Workforce management

Workforce management

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  • Despite the growth of online self-service, call centers remain the most common way for customers to interact with companies. New technologies promise ROI by focusing on the performance of the people who deliver service to the customer-call center agents.Driving customers to the Internet for self-service is an effective way for insurers to reduce the high costs of providing information and processing transactions off-line. The fact is, most customers still prefer to call and talk to a human being-the most expensive customer-service channel.

    October 1
  • There's no question about it: A contact center is an expensive operation. Not only has the technology become more complex and costly over the past few years, but training and licensing agents-who leave at a clip of 25% to 40% annually-impact a carrier's bottom line.It's no wonder many insurers decide to farm out some or all of their customer care functions-to the tune of $1 billion per year, according to research from IDC, Framingham, Mass.

    October 1
  • Despite the economic slow down and the many challenges faced by the insurance industry, carriers increased their total IT budgets in 2002 by an average of 7%. On average, 35% of this spending is devoted to new projects and strategic initiatives, according to a study by Celent Communications, Boston.Many insurance companies cannot afford to not update their existing systems. In a mature and highly competitive marketplace like the U.S. insurance industry, operational efficiency and flexibility is key to profitability. To achieve these goals, insurance companies must take advantage of new technological capabilities in every step of the insurance business process or risk falling behind their competitors.

    October 1
  • Technology budgets traditionally have been an easy target for firms looking to lob off expenses and improve their bottom lines. And, while carriers-especially property/casualty insurers-are experiencing tough financial times, they are not slashing their IT budgets, according to the findings of an exclusive Insurance Networking survey of 82 carriers, agents, brokers and services firms.Nevertheless, carriers and agencies are taking distinctly different paths this year, with carriers ratcheting up spending on internal development, while agencies are cutting back on custom software and increasing packaged installations.

    September 1
  • Individuals who have experienced an auto accident or incurred damage to their vehicle often discover that the road to swift claims settlement is a bumpy, winding and volatile one.

    August 1
  • Claims processing capabilities within the automobile insurance segment is not unlike a car itself-hitting on all cylinders is essential to ensure high performance.In 1999, Mayfield Village, Ohio-based Progressive Insurance Co. debuted TotalPro, a Web-based claims processing application that can be activated by both internal affiliates and Progressive policyholders.

    August 1
  • Today's insurance marketplace is anything but "business as usual." Competition from new market entrants, deregulation, and fast-changing consumer expectations are challenging insurers' historically risk-averse corporate cultures.Traditional strategies and processes will not be successful in this market. To succeed, insurers must develop new business strategies and apply new technologies that will support business transformation.

    August 1
  • As insurers' expectations for e-commerce revenue tumbled over the past couple years, e-business spending has focused on self-service initiatives such as enterprise portals and agent extranets. But most insurers lack the infrastructure and customer understanding to maximize the return on these and other technology investments, such as customer relationship management.Therefore, insurers need to create financial services hubs: technology platforms for delivering services that span multiple systems.

    August 1
  • With the insurance industry, one moment of impact-whether it's two vans, two workers or two ships-can initiate a lengthy reporting trail weighed down by paper handling and delays. The first notice of loss, which carriers receive from agents by phone, fax, or Internet, starts the trail.

    August 1
  • Despite the slow economy and overall reductions in IT spending since 2000, U.S. insurance companies are continuing to increase their technology spending. That's according to a June report from Celent Communications, a Boston-based research and consulting firm.Budgets for 2002 are an average of 7% higher this year than last year-totaling $18 billion industrywide, according to the report, titled "IT Spending in U.S. Insurance."

    July 1
  • The information technology initiative that Toronto-based Manulife Financial Corp. and IBM Corp. announced in April is receiving its fair share of scrutiny within the insurance community due to several wide-ranging implications.

    July 1
  • Insurers are discovering that strategic outsourcing ventures performed overseas can provide a great deal of mileage when it comes to capturing significant long-term efficiencies.Those that have launched offshore endeavors have found that establishing a presence outside the U.S. with information technology and business process outsourcing possesses a greater degree of leverage for a couple of reasons. From a labor standpoint, the cost of doing business outside the U.S. is far less expensive, and the savings can be passed along to the client.

    July 1
  • Most IT purchasing decisions made by insurance companies put careers on the line. Don't start a project until the costs and payback can be reasonably defined.The insurance industry has been exposed to much hype about new technologies. I believe executives should avoid this urge to jump on the next technology bandwagon.

    July 1
  • Even though claims service provided by property/casualty insurance carriers represents a major factor in their ability to retain customers and attract new ones, insurers are not providing the level of service that is considered acceptable to corporate customers and consumers, two new studies conclude.Moreover, even well-capitalized carriers that possess the financial stability to support quality claims service appear to be dropping the ball.

    June 1
  • Over the past few years, many financial services providers have struggled to automate their operations across the enterprise. For most, the task of extracting data that resides in antiquated legacy systems and seamlessly linking these systems across various business units has proved to be nothing short of rocket science.

    June 1
  • After spending the past several years sitting on the sidelines, mid-size insurance companies are poised to break out of their IT spending inertia.In a report titled "Technology Market Snapshot: Mid-Size Insurance Companies," Boston-based Celent Communications Inc. estimates that mid-size insurers-those with direct written premiums between $100 million and $1 billion-will spend $1.1 billion on new technology projects over the next three to five years, primarily on Web-enabled policy administration systems and agent extranets.

    May 1
  • Bob Lucas isn't your typical insurance company CIO. For starters, he has been with one company-The Hartford-for 30 years. What's more, he's a business administration major who was hired right out of college by the Hartford, Conn.-based financial services firm.

    May 1
  • Northwestern Mutual's IT philosophy is right out of Aesop's Fables. By applying the strategy of the tortoise and its slow and steady approach, this insurance giant with $92 billion in assets and annual revenues of $15.4 billion gets the most bang for its information technology buck.The Milwaukee-based company has to be careful how it uses technology because it can't jeopardize its shining reputation. This year, it was voted the "most admired" life insurance company for the 19th year in a row in a Fortune magazine survey. And, it ranks as the nation's best in customer satisfaction among all financial services studied, according to a Wall Street Journal 2001 report.

    April 1
  • Environmentalists should be happy about the new document scanning and imaging system at Prudential Group Insurance-because it's saving a lot of trees. The insurer's disability insurance customers should be pleased too-because it's enabling the company to process their claims more quickly.What had been a manual, paper-intensive process of receiving disability claim documents via fax machine or mail has been replaced by a nearly paperless operation.

    March 1
  • Insurance is an important component of modern economic life. The logical outcome of the millions of policies in force today is a proportional number of claims to pay for covered losses.From an operational cost and policyholder perspective, the claims handling process is the heart of property/casualty insurance. It's true that performing risk analysis, selling policies and retaining customers are important issues for carriers.

    March 1