75% Of Insurers To Increase Data And Analytics Spending
| Chris McMahon |
Analytics increasingly provide competitive differentiation for insurers and are at the heart of the industry’s transformation to a more customer-centric business model, according to “Data and Analytics in Insurance: The Dawn of a New Era,” from Strategy Meets Action.
“Analytics hold great promise for the insurance industry, including the application of traditional business intelligence approaches, as well as advanced techniques such as predictive models and Big Data,” said
The report, which covers the spectrum of tools from business intelligence tools to advanced analytics tools, finds that the average insurer invests 9 percent of the IT budget on data and analytics. This amounts to almost
Underwriting and product design/actuarial are the top two traditional areas of analytics. In terms of investment, underwriting leads the way, with 70 percent responding that they use data and analytics to better assess and manage risk. Product development is next; 52 percent use such tools to design and develop new products. Claims is the third highest area of investment, with 50 percent using analyzing data about risk to increase profitability.
However, analytical tools are being applied across the enterprise, and the new trend is the emergence of more customer-centric analytics projects, the report finds. A significant number of insurers now are investing in data and analytics tools for marketing, distribution and policy servicing.
In the front office, insurers also are using tools to analyze internal and external data. More than 40 percent of respondents are already using analytics to develop advanced customer segmentation and another 20 percent are currently piloting or implementing; 21 percent are using analytics to develop a single view of customers and another 26 percent are piloting or implementing the tools. A quarter are using analytics for campaign analysis and another 18 percent are piloting or implementing them to conduct more effective marketing campaigns. Analytics are also being applied directly to sales, to better understand customer relationships and agent performance.
Analytics are in use by 48 percent of insurers for channel/agent performance management, and another 20 percent are currently piloting or implementing the tools there. For customer relationship management, 30 percent are using the tools and 22 percent are currently piloting or implementing them.
While most insurers have analytics projects in use or in process for product development, they are not always using the same IT tools that are used elsewhere in the enterprise, the report finds. Many have built custom models using spreadsheets or the APL programming language.
In the back and middle office, analytic tools are already widely used. But now, 23 percent have new projects underway to support claim operations, with 7 percent piloting and 16 percent implementing data and analytics tools. These new projects are helping claims management evaluate the productivity of adjusters, identify fraud and mitigate losses.
In terms of spending, one-third of respondents are spending more than 10 of their IT budget on analytics projects and 15 percent of insurers are spending more than 15 percent of the IT budget on data and analytics. More than three-quarters said they will increase spending on data and analytics over the next three years. “It is difficult to envision how a company will remain competitive over the next decade if they do not aggressively invest in data and analytics,” the report said.
Further, the report finds that insurers are using many approaches to enhancing the proprietary data they have captured in the underwriting process. Some insurers are correlating, comparing and combining data for demographic, firmographic and psychographic insights and almost 60 percent of insurers said they enhance their data by using data matching techniques.
Data quality and completeness, of course, provide the foundation of these projects. The top drivers for data management spending are: ensuring data is cleansed, standardized and well organized (61 percent), building data warehouses and data marts (59 percent), leveraging an enterprise-wide data model (43 percent), acquiring data from external sources (30 percent) and ensuring the privacy of customer and agent data (30 percent).
In addition, the report considers:
• The most important methods of enhancing data—data matching (57 percent) and appending risk data (53 percent)
• The challenges of capitalizing on analytics—chiefly data quality and completeness (57 percent) and lack of an overall strategy (43 percent) and accessibility (37 percent)
• The most valuable customer insights—real-time identification of cross- and up-sell opportunities (49 percent), proactive loss control alerts (47 percent) and baselining (40 percent)
• The most valuable operational insights—loss trends (63 percent) and productivity measurements (49 percent)
The report concludes that insurers should conduct a comprehensive assessment of data, , identify where business intelligence and analytics tools are being used in the enterprise today to determine additional business applications for existing and new tools, and develop a plan for building and staffing a center of excellence for data and analytics.
| Copyright: | (c) 2012 Insurance Networking News. All rights Reserved. |
| Source: | Source Media, Inc. |
| Wordcount: | 859 |



FINRAs First Five Years: 6,291 Disciplinary Actions
Advisor News
- Proposed legislation takes aim at Social Security shortfall
- The overlooked retirement security risk that must be addressed
- What advisors should know about hedge funds in retirement planning
- Retirement control is top success measure for middle class, ACLI says
- Industry groups applaud House passage of Financial Exploitation Prevention Act
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Built-in guaranteed annuities: What advisors should know
- Malibu Life Holdings Completes Acquisition of TruSpire, Establishing Malibu USA and Accelerating Entry into the U.S. Retail Annuity Market
- Why job boards are failing insurance agencies
- MassMutual Ranks No. 100 on the 2026 Fortune 500® List
- What’s fueling record annuity growth?
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Findings from George Washington University Update Understanding of Managed Care (Eligibility Assistance Increases Insurance Enrollment Within Community Health Centers but Not At the State Level): Managed Care
- Findings from Razanne Oueini and Colleagues Provides New Insights into Proinsulin (Changes in persistence to basal insulin following the Medicare out-of-pocket cost cap): Peptide Proteins – Proinsulin
- Researchers from Columbia University Detail New Studies and Findings in the Area of Managed Care (The Impact of Health Shocks On Housing Instability: Evidence From Urban Medicaid Enrollees): Managed Care
- Studies Conducted at Stanford University on Economics Recently Reported (Why Doesn’t the United States Have National Health Insurance? the Political Role of the American Medical Association): Economics
- This rural Colorado hospital is using AI to go after health insurers that ghosted payments. Here's how.
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Fortitude Re Announces $3.8 Billion Long-Term Care Reinsurance Agreement with Unum Group
- Unum Group Announces $3.8 Billion Long-Term Care Reinsurance Transaction with Fortitude Re
- Before you debate premium financing, understand the bigger picture
- NAIFA praises House committee approval of Clarity for Compensation Act
- PHL Variable liquidation pushed out to 2027, Connecticut regulators say
More Life Insurance News