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Technology revolutionizes underwriting, claims

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Technology revolutionizes underwriting, claims

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Technological developments are leading to rapid changes in commercial underwriting and claims management as insurers access massive amounts of data to automate and streamline their operations, a panel of experts said.

While the moves will likely make some jobs in the sector redundant, they will also lead to significant enhancements for people working in other positions, they said Friday during a session of Claims and Litigation Management Alliance Conference in Nashville, Tennessee.

Access to data has enabled Hamilton USA to issue small business policies within a few minutes of accepting an application that just provides the name of the business they are underwriting, said Melissa A. Hill, Princeton, New Jersey-based senior vice president, chief resolution officer for the U.S. insurance unit of Bermuda-based Hamilton Group Insurance Group Ltd.

“We have a business owners policy product and there are no underwriting questions. Zero,” she said.

An agent submits a name and an address and the Hamilton system conducts various data calls — such as credit information and location details — the agent receives a quote within seven minutes, they can bind it one minute later and the policy is issued, Ms. Hill said.

In addition to accessing public data, Hamilton is incorporating claims data — it’s  had about 1,300 claims so far — to improve the claims process and customer experience, she said.

The company is looking to expand the process to middle market risks, Ms. Hill said.

Insurers can also use the technology platforms of shared economy companies they insure — which are often focused on enhancing the customer experience of using the service — to improve insurance services, she said.

For example, with vehicle sharing services, telematics devices are in vehicles and the information can be fed into an app, so claims can be reported immediately, Ms. Hill said.

“It goes in, the claim is reported and we call the customer,” she said.

As technological applications develop, some functions at insurers will change, Gareth Hedges, chief claims officer at the Redwoods Group Inc., a Morrisville, North Carolina-based specialty insurer for youth organizations and camps.

“Technology will replace people in some cases,” he said. For example, the first notice of loss “triage” system — prioritization of claims, determining what information to send and setting up the claims process — will be automated, Mr. Hedges said.

“In most cases the technology is used to enhance the human job. There will be someone who has to put eyes on the first notice of loss, but it will already be prioritized for them, it will already be triaged and now that person will be adding value” and will provide more insight and speed up the process, he said.

Drone technology is also being used by insurers to enhance their underwriting and claims processes, said Dan Moore, St. Louis-based senior vice president, claims services, at QBE North America, a unit of Australian insurer QBE Insurance Group Ltd.

“There is real opportunity in the drone space. We are currently using drones extensively in our crop business. Crop is an area where in many cases we are surveying hundreds or thousands of acres at a time,” he said.

The drones can be equipped with cameras and infrared sensors to allow the insurer to determine what the land it being used for, Mr. Moore said.

CLM is a sister organization to Business Insurance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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