|
| |

What's New in
Cybertalk?
by Jean Gora
December, 1998
Note: CyberTalk is a
column that appears monthly in LOMA's Resource, the magazine for insurance and financial
services management. To see more contents of the magazine and to see how to subscribe,
click on
RESOURCE.
Portals and Products: Online Annuity Offerings and
the Emergence of Portals Further Change Insurance E-Commerce
For a long time, many people in the insurance industry have talked about the
impossibility of selling complex products directly. They hold the view that only an agent
can guide a prospect through the intricacies of a product as complex a variable annuity or
variable life insurance. They also believe that the only way to close a sale is by
discussing needs rather than product specifics.
This writer, who has spent a lot of time at Internet investment sites, has long
wondered at this attitude. Many of these investment sites offer products as complex as
variable insurance products. Many of them discuss arcane product specifics. Internet
investment sites employ complex vocabularies and require more than basic literacy. Their
audience is well-educated and willing to learn about new products by reading about them.
Employees covered by 401(k) plans have embraced Internet account access with
enthusiasm. A 401(k) plan is at least as complex as an individual variable annuity. Yet
much of the individual insurance industry acts as though people interested in annuities
online do not exist. Even some of the best insurance Internet sites discuss insurance as
little as possible but provide volumes of needs-related information.
Finally, one insurer has decided to embrace this market segment. Lincoln Financial
Direct, the new direct unit of Lincoln Life, offers a variable annuitycalled
eAnnuityon the Internet (http://www.eannuity.com). The prospect can purchase the
product almost entirely on the Internet and transmit a bank draft authorization to execute
payment. The initial purchase contract requires that a signed copy be sent via fax or
regular mail. The customer can transfer money among the product's mutual funds on the
Internet. All customer service functions take place on the Internet.
eAnnuity
Here is how Lincoln Financial Direct addresses its target
audience:
"Investing in mutual funds? You should consider eAnnuity."
"If you've spent a lot of time on the Internet, you probably already know the
advantages of making purchases over the Net. The most important of these is probably lower
costs. We sell our products directly to sophisticated Internet-savvy investors who make
their own decisions. In this way, we reduce a major expensesales commissions. We
also eliminate another major expensehaving customer service people manning a large
bank of phones. We pass these lower costs on to you, bringing you what we believe to be
one of the financial industry's best values."
"Another major advantage of buying the eAnnuity over the Internet is ease of
access to comprehensive information about your account."
"We treat you like an intelligent adult. We have a good, relatively simple
product. We don't need to dazzle you with meaningless slogans. Instead, we supply you with
honest, direct information that helps you to make an intelligent investment
decision."
Lincoln Financial Direct presents extensive comparative pricing information in
conjunction with its description of eAnnuity. Here are several examples of this
information:
"Other companies spend from 4.5 percent to 8 percent to sell their annuities; our
cost is projected to be between 1 and 2 percent."
"On an overall basis, the eAnnuity is substantially cheaper than other annuities.
Based on a $25,000 annuity, the average annual industry expense ratio as of December 31,
1997 was 1.97 percent (SourceNAVA Outlook Nov./Dec.1997). The eAnnuity average
expense ratio is 1.22 percent."
"The most important fee in the eAnnuity is the general asset charge. This is
roughly comparable to what other companies call a mortality and expense charge. This
charge is computed daily. On an annual basis our charge is 0.55 percent. This is
significantly less than the typical annuity asset charge of 1.15 percent. (Industry
average according to NAVA, the annuity industry trade association.)"
The site describes its Internet Service Center, saying, "The Internet Service
Center is available to provide you with comprehensive information about your eAnnuity,
available at any time. For security, you may be given a password or personal
identification number to access your account information. Some documents, such as the
initial purchase contract, require a signed copy to be sent via fax or regular mail."
The site continues, "The service center is also your source of information for
modifying your account. Transferring money from one sub-account to another, changing
beneficiaries, and making withdrawals are examples of transactions that can be
accomplished at the My Account section of the service center."
The Electronic Customer Service Agreement contains interesting language regarding the
customer's responsibilities for passwords and security, however. The site says, "Your
use of the Lincoln Financial Direct Internet Service Center involves the transmission of
information that may be considered personal financial information, including but not
limited to the identity and number of your Lincoln Financial Direct eAnnuity accumulation
units and the net dollar price for these accumulation units. Lincoln will take reasonable
security precautions with regard to the utilization of security precautions with regard to
the utilization of Internet services to transport data or communications, but Lincoln
disclaims any liability for interception of any such data or communications. You will
select a password for your use in making transaction requests and for accessing your
folder maintained at the Lincoln Financial Direct Internet Service Center. Lincoln shall
not be under a duty to inquire as to the authority or propriety of any instructions given
to Lincoln with regard to the use of your password, and shall be entitled to act upon any
such instructions; and Lincoln will not be liable for any loss, cost, expense or other
liability arising out of any such instructions."
Lincoln Financial Direct's attempt to sell a variable annuity directly without offering
telephone access to the company for customer service represents an aggressive Internet
experiment. Even some of the best-known Internet investment sales sites, such as that of
Charles Schwab, offer telephone access to the company as a back-up to e-mail queries.
Attracting Business Through Portals
Many fine Internet sites attract little business because the site operator has not
established links to other sites that generate traffic. Some of these other
traffic-generating sites are now called "portals," and they are currently
receiving tremendous investment. Portals usually include the following features:
-
Search engines
-
Subject-area links to other sites of significant interest (sports, weather, business,
finance, etc.)
-
Personalization (The user can organize material presented on the site according to his
or her own interests.)
-
News (News changes frequently. These changes give consumers incentives to return to them
often.)
-
Stock market price quotations (Stock market prices change all the time, creating an
incentive for users to return to them.)
-
Use as default welcome sites when users access the Internet (Portal operators have
alliances with Internet access providers or function as Internet access providers
themselves. America Online is a good example of such a portal.)
Portals are becoming an increasingly important commercial force. If Lincoln Financial
does not establish its own links with portals, then it would do well to establish them
with investment sites, which attract the kind of people who are sophisticated and
motivated enough to read and understand eAnnuity.
Positioning on Search Engines
At present, most insurers do not have direct links to portals. Furthermore, they do not
appear prominently when users conduct searches using the major search engines: AltaVista,
Yahoo!, Excite, WebCrawler, and InfoSeek.
Mainspring Communications (www.mainspring.com), an electronic commerce
consulting firm, examined the links generated by searches employing the key terms
"insurance," "auto insurance," "homeowners insurance,"
"life insurance," and "health insurance." It found that the searches
generated 750 links, of which 44 percent went to Internet intermediaries (insurance
electronic malls such as InsWeb and InsureMarket), 37 percent went to agents, and 19
percent went to insurance carriers.
These results suggest that insurers that rely primarily on search engines to drive
traffic directly to their sites may be disappointed with the results. This generalization
is particularly true for insurers with limited brand-name recognition. A consumer who has
never heard of the XYZ insurance company has little reason to select a link to it rather
than one to the ABC insurance agency or one of the insurance malls.
The Status of Digital Signature Laws
The countries of the world continue to enact digital signature legislation. The Chicago
law firm of McBride, Baker, & Coles has posted much of the existing legislation on the
firm's Web site (www.mbc.com). In the case of U.S. laws, the site presents three
tables listing enacted legislation authorizing the use of electronic signatures,
definitions of the term "electronic signature" in enacted legislation, and
definitions of the term "digital signature" in enacted legislation.
All U.S. states have enacted some form of electronic signature legislation. Entries for
each state appear at the McBride, Baker, & Coles site, which presents a hyperlink to
the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, which in turn offers
access to the draft Uniform Electronic Transactions Act. That act is ultimately likely to
be the basis of uniform state legislation in the U.S. In addition to electronic
signatures, that act covers electronic records, electronic contracts and communications,
and governmental electronic records.
This site also presents legislation enacted or introduced in Argentina, Australia,
Canada, Denmark, Colombia, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, the
Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Various initiatives by the
U.N. Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), the European Union, the
International Chamber of Commerce, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) are also available.
See previous issues of CyberTalk in the CyberTalk
Archives.
For more information, E-mail research@loma.org
To register / order, call 1-800 ASK-LOMA
|