Covergence and the Insurance Ecosystem

by Stephen Applebaum and Alan Demers

The violently disruptive and confusing shifts we are all experiencing are in large part a result of accelerating convergence.

According to Marc Benioff, founder, chairman and CEO of Salesforce, Inc., “The world is being re-shaped by the convergence of social, mobile, cloud, big data, community and other powerful forces”.

Another perspective on the same phenomenon comes from Chunka Mui, author, futurist and innovation expert: “We have the good fortune and awesome responsibility of sitting at the inflection point of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. For better or worse, ever better and cheaper technological building blocks, including pervasive connectivity and computing, AI, robotics and genomics, are blurring the lines of the physical, digital and biological worlds. They are already reshaping industries and societal patterns, and the transformation is accelerating.”

This convergence is taking place across all industries, products, services and technologies. Its influence extends to the blurring of the previously clear separation of our work and personal lives, giving rise to the current focus on “work-life balance.”

Convergence and The Insurance Industry

Insurance is one of the larger industries to have significant exposure to these shifts, given their dependency on accurately predicting and managing risk and on their broad and diverse customer base, and we are already seeing the effects of this convergence.

In the financial services industry, convergence is bringing together banks, credit institutions, wealth management and insurers to develop products that combine the elements of each industry sector.

Consolidation of market share is another form of convergence as the big get bigger. The $800 billion U.S. Property & Casualty insurance industry is highly consolidated, with 2% of carriers holding between 50%-75% market share across most lines of business. This consolidation has had the effect of causing consolidation among the many supply chain segments in the insurance ecosystem to themselves consolidate in order to meet the many new and different  needs and expectations of these much large national carriers.

In the estimated $500 billion U.S. Auto Insurance ecosytem, several highly fragmented segments including collision repair, autoglass, insurance replacement car rental, salvage management, towing, Third Party Claims Adminstration and Independent Appraisal and Adjusting have and are still seeing significant consolidation as investors with access to large pools of capital have recognized the potential for new value creation resulting from this consolidation. While thousands of these individual businesses controlling billions of dollars in revenues have already been consolidated, the process still has a long way to run in most of these segments.

Strategic Alliances and Partnerships, Mergers and Acquistions

Alliances and partnerships between participants in the insurance ecosystem are the result of, and precursors to, convergence. Historically, fewer alliance and partnerships existed because management believed that their company’s core competencies were competitive diffentiators and the “not invented here” prejudice was prevalent. The most progressive of companies may have collaborated with others, but nothing more formal than that.

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As industry consolidation proceeded, new participants came to market leveraging new technologies, and competiton in general heated up, partnerships and alliances became recognized as valuable and eventually necessary. Similarly, mergers and acquisitions became attractive strategies to further formalize these benefits. One good example of this evolution is CoreLogic’s partnership with, minority investment in, and ultimately acquisition of the property claims information software provider Symbility in 2018, which has enabled CoreLogic to compete effectively with Verisk and its Xactware property estimating solution suite. Verisk originally acquired Xactware in 2006.

Management began to recognize the value of these combinations in new product development, speed to market, rationalization of duplicated overhead and acceleration of revenue. In some cases, partnerships with especially attractive companies were defensive as suitors sought to keep these companies out of the hands of their competitors.

Platforms and Marketplaces

Other more indirect forms of alliances and partnerships are emerging in the insurance industry in the form of so-called platforms and marketplaces. The most well recognized of these “hybrids” are the platforms created by insurance core system providers such as Guidewire, Duck Creek,  Majesco and Sapiens. These companies are enabling third party information and service providers to integrate into their core systems and thereby become easily accessible to hundreds of common insurance clients, thus avoiding lengthy, resource intense one-to-one integrations. Some of these core system software providers have begun acquiring the more attractive and popular of these third party partners (e.g. Guidewire’s 2021 acquisition of HazrdHub and Duck Creek’s 2023 acquisition of Imburse).

Other examples of platforms which are mores specifically focused on Claims, especially Auto Physical Damage claims, include CCC Intelligent Solutions, Mitchell Enlyte and Solera/Audatex, all of whom have numerous strategic partnerships with multiple third party providers, many of  which are integrated into core claims solutions and linked to their common customers for ease of access and use. We expect to see many more of these strategic alliances, some of which may well result in acqusitions and further market consolidation by these claims information services and solutions providers.

OEMs and Insurance

Car makers, otherwise known as OEMs (Original Equipment Manufacturers), Auto  Insurers and software developers are converging.  Most OEMs have partneships with insurance companies around auto insurance distribution and repairs, even as some are simultaneously focused on developing their own bespoke auto insurance operations.

OEMs are developing Certitified Repair Networks in which collision repair shops who follow OEM repair guidelines are “certified” to perform repairs on those brands. This certification includes the use of OEM parts, as opposed to the less expensive Alternative Parts which insurers frequently prefer. And today’s vehicles are essentially computers on wheels, as OEMs pursue subscription software models in which consumers pay for specific premium auto features “over the air” on a monthly basis. OEMs believe the market size for subscriptions will be in the tens of billions by 2030.

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Telematics-enabled products are also converging as vehicle installed software and programs and motion detection data resident on smartphones are aggregated.  These hybrid solutions will enable greater functionality and reliability for solutions such as accident notification, emergency response and crash detection, which will be heavily monetized by auto insurers, OEMs and others.

Workplace Convergence

For most of us, our workplaces and our homes converged during the pandemic, and for many of us that continues to be the case, either partially or completely.  The implications of the shift to “Work From Home” are felt by the insurance industry in more ways than most industries.  Being so historically labor intense, insurance companies own more physical facilities than most other industries, but that is changing rapidly.  Most notably, Allstate insurance, one of largest personal   insurers in the U.S., recently sold its entire 2 million square foot headquarters campus in the Chicago area.

Technology Convergence

The smartphone is a prime example of technology convergence, in which several previously separate technologies (telephones, wrist watches, digital cameras, computers, web browsers and GPS navigators) were fused into a single easily portable device.

Data convergence has increased as AI (Artificial Intelligence) software programs became capable of processing huge volumes of data into actionable decisioning information.

According to a report published by Dell Technologies and authored by the Institute For The Future (IFTF) and a panel of 20 tech, business and academic experts from around the world, 85 per cent of the jobs that will exist in 2030 haven’t even been invented yet.

Likewise, the Insurtech movement and the large amounts of capital invested in it over the past 10 years, caused convergence between technology and insurance. While perhaps not the upending of the insurance industry that some had predicted, it has certainly caused accelerated adoption of digitization and automation in insurance processes and the leveraging of big data and analytics.

Future of Insurance

In such a changing  world, todays’ insurance services will become increasingly obsolete.  And with the technology that is enabling it, insurers are already shifting their products and value proposition from “repair and replace” to “predict and prevent”.  This shift is and will fundamentally changing almost every aspect of insurance, including skills requirements, product design, distribution and pricing models.

Embedded insurance represents both new insurance products and new distribution channels.  Similarly, eposidic insurance (e.g. travel interuption insurance) is a new insurance product enabled by technology and delivered digitally.

Managing Convergence

Perhaps the most powerful convergence of all is the convergence of the future and the present. The speed of technology-enabled advancements continues to accelerate and what was new only yesterday is replaced by even more impactful advancements today. This is as true in the insurance ecosystem as it is in every other industry. The basic question for insurers and others is – how do you manage your business in a world where planning based on historical experience and reasonable expectations are continuously being proven unreliable?

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To manage convergence, companies will need to be excellent at anticipating the future, innovating beyond their core, and transforming their capabilities as rapidly as technology can enable it. This will require leadership to become expert change managers, encourage innovation in more powerful and practical ways with more than just lip service, ensure that the entire workforce is future ready, develop new and more powerful intelligence gathering capabilities to better anticipate and respond to competitive threats and communicate core strategies and changing priorities in a frequent and highly articulate manner. It will be necessary to have every employee understand that it will be a new and very different ballgame.

These skills will define the winners in a rapidly converging world.

About the Authors

Stephen E. Applebaum, Managing Partner, Insurance Solutions Group, is a subject matter expert and thought leader providing consulting, advisory, research and strategic M&A services to participants across the entire North American property/casualty insurance ecosystem focused on insurance information technology, claims, innovation, disruption, supply chain, vendor and performance management. Mr. Applebaum is also a Senior Advisor to Waller Helms Advisors.  WHA is the premier investment banking boutique focused on the crossroads of the Insurance, Healthcare and Investment Services sectors.

Stephen is a frequent chairman, guest speaker and panelist at insurance industry conferences and contributor to major insurance industry publications and has a passion for coaching, mentoring, business process innovation and constructive transformation, applying disruptive technology, and managing organizational change in the North American property/casualty insurance industry and trading partner communities. He can be reached at [email protected].

Alan Demers is founder and president of InsurTech Consulting LLC, with 30 years of P&C insurance claims experience, providing consultative services focused on innovating claims. After initiating and leading claims innovation at Nationwide, Demers collaborates in the forefront of InsurTech, partnering with insurance leaders, startups, design thinking experts and service providers to modernize personal, commercial and specialty claims.

As Vice President of Claims Innovation at Nationwide, Alan conceptualized a vision and road map to build next-generation claims, automating and digitizing claims experiences, progressing from inception through prototype testing. He served as a founding member of the Corporate Innovation Council and played a key leadership role in establishing goals, practices and an innovative culture at Nationwide.

Alan is an accomplished executive leader and has worked for two separate Fortune 100 insurance companies in a number of corporate, national and regional leadership roles among personal, commercial, non-standard and specialty lines claims. Prior to leading claims innovation, he served as head of claims for Nationwide’s commercial agribusiness and non-standard claims. Other noteworthy roles include: field vice president, regional claims officer and national catastrophe director, quality assurance director.

Alan began his career with Aetna as a claim adjuster and advanced to a corporate claim consultant, prior to joining Nationwide in 1995.

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