|

What's New in
Cybertalk?
by
Jean Gora
July
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.
Bancassurance,
Automated Underwriting, and the Web
Today, the Web browser is a
tremendously important front end to insurance applications. So
much so, in fact, that browsers can now support distribution
through a multiplicity of channels. They are no longer limited to
direct distribution to end customers through the public Internet.
In the past, this column documented numerous examples of the use
of the Internet, intranets, and extranets by insurance companies
supporting agent distribution.
Banks distributing insurance can
also employ a browser plus the Internet or an intranet to support
the distribution process. They can do so in several waysby
offering direct insurance purchases through their public Internet
sites or home banking services, or by supporting branch or call
center sales representatives engaged in insurance distribution.
Browser access to insurance sales applications is highly
intuitive. When those applications include an automated
underwriting system, the entire insurance sales process can speed
up dramatically.
FMS, an original software
manufacturer based in Ireland, has developed a suite of insurance
sales automation productscalled Allfinanzthat include
browser access and are backed by an automated underwriting
system. The Reinsurance Group of America (RGA), the life
reinsurance subsidiary of U.S. insurer General American, has
entered a joint venture with FMS to market FMSs Allfinanz
ELife and EUnderwriter to RGAs life insurance
company clients in the U.S. and elsewhere. RGA provides the
underwriting rules for the products.
FMS and RGA are particularly
interested in offering the products to insurance companies
attempting to distribute through banks. Banks can opt to use the
products to offer distribution through one or more of the
channels named above, including their public Web sites, home
banking services, call centers, or branch offices. Products in
the Allfinanz series include ELife, ERetire,
EHealth, and EBranch. Insurers can use the same
products in similar ways, including on their Web sites, in call
centers, and to support agents. EAgent is specially
targeted at agent distribution. Future products will cover loans.
The chief focus of FMS and RGA at present is on
bancassuranceinsurance distribution through banks.
At a recent FMS conference in
Shannon, Ireland, Alan Hobbs, RGA vice president of institutional
markets, showed why insurers should be interested in bank
distribution and an automated underwriting system with a browser
front end, such as the Allfinanz product suite by FMS. His
remarks shed new light on the costs associated with traditional
insurance distribution.
Distribution is Expensive
Distribution of life insurance to
individuals is under great pressure right now because of the
costs associated with the traditional, hugely inefficient
distribution process. A McKinsey study showed that for every 100
leads followed by a superior agent, the agent generates 32
appointments and only 11 sales. The performance of an average
agent is worse. For every 100 leads followed, the average agent
generates only seven appointments and one sale. The costs
associated with this inefficient sales process has made life
insurance less attractive than competing asset accumulation
products. As a result, the number of individual life insurance
policies sold in the U.S. dropped from about 17 million in 1985
to about 12 million in 1996.
The U.S. insurance industry has
made concerted efforts to bolster the efficiency of its sales
process. Approximately 70 percent of the costs of a traditional
insurance company are distribution-related. Close to half of that
share represents agent compensation, and over one-third of it
represents field expenses. Even with strenuous efforts to cut
distribution costs, the industry has been able to reduce the
average cost per dollar of new business from $1.36 in 1990 to
only $1.27 in 1995. Thus, even if streamlined, the traditional
agency distribution process remains highly costly.
In traditional insurance
distribution, the money spent on distribution typically goes to
four major activities: about 38 percent to prospecting, another
38 percent to needs assessment and advice, another 20 percent to
sales fulfillment, and about 4 percent to post sales service. Use
of the bank channel can sharply reduce prospecting costs because
the banks customer base generates prospects. Use of
technology (in this case, automated underwriting plus a browser
front-end) in the bank channel can impact the other costs.
According to Hobbs, technology can have this impact by improving
both the conversion rate and the "pass underwriting and paid
for" rate. The conversion rate is the rate at which
individuals contacted for purchase actually file an application
for insurance. The "pass underwriting and paid for"
rate is the rate at which individuals who apply for insurance are
actually granted it and pay for it.
High conversion and "pass
underwriting and paid for" rates affect distribution costs
in dramatic ways. The results of a study by the Mitchell Madison
Group show how. If every individual contacted for purchase
actually purchases and pays for insurance, the distribution cost
should be equal to the cost of the initial contact, about $29.80
for the sale. If, however, only a fraction of the individuals
contacted actually apply for insurance (the conversion rate) and
if only half of those who apply actually pass underwriting and
pay for policies, the cost per policy sold rises dramatically. At
a one percent conversion rate and a 50 percent "pass
underwriting and paid for" rate, the distribution cost per
policy sold rises to $5960.
How Technology Can Help
Technology can impact both the
conversion rate and the "pass underwriting and paid
for" rate by dramatically compressing the time it takes for
the prospect to get answers about policy provisions, prices, and
underwriting results. The automated underwriting system delivers
a rapid underwriting decision, and the browser front end to
insurance sales guarantees ease of usewhether by the
prospect on the Internet, by a call center employee or by the
bank branch sales representative.
In life insurance cases requiring
no medical underwriting, such as term insurance policies below
$100,000, the entire application and underwriting process takes
about 25 minutes instead of the several weeks the process
typically takes. When the sale occurs in a branch, the branch
sales representative can administer a saliva test. RGAs
saliva test checks for AIDS, cocaine, and smoking. The branch
representative mails the test to a lab that transmits test
results electronically, and the turnaround time for underwriting
is only two days.
RGA has found that individuals
who receive immediate insurance coverage at the time of
application are most likely to complete the sales process and
become buyers. Thus, a delay associated with saliva testing has a
potentially negative effect on sales. To counteract this effect,
the insurer can provide immediate accidental death coverage that
converts into life insurance coverage as soon as the results of a
favorable saliva test are known.
Automated Underwriting and
Bancassurance
FMS brings important credentials
to automated underwriting systems in the bancassurance arena. It
developed the first version of its automated underwriting engine
initially for Direct Line Life. Direct Line is one of the most
interesting European bancassurance ventures. Direct Line is an
insurance subsidiary of the Royal Bank of Scotland. It began
operation in 1985 as a direct auto insurer and now holds 12
percent of the U.K. auto insurance market.
Respondents to Direct Lines
solicitations call a sales center and supply information that is
fed into an expert underwriting system that generates quotes.
Underwriting is immediate. Premium payments are collected
electronically. Because it has no local offices or agents, it
pays no agent commissions and can, therefore, charge low rates
and advertise heavily. Its expense ratio is 11 points under the
industry average.
After the success of its direct
auto insurance operation, Direct Line sought to transfer this
approach to the life insurance arena, and FMS provided the
automated underwriting engine. In mid 1997, Direct Line and
Scottish Widows, a U.K. mutual insurer, formed a fifty-fifty
joint venture, Direct Line Life, to sell life insurance and
pension products directly.
Direct Line Life offers customers
both execution-only sales and advice options. Initial products
include mortgage life, term insurance, and an individual
retirement product. Scottish Widows also has a 30 percent stake
in Royal Scottish Assurance, a Royal Bank of Scotland subsidiary.
The automated underwriting engine now offered by FMS as part of
its Allfinanz product line represents the third generation of the
system initially developed for Direct Line.
FMS is in the process of opening
a U.S. office. Descriptions and demos of its products are
available at its Web site: http://www.fms.ie.
|