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Сloud Technology for Insurance Industry. What Insurers Should Know?

Сloud Technology for Insurance Industry

The increasing use of digital tools and services, as well as the corresponding surge in data generated from digital interactions, has made technology a crucial competitive capability for insurance carriers. In that context, cloud has emerged as a generational opportunity, with leading carriers already using it to serve customers better, faster, and more efficiently.

Insurers join most organizations across all sectors in expecting to significantly ramp up adoption and migrate a growing share of their compute environment to public cloud within the next five years. That intention is reflected in the projected 32% annual growth in cloud services by 2025 (see Main Cloud Adoption Goals & Challenges in Insurance).

The benefits of cloud computing are changing the landscape of business. In a world where customers demand personalized marketing and instant and impeccable service, it’s fast becoming not just the best way to drive successful and innovative businesses, but the only way.

The power of cloud computing is amplified when paired with mobile technology. Because there’s no physical equipment or software to install, you can sign in and work from any computer, anywhere. With apps, you can access important files from mobile devices, so wherever you go, higher productivity follows.

Cloud adoption and insurance business migrate

Successful cloud migrations depend on knowing where the value for insurance lies in cloud and on business and IT working together.

The most important thing to understand about cloud, however, is that it’s not a more efficient way to operate IT, but a force multiplier for generating value for the business. This reality is why it is critical for business leaders, particularly business unit CEOs and business unit heads, to understand the value at stake and what it takes to capture it.

Insurers that use the cloud effectively can unlock such desirable capabilities as providing omnichannel experiences for customers, developing a diverse portfolio of integrated services, and rolling out solutions at unprecedented speeds.

Business unit CEOs understand the nuances of the business and have accountability for identifying and driving the change. They should therefore act as orchestrators of the cloud migration and coaches for the rest of the business leadership in setting bold aspirations and establishing the organizational model that enables the business to harness cloud’s full value.

Through deep discussions with insurance business unit leaders and years of experience helping them migrate to the cloud, we have found that the business units most effective in capturing cloud’s value focus on two key areas: understanding where the value in cloud lies and building a partnership between business and IT (see about New Trends of Cloud Services).

Be clear about where the value is in cloud

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is becoming increasingly proficient at performing tasks historically difficult for computers to execute, including recognizing images, identifying spoken words, and using unstructured data.

Insurance professionals are getting more comfortable with recommendations coming from AI systems and utilizing them for decision-making in underwriting, pricing, marketing, and claims

Most insurers still vastly undervalue cloud’s potential. McKinsey research shows that the EBITDA run-rate impact of cloud on the insurance sector will be $70 billion to $110 billion by 2030—in the top five of all sectors analyzed. When looking at EBITDA impact as a percentage of 2030 EBITDA, insurance is the top-ranked of all sectors, at 43–70 percent.

This value comes from two sources.

The first is rejuvenation, which focuses on using cloud to lower costs and risk across IT and core operations. It can be predominantly driven by IT teams.

The second source of value is innovation, which focuses on harnessing the cloud to accelerate or enable the development of new revenue streams. That includes, for example, faster time to market or new-product development—using advanced analytics, IoT, and automation at scale.

A close partnership between IT and business leadership is needed to drive the innovation.

One insurance carrier, for example, announced a new direct-to-consumer business targeting gig-economy workers and retired baby boomers, which was made possible by a host of cloud-native services including AI-based chatbots, data services, and automated or digitized workflows.

As in most sectors, the value of cloud-facilitated innovation in the insurance industry dwarfs what’s achievable through rejuvenation.

By understanding the hierarchy of value, insurance companies can move past the proverbial low-hanging fruit, the most accessible benefits of cloud that require limited business engagement.

Only a select few companies, where business leaders have led the cloud transformation in tandem with technology leaders, have been able to capture the full potential of cloud.

Cloud technologies enable better asset utilization operating models

Those carriers that have effectively tapped the hierarchy of cloud value have realized significant benefits, including the following:

Build a close working relationship between IT and the business

Rapid virtualization across industries and digital workflows accelerated the already exponential rise in the amount of data available to insurers from internal and third parties. This was driven in part by the proliferation of sensors, digitization of physical records, and the expanding digital footprint left by consumers from online activities.

Almost seven in 10 of respondents said they planned to increase spending on data-related technologies—specifically privacy (70%), collection (69%), and analytics (67%).

In our experience, cloud transformations are most successful when they are joint efforts between business and IT, rather than purely IT-led initiatives. Such collaborations are more likely to direct efforts efficiently at the sources of business value and at business outcomes aligned to the institution’s overall goals.

In successful business–IT partnerships, IT leaders and business unit heads have worked closely with each other to educate the business—and the board—about cloud in the following ways:

At one large, global life and retirement company, the CIO orchestrated a three-month cloud immersion program for the company’s top 100 business and IT leaders.

This senior leadership team started off by learning the basics of cloud through field and forum exercises, went on “go-and-see” visits to two companies further along in their cloud journey, and targeted sessions with CSPs to learn about practical use cases from other industries in such specific functional areas as marketing and customer analytics.

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AUTHORS: Sanjay Kaniyar – partner in McKinsey’s Boston office, Mathew Lee – partner in the Miami office, Ani Majumder – partner in McKinsey New York office, Steve Van Kuiken – senior partner in the New Jersey office

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