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What's New in
Cybertalk?
by Jean Gora
June 1999
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.
Executing Core Processes on the
Internet
More and more Internet sites allow the execution of
core insurance processes. This months CyberTalk reviews several of the most
interesting. OneChannelPointis an employee benefits Internet mall that not
only allows distribution; it also allows product design and pricing. The
otherCyber$ettleallows online negotiation and settlement of disputed claims.
Travelers Insurance, one of the insurance companies that uses Cyber$ettle, also allows
claim filing through its own Web site.
The sale of employee benefits products, particularly
health insurance, is typically complex. Each sales proposal may require the analysis of a
complex set of variables. Turn-around time for a proposal can be as long as three to five
weeks.
ChannelPoint automates important facets of the
process and makes them accessible via the Internet. It can accommodate the sales of all
types of insurance including health, life, disability, dental, vision, and
property/casualty insurance. Backers of the site include Andersen Consulting and Intel
plus an assortment of venture capital firms (Capital Z Partners, Mohr, Davidow Ventures,
Pacific Venture Group and Validus Partners). It already has a group of major health and
other insurance customers including CAREINGTON International, Guardian Life, HIP Health
Plans, Physicians Health Services, United HealthCare, Foundation Health Systems, USLife,
and Regence Blue Cross/Blue Shield. In addition to Andersen Consulting, ChannelPoint has
the following major business Partners: First Consulting Group, KPMG Peat Marwick, and
USWeb/CKS.
ChannelPoint
ChannelPoint has two primary sections, ChannelPoint Commerce, and ChannelPoint Insure.
In ChannelPoint Commerce, the company has positioned itself as an Internet exchange
provider that delivers products furnished by insurance carriers to multiple retailers or
directly to end customers. It can support retailers including insurance brokers, banks,
other financial institutions, insurers themselves, or even Web portals. It can accommodate
work site marketing. It also plans to function as an Internet insurance mall the way
InsWeb and InsureMarket do, but it has not yet added that functionality to its Internet
site. In addition, it will allow various retailers to offer its services through their own
sites or Internet store fronts developed by ChannelPoint but carrying the retailers
brand.
ChannelPoint Commerce does more than route information between retailers (or end
customers) and sellers; it also includes its own internal smart content generation engine.
That engine uses plans and policy descriptions, pricing models, and business rules to
develop proposals or other content tailored to the requirements of different audiences.
A section of the service is targeted at brokers. This section allows them to automate
rating, price quoting, response to RFPs, proposal preparation, and enrollment. It permits
comparison of dozens of carriers with respect to policy provisions and prices. It can also
make cross-carrier physician network searches using information supplied by the carriers.
Carrier participation in the service also ensures that pricing and underwriting rules are
up to date. The broker service also permits online enrollment of clients. The broker
service begins operation in the New York area in June.
ChannelPoint also offers a service designed to support worksite marketing. It allows
employers to offer their employees choices of products from multiple carriers. Employees
can compare products from multiple carriers and make online purchases through the
Internet. The service incorporates typical needs analysis tools. This approach reduces
employer administrative costs. It also allows employees to access their data even if their
positions change.
For direct sales to end customers (businesses or individuals), ChannelPoint will
operate an Internet market that incorporates many of the features mentioned above. This
site will enable online sales and online payments.
Carriers that supply products for distribution through ChannelPoints services can
receive data regarding broker inquiries, sales, and buying patterns.
ChannelPoints Back-End Products
In addition to providing electronic commerce capability, ChannelPoint offers a group of
back-end software products: Insure Rating, Insure Quote, Insure Data, and Insure Risk.
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Insure Rating enables electronic rate generation close to the point of sale. It provides
actuaries with the calculations they need to price proposals and generate final rates. It
enables business owners to maintain and activate various rating factors that affect
product pricing. Its calculations make use of census information, proprietary rating
methodologies, regulations, and industry underwriting rules. It permits the consolidation
of rating systems across multiple lines of business.
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Insure Quote automates the price quotation process. It can accept incoming RFPs, scan
and interpret relevant census data, and match the plans or benefits requested with the
benefits package supplied by a carrier. It then rates the plans based on group
demographics and faxes a proposal to the prospect.
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Insure Data automates the enrollment process, flagging missing or incomplete information
so that account representatives do not have to examine all enrollment forms. It also
employs Intelligent Character Recognition to read documents that are then stored in an
electronic case workbook. It provides brokers with ICR-capable fax forms that enable the
automatic correction of subsequent information.
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Insure Risk enables the automatic assignment of risk factors and rates on the basis of a
review of group demographics, medical histories, and other case information. All relevant
risk data is stored in a single database. The system is intended to decrease the
turnaround time associated with case processing.
The ChannelPoint Insure system is being designed so that it can accommodate links to
other databases in the future. For example, carriers will be able to link enrollment and
underwriting information to a database that might offer medical advice and physician
referrals to group members.
Cyber$ettle
Cyber$ettle is another service that makes use of the Internets ability to bring
multiple parties together in ways that improve the efficiency of the traditional insurance
process. Conflicts between claimants and insurance companies arise frequently. Claimants
often believe they are entitled to greater benefits than their insurers do. When the
insurers refuse to pay more, claimants often file lawsuits. Insurance litigation is
time-consuming and expensive for insurance companies. Insurers, therefore, may be willing
to settle claims for higher sums than they originally intended because they want to avoid
the cost of litigation. The settlement process has traditionally been paper-based or, more
recently, fax-based. Parties to the dispute file offers and counter-offers. The process is
time-consuming.
Cyber$ettle, developed by two lawyers, offers an Internet-based automated dispute
resolution service. Either the insurer or a claimant can initiate the dispute resolution
process. The insurer files three offers. The claimant files three demands. An automated
attempt is made to match an offer and a demand. If they are within $5,000 or 30 percent of
one another, a match is considered to have been made, and the parties split any remaining
difference. If the offer or demand differs by more than 30 percent or $5,000 in all three
rounds, settlement does not occur. If the settlement offered is the same or greater than
the demand, the claim is settled for the demand amount. Offers and demands that do not
result in settlement are not disclosed, so that if settlement does not take place, future
actions by either party are not affected.
One of the leading insurance users of Cyber$ettle is Travelers Property/Casualty
Insurance. Travelers has become one of the first insurers to allow online claim filing of
homeowners or personal auto insurance policies through its Web site. The claimant fills
out a form on the Travelers site and submits a claim that is automatically routed to a
local claim service center. A Travelers claim processor then contacts the claimant by
telephone to take additional information. If disputes arise during the claim process,
Travelers may make use of Cyber$ettle. According to Business Insurance (April 12,
1999), ten to fifteen percent of the claims it has referred to Cyber$ettle successfully
reached settlement through the service.
The two very different services of ChannelPoint and Cyber$ettle show how the Internet
is invading core insurance business processes and improving them.
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
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