Friday, February 10, 2012

CIOs as Revolutionaries? Technology Spurring Change Among Carriers - PropertyCasualty360.com

http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2012/02/09/cios-as-revolutionaries-technology-spurring-change
No longer supporting players, Deloitte views CIOs as leaders in innovation.

By ROBERT REGIS HYLE, PROPERTYCASUALTY360.COM

February 9, 2012

In its 2012 Global Insurance Outlook, Deloitte Research insurance leader Sam Friedman issues an interesting description of technology leaders in the insurance industry. He describes their work as “revolutionary,” and points out the important decisions CIOs make today are less about software or reengineering processes than they are about transformation.

“CIOs are evolving into key players within the C-suite to develop and execute strategy,” he says. “They are expected to be transformational.”

Technology today is viewed as a way to change the business culture within an insurance company.

“Maybe it’s a culture that’s insulated in the sense they always do things in-house, work with existing systems, and adapt the best they can with the systems in place,” says Friedman. “Now [CIOs] are being asked to come up with more ambitious game plans to change the culture and the approach—and not just technologically, but from a business operations standpoint. Technology facilitates the business operation.”

The C-suite within an insurance company has expanded in the last few years, explains Friedman. The CEOs, CFOs, and COOs remain lead players, but newer titles—chief risk officers, chief information officers or chief technology officers—are playing important roles in the enterprise.

“Their roles are not simply to take marching orders from the C-suite and execute strategies,” he says. “They have a more influential seat at the table in terms of setting strategy, planning how that strategy will be executed, and having a say on what resources will be available—particularly outside resources like software and the people involved.”

Because so much technology today is being outsourced—in part because of the current growth in cloud computing—technology leaders need to perform a tremendous amount of due diligence, explains Friedman. Outsourcing requires carriers to put a great deal of faith in the infrastructure and the personnel from outside the organization.

Friedman concedes it is difficult to look at insurance CIOs as revolutionaries since the insurance has been known as a less than revolutionary type of business.

“Insurance tends to change slowly,” he says. “Product development is incremental. You don’t have the introduction of a revolutionary product that changes the landscape very often. Technology is an area where you can bring transformational change within insurance. The whole decision to outsource to a cloud is revolutionary to many insurance companies that either kept patching their legacy systems or kept reinventing the wheel in house.”

Social media is not viewed as a transformative tool and is mostly used as a marketing tool for insurance carriers to interact with policyholders on social networking sites such as Facebook. But Friedman believes IT leaders need to look at social media as a collaboration tool within an organization, particularly for multi-state or multi-national carriers where employees are not in the same office or even in the same country.

Friedman points out that at Deloitte, the social media site Yammer is becoming an important tool the research firm uses to conduct business day to day. Deloitte facilitates knowledge management by setting up internal Yammer sites to discuss issues in real time rather than brainstorming on a conference call.

“Why do that instead of using the telephone?” Friedman asks. “What we found is on a call someone is leading it and sometimes people are hesitant to speak out. The experience we’ve had with Yammer is people are much more interactive in the social media platform rather than on the telephone. There seems to be more content generated and information exchanged than on the phone or in a live meeting. [Workers] seem to be more open on the social media platform.”

Friedman believes the same thing is happening within insurance organizations. For example, the person in charge of distributor relations at a carrier could hold a session to deal with their independent agents to discuss a new product or a new twist on an existing product like telematics, or strategic planning for product development.

“Rather than having conference calls and live meetings, maybe it’s less expensive and perhaps more effective through social media,” he says. “There are many other services out there. The software itself is secondary. It’s really about transformation for the business operation. The CIO can lead that.”

Most insurers have a social media policy in place, but Friedman wonders how carriers are quantifying and benchmarking what they are accomplishing—particularly in contrast to their competition. Carriers need analytics tools to answer those questions.

“There’s work going on to try and solve [benchmarking issues] through advanced analytics, it’s just a matter of what the field of information is going to be and how it is weighed against the competition,” he says.

Analytics is the wave that is overcoming any sort of internal objections, points out Friedman.

“It’s such a natural transition to the business,” he says. “My only surprise is it’s taken so long to take off. It’s being heavily leveraged to red flag inflated or fraudulent claims. [Analytics] always had a strong element in underwriting and with smaller accounts you can leverage it to make decisions and save the underwriter’s expertise for more complex accounts.”

Friedman also is excited by the new hardware for agents and consumers: the smartphone.

“Think of all the things you can do from a smartphone,” he says. “It is the most insurance-friendly device invented in a long time.”

Policyholders can document an accident with a still photo or a video, write all the details of the accident on the phone’s memo function and email it to the insurance company, and go online through the an insurance app and the GPS function will tell them where the closest repair facility is located. Customers also can get quotes on their smartphone.

“It’s an amazing device,” says Friedman. “It can transform how an insurance company does business and it’s all under the CIOs purview.”

Many functions also are delivered for tablets. A life salesperson can sit down with a prospect and rather than printing out policy details or having the prospect hunch over and look at the laptop, they can present the policy to the customer on their tablet.

“This is the revolution being led by the CIOs,” says Friedman. “CIOs are the ones bringing these ideas to the C-suite and the board of directors to differentiate [the insurer] from the competition. CIOs are no longer just middle managers.”



Access Source And Its Great Content: http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2012/02/09/cios-as-revolutionaries-technology-spurring-change


Access Deloitte Insurance Outlook 2012: http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=2&ved=0CCoQFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.deloitte.com%2Fassets%2FDcom-Sweden%2FLocal%2520Assets%2FDocuments%2FDeloitte-FSI-Global-Insurance-Outlook-2012.pdf&ei=ryU1T8TzHOP00gGHq-HQCQ&usg=AFQjCNFL42xA35uXRtec-ztP-jBYqqHJdg&sig2=gm9ZBcYvVVST9uZkJTD1JA

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