13
  • Worchester, Mass. - The Hanover Insurance Group Inc., a regional property/casualty company based in Worchester, Mass., is offering Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) bonds through the company’s online point-of-sale system, BONDirect. The federal government’s ERISA bonds protect employee benefit plans against losses caused by fraud and dishonesty committed by employee trustees.

    August 10
  • Toronto-based kanetix, Canada's online insurance marketplace, compared the average lowest auto insurance premium quoted at www.kanetix.ca in Q2 2007 with the average lowest premium quoted from the same period in 2006, and found that the average lowest price had decreased by almost 17%.

    August 9
  • El Segundo, Calif. - To remain competitive in the life and annuity industry, insurers should exploit technology to create more innovative products and introduce them faster, according to insurance industry analysts speaking at Computer Sciences Corp.’s Life and Annuity Users’ Forum.

    August 8
  • Washington- The National Association of Professional Insurance Agents (PIA) is reiterating its opposition to the National Insurance Act of 2007.

    August 7
  • Washington— The National Association of Professional Insurance Agents (PIA) is reiterating its opposition to the National Insurance Act of 2007.

    August 7
  • In the wake of insurers increasing their efforts to utilize the Internet to broaden their accessibility, streamline efficiency and reduce time and costs, two insurers have recently ramped up their online customer service capabilities.

    August 6
  • Washington, D.C. - The House Financial Services Committee today passed H.R. 2761, the Terrorism Risk Insurance Revision and Extension Act of 2007 (TRIREA) by a vote of 49 to 20.

    August 3
  • Richmond, Va. - Markel International Ltd., the company's London-based operation, will enter the Asian market with marine and professional liability products, the company reports. Markel Vice Chairman Steven Markel told INN that the push in Asia is in conjunction with its operations as a syndicate of Lloyd's of London.

    August 2
  • Frisco, Texas – The consolidation in the vendor arena continues as Skywire Software, making its third major acquisition of the year, snapped up Canadian automation and compliance solutions provider Whitehill Technologies, Inc.

    August 2
  • The momentum to move to a nationwide e-health network that includes electronic medical records and secure transmission of information between stakeholders is being fueled by entities of all sizes and influence-from grass roots-oriented non-profits to major health insurers to the federal government. This momentum is putting mounting pressure on the faction that may stand the most to gain yet seems most reluctant to participate-the health care provider.No one questions the fact that the e-health market is still in a state of relative infancy, in spite of the support being offered by the government, insurance, standards and vendor communities.

    August 1
  • If you think your contact center (what used to be your call center before e-mail and Web chat were added to the customer service mix) doesn't do much for sales, you might have a look at a new study from Genesys Telecommunications Laboratories Inc. The Daly City, Calif., maker of contact center software recently surveyed 500 consumers in the United States, and found that almost half placed more importance on customer service than product quality, price or the vendor's reputation when it came to loyalty. A full 40% said they'd stopped doing business with a company solely because of a bad contact center experience.Donna Fluss, president of DMG Consulting, a West Orange, N.J., company that specializes in helping clients build contact centers, says the centers should be playing a more significant role than just keeping customers happy and loyal-especially for insurance carriers.

    August 1
  • From collaboration to customer service, companies are turning to networks of applications and individuals to accomplish tasks, increase competitiveness and improve productivity. As a result, pressure is on enterprise networks to constantly keep increasing capacity, intelligence, speed and performance-both inside and outside the firewall.The typical insurance carrier is increasingly becoming a networked organization, albeit at a slower rate than other industries.

    August 1
  • It seems as though the insurance industry just can't cut a break in the media. As I write this, the news of a MetLife agent convicted in a New York murder-for-life-insurance plot received coverage across all major business wires. Those of you who remember insurance executive Michael Segal's 2004 conviction on racketeering, fraud and embezzlement, or the trials and tribulations of Maurice R. "Hank" Greenberg, will agree that regardless of guilt or innocence, propaganda or truth, information is power. This is particularly true as health insurers put their talking points together to respond to the recent release of Michael Moore's movie, "Sicko." This type of news brings the entire industry down... and puts the industry under increased scrutiny.Information published by either the public or the trade press is held to stringent ethical standards, and although this may not always be the case, we'd like to think that professionals from both mediums report truthful information without bias. This is INN's editorial mission. Reporting negative information tends to stir the pot, however, from generating a quiet dialogue to generating results that force accountability. The facts are the facts.

    August 1
  • SC BLUES WINS CALL CENTER TECH AWARDBlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina, Columbia, S.C., took top honors in the "Best Use of Technology" category during the 3rd Annual Call Center Excellence Awards held recently in Las Vegas.

    August 1
  • FEE REDUCTION FOR INSURANCE SERVICESThe Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation's (DTCC) Insurance Services New York business reports its first fee reduction in history, reflecting growing usage of its services. Insurance Services has automated linkages and data exchange between carriers and their broker/dealer, bank and other distributor partners who market insurance products.

    August 1
  • What do insurance, consumer goods, retail and manufacturing companies have in common? Each relies on a complex value chain of partners engaged in collaborative business processes in order to develop relationships and deliver goods or services to customers. This is true for B2B insurance companies such as Health Net Inc., Woodland Hills, Calif., and Delta Dental Plans Assoc., Oak Brook, Ill., consumer-focused organizations such as Galveston, Texas-based American National Insurance Co. (ANICO), which offers a broad line of insurance products and services, including life insurance, annuities, health, property/casualty and credit insurance and Service Masters' American Home Shield (AHS), or American Insurance Group Inc. (AIG), which serves commercial, institutional and individual customers.Whether providing individual policies direct to consumers or a range of portfolio products to commercial or business customers on behalf of employee members, insurance companies operate within complex, process-driven environments.

    August 1
  • The relationship between IT and the business within insurance companies is a subject insurance professionals will talk about until the cows come home. How do the two work together? Who are the forward thinkers? How does IT know what the business needs and vice versa? These questions plague both sides. CUNA Mutual Group, Madison, Wis., may have figured it out. In fact, this epiphany helped win the company Insurance Networking News' 2007 INNovator of the Year award for its ability to successfully combine the efforts of IT and the business to create a specialized claims processing solution, Claims Express."We're (business and IT) part of the same team," says Tom Gosnell, CIO at CUNA Mutual. "I think it's that close working relationship that helps best position us to be able to share ideas with the business and vice versa and to be able to come up with the right solution across the board."

    August 1
  • With the 2007 business environment for North American insurance carriers looking relatively good for the second year in a row, according to Forrester Research Inc., insurance carriers have become slightly more generous in their IT spending. The Cambridge, Mass.-based research firm anticipates that IT spending in 2007 in the insurance industry will increase by 7%, compared with 5% growth in 2006.Efficiency and innovation will be the highest priorities, and the initiatives to support these priorities are utility-oriented projects such as infrastructure consolidation and disaster recovery. However, competitive pressures and technology-enabled opportunities will drive the need for innovation in Internet and mobile applications as well as the replacement of legacy applications. Underpinning these changes will be a continued drive toward service-oriented architecture (SOA) for internal integration of systems, usage of services firms for transformation, and greater focus on process standardization.

    August 1