Subject Root Tag

  • The insurance industry could learn as early as this week the broad outlines and ballpark costs of the so-called third wave of asbestos litigation.That's the timeline Sen. Orin Hatch, R-Utah, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has established for drafting proposed asbestos litigation legislation as he has woven his way between industry, insurer and labor interests in an effort to forge consensus legislation that will pass the Congress.

    May 1
  • Facing a mandate to reduce their loss exposures for a variety of reasons-from the threat of terrorism to the need to secure better insurance coverage terms-risk managers are upping the ante on loss control spending.A survey of nearly 400 risk managers conducted by Warren, N.J.-based Chubb Group of Insurance Cos. revealed that nearly 50% of respondents increased their loss control spending over the past year; 34% held their budgets constant; and 5% decreased their loss control spending.

    May 1
  • Before the passage of the landmark Gramm-Leach-Bliley legislation in 1999, several insurers received clearance from the federal government to operate online thrift institutions. Executives with Principal Bank of Des Moines, which opened for business in February 1998, say the brand-name backing of its parent and a growing acceptance of online banking will help it grow to $5 billion of assets by 2005.Principal Bank, owned by Des Moines, Iowa-based Principal Financial Group, had $1.5 billion of assets at the end 2002-compared with $100 million in January 2000. "We had expected, when the initial strategic plan was put together, to be about $100 million at year four," says Barrie Christman, Principal Bank's president and CEO.

    May 1
  • Business leaders at American National Insurance Co. checked under the sofa before sitting down to assemble the customer relationship management (CRM) jigsaw puzzle. Why? Because they wanted to make sure they had every piece.First, the business units of the Galveston, Texas-based ANICO defined their CRM vision as precisely as possible. Next, the company selected Pegasystems, a software provider they say has delivered the proper CRM technology for their specific needs. Third, the insurer formed a team of committed customer service employees who meet regularly to share knowledge and guide the CRM effort.

    May 1
  • Speed is an important call center objective for American National Insurance Co. because "shaving a minute here or 30 seconds there makes a big difference in costs when you're running a call center," explains Gary Kirkham, vice president and director of planning and support for the Galveston, Texas-based insurer.Yet, flexibility is at the core of the steps that guide customer service representatives (CSRs) through conversations with callers. A key to managing call center conversations resides in workflow-helping the CSR pace the conservation and guide it in the desired direction.

    May 1
  • Everyone knows the numbers by heart: Insurance fraud costs property/casualty carriers an estimated $27 billion each year, or roughly 10% of premiums collected.The tricky part is detecting fraud so that some of those losses can be redirected to the bottom line. In the world of auto repair, fraud rears its head higher during dicey economic times like now when folks are hurting for money.

    May 1
  • Fraud can be subtle and complex. It can be hidden among voluminous amounts of data. New schemes are always emerging. Insurers understand the impact of fraud and consider it a serious problem.Fraud management technology that uses predictive modeling to identify suspicious claims can accurately cull out high-risk claims and label them at the earliest possible moment. It not only makes it practical for insurers to process and close the vast majority of claims faster, it focuses the adjusters review on claims that require the most attention. Lastly, it provides higher quality referrals to investigative units.

    May 1
  • Supporting its more than 12,000 exclusive agents is at the heart of Farmers Insurance Group's CRM initiatives. The centerpiece of this strategy is a branded program called Agency Dashboard, which enables agents to obtain ongoing insights on policyholders' needs.When Farmers agents log onto the secure intranet site, located at www.eagantfarmersinsurance.com, they must key in a user name and password and then are connected to a personalized Web portal that provides real-time data and policy activity of their entire book of business.

    May 1
  • Many insurance e-business experts agree that establishing a single source of customer data is a key to making customer relationship management (CRM) succeed. A single source of data produces a unified customer view across the enterprise, in turn enabling insurers to generate a clear and concise profile of customers.Once established, insurers can confidently proceed to configure customer needs profiles, such as realizing specific and changing needs within a mutual fund portfolio. Using analytics, insurers can separate their customers into demographic "buckets" from which they can determine specific needs.

    May 1
  • Weak carrier marketing is one reason agents have not flocked to real-time agency-carrier transactions, according to industry sources. "Only a handful of carriers have actually told their agencies these services are up and running," says one source who wishes to remain anonymous. "I get phone calls every day from agencies saying, 'A field rep was just at my office and he didn't know anything about this.'"Carriers haven't publicized their capabilities widely, in part, because they view them as a competitive advantage, says Rick Gilman, vice president for ACORD, Pearl River, N.Y. Although ACORD is making efforts to track carrier initiatives, a comprehensive list of all carriers and the types of real-time transactions they provide does not exist.

    May 1
  • The quiet catastrophe of insurance fraud is gaining more attention as insurance executives continue to look to operational efficiencies-rather than investment income-to protect their bottom lines.With the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud (CAIF) estimating an annual fraud cost of $80 billion dollars, the industry has realized that the harmless fudging of a million here and a million there is adding up to real money.

    May 1
  • Outsouring isn't "news" to the insurance industry. Insurers have been using outsourcers for years for IT projects, such as application maintenance or development to help with legacy problems, small-scale business processes (such as using third-party administrators for claims processing or accounting) and out-tasking small parts but not an entire business process.However, the bulk of insurance outsourcing has tended to be within the IT outsourcing domain. Driven by aging legacy systems and limited resources (time, budget and staffing), insurers have turned to external services providers to help with a wide variety of IT initiatives, including infrastructure, networking, and application development and maintenance.

    May 1
  • As a direct writer of homeowners and automobile insurance, Electric Insurance Co. doesn't rely on a network of independent agents to regularly interact with policyholders.Instead, Electric's call center agents interact with customers for everything from delinquent premium payments to claims-related inquiries. While this arrangement often suffices, CSRs typically lack the customer relationship skills that local agents have.

    April 1
  • At Cincinnati Equitable, Web services have opened up new avenues of connectivity. Agents can now access rating applications housed within the Cincinnati-based carrier's Windows-based servers to look up territory and verify policy status.This is not remarkable news, since agent portal Web sites have been around for years. What is remarkable is the fact that this new application took two hours to set up and deploy-a process that usually took several weeks, according to Terry Brown, vice president of information systems for Cincinnati Equitable Insurance Co.

    April 1
  • In an effort to reduce internal IT costs, more insurers are considering buying packaged software-as opposed to building customized applications.However, many executives in the industry-those evaluating packaged software solutions-may not be familiar with vendors and products that are available. Therefore, they may have difficulty assessing them.

    April 1
  • The typical profile of a perpetrator of fraud has been that of trained con artist who plans his or her scheme in a calculated fashion. But a new study depicts insurance fraud not only as a sophisticated ring carried out by professionals but as an act often executed by mainstream insurance customers.The study, by Bermuda-based consulting and technology solutions provider Accenture, found that nearly one in four U.S. adults say that overstating the value of claims to insurance companies is acceptable, and more than one in 10 say they approve of submitting insurance claims for items that were never lost or damaged or for treatments that were not provided.

    April 1
  • As concerns over asbestos liability continue to mount, industry observers say carriers need to find solutions to manage the risk-other than just throwing money at it.Insurance Services Office Inc. (ISO) estimates that newly incurred asbestos loss and loss-adjustment expenses rose from $1.4 billion in 2000 to $3.7 billion in 2001. Based on partial data, Jersey City, N.J.-based ISO estimates newly incurred asbestos losses more than doubled in 2002, rising to about $8 billion.

    April 1
  • With technology playing an increasingly important role in the modernization and standardization of the 50-state system of insurance regulation, officials from the National Association of Insurance Commissioners have decided the time is ripe for development of standards that can make the process more seamless.The National Technical Architecture working group started work early this year on standards that will be mandatory for information projects developed directly for the Kansas City, Mo.-based NAIC, and serve as a guide for state and industry efforts that target national regulatory interoperability.

    April 1
  • When GE Capital announced to the world that it had saved $400 million in 1999 by applying six sigma principles throughout its organization, Marla Friedman listened.Then, as senior vice president of operations at Allstate Financial, she shared this impressive news with her boss Tom Wilson, the firm's president at the time.

    April 1
  • When it mapped out a "scorecard" listing of requirements for a new annuity administration system in early 2000, Security Benefit Group Inc. was living in the green eye-shade era of COBOL, two mainframes and "bolt-on" systems.To make matters worse, the carrier's IT department was trapped beneath a mountain of application changes.

    April 1