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Insurers Should be Think How Insurance Policy Fits with Customers Lifestyle

Insurers Should be Think How Insurance Policy Fits with Customers Lifestyle?

Consumers are beginning to look for the same convenience from their insurance companies as they are in other areas of their lives. That is according to Guidewire Report which has also found that insurance customers are open to new services that mitigate risks and believe that insurers should be tackling climate change proactively.

Guidewire commissioned market research agency Censuswide to survey a representative sample of 1,000 insurance customers aged 18 to 55+ years old about their insurance preferences.

Insurance customers are starting to think about how their insurance policy fits with their lifestyle. Whilst only 12% of those surveyed had a Usage-Based Insurance (UBI) policy, 54% of people could see the value of one.

Of those that did have a UBI program, the fact that the policy fitted with their lifestyle was the main reason (37%) they had chosen it.

When it comes to proactive services that mitigate risks, such as leak detection, more than six out of ten (61%) people surveyed, said that they would want access to such a service if their insurer offered it.

In terms of other types of risks that might be mitigated, having access to real time data about plumbing to detect leaks (21%), driving (20%), and home heating systems (19%), rose to the top. Customers would feel most comfortable sharing their data with their insurer regarding these risks.

Notwithstanding this, the issue of data collection will be a tricky one for the insurance industry to manage with the growth of more proactive services and UBI. On this point, insurance customers in the UK are far more conservative than their counterparts elsewhere in Europe.

Less than a quarter (24%) of those surveyed believe that insurers collecting more data will be a good thing that improves services and reduces prices, with 28% unable to understand why insurers feel that they need this level of data on their customers; regarding this as an invasion of privacy.

Over a third (36%) can see why insurers might want to collect the data but would rather they not do so. Insurers need to earn the trust of consumers on the fence about data collection if they are to be successful. Whilst many (44%) believe UBI represents too big a loss of privacy for them, 46% neither agree nor disagree as to whether it does.

Consumers are far better educated now on their privacy and how data about them is being collected, which means that insurers need to build trust fast if they want to maintain and grow their business.

René Schoenauer, Director, Product Marketing – EMEA, Guidewire

Insurers are looking at new services or tighter segmentation to improve profits, but without the permission to collect the data needed to underpin these services they will not be truly successful.

Helping customers understand how collecting and using their data will help them and educating them on the benefits, such as personalisation, is as important an investment as developing advanced AI models or IoT solutions. You cannot have one without the other (see How IoT Technology is Reshaping Insurance Business?).

Insurance customers are also beginning to think that insurers should be acting on climate change, but consumers in the UK are less willing to assume increased costs as opposed to their counterparts in other European countries

With severe weather events across Europe and the world in the past twelve months, insurers clearly need to play a role in combatting climate change.

Whatever course of action insurers take, they should be clear and transparent about it and show the difference they are making. In this way they can demonstrate the positive role insurance companies play in our lives, something that all too often goes largely unnoticed.

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AUTHOR: Daniel Couzens – VP, B2B Technology, Europe at Allison+Partners, Louise Bradley – Senior Manager, Media & Analyst Relations – EMEA Guidewire Software

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