Getting down to basics about the insurance industry, how might someone perceive or reperceive the industry from a strategic perspective? Strategy, for me at least, is what a company does to differentiate itself uniquely from its competitors. That’s why I don’t consider core administrative systems (or one of the components of a core administrative system such as billing) to be strategic. But that is a post for another time.
The purpose of determining a perspective is to help identify those strategic elements to truly differentiate one insurer from another. It’s very much like people majoring or being expert in multiple disciplines. Reperceiving enables a fresh view; a new view; a different way of thinking.
I suggest there are, at least, two perspectives insurance companies should use when considering how to create or enhance their strategies. One is an information perspective and the second is a media perspective.
We all know that insurance is an information-based industry (not information intensive but information based). So, how might an information perspective help an insurance company differentiate itself from its competitors? Well, an insurer with an information perspective should:
What would you add to this list if an insurer wanted to perceive its strategic objectives through an information perspective?
Then there is the media perspective. Of course, it is highly interdependent with the information perspective. However, an insurer that applies a media perspective would do best if it realizes it is both a consumer and publisher of information. So, the insurer would:
What would you add to this list of media perceptions for an insurance company to consider?
It doesn’t seem that long ago that I thought the “great divide” insurers faced was bridging operations and information. Operations – policy administration, billing, claims, producer onboarding and compensation, reinsurance and so forth - kept the business going while information extracted from those functional processes and other sources fueled decisions.
Oh for the good old days.
We really haven’t solved the operational / informational divide but the rapidly emerging Digital Marketplace has uncovered a divide that had always existed but has now taken on more urgency: the divide between structured data and unstructured data.
Structured & Unstructured Data
Structured data we know and sometimes love: numbers, spreadsheets, databases, … But unstructured data is all around us in the insurance value chains including but certainly not limited to:
This divide must be solved sooner than later. And the solutions rests with understanding the importance of investing in capabilities that enable the insurance company to mix, merge or otherwise blend, and access structured and unstructured data into one coherent data repository … and, of course, be able to visualize the results of the queries in a way that leads to effective and efficient decision-making.
What is your insurance company doing to bridge the structured / unstructured data gap?
Bacon crackling in the pan, drippings from the steak on the grill … just sizzling.
Just like analytics for the insurance industry. Sizzlin’Â just sizzlin’ …
And why not? Insurance is nothing but information flowing amongst and between the value chains that keep the business operating, that enables executives to make better informed decisions, that strengthens product development and … Well, you get the idea.
The insurance company is an information factory. It creates information. It consumes information. Information is the very life-blood of the insurance company.
BUT…
But do insurance executives realize the power of analytics? Are they merely running reports to test or present existing hypotheses? More importantly, are some of the insurer’s more talented quant jocks creating new hypotheses? Or even better, immersing themselves in the data and using analytical tools that enable hypotheses to emerge?
Have insurance executives realized the power of spatial information management? If not, how effective or efficient can their placement of agencies or brokers be in their field management decisions? Are the insurers marrying demographics, psychographics and spatial information into a coherent perspective to develop products better pinpointed to specific territories meeting both policyholder and producer needs?
Have insurance executives realized that data encompasses not just digits but also documents? Content management is critical to coherent analytical decision-making.
But a recent article in TechDecisions discusses the sad fact that analytics is not as far along as it really should be [my opinion].