Major U.S. insurers jump on distribution platforms to gain customers,
sales
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[September 07, 2021] By
Alwyn Scott
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Major U.S. insurers
are joining new digital exchanges to sell not only their own policies
but also those of rivals, a fresh twist in an industry known for fierce
competition.
The powerful new platforms, including Semsee, bolttech, Bold Penguin and
Uncharted, pull data from many carriers, allowing agents to see multiple
quotes for policies, much the way travel agents see competing air fares.
Chubb Ltd, Travelers Companies Inc and Liberty Mutual have signed on
recently as have agencies that also sell policies, executives said.
"The eyeballs are enormous and important to them," said Philip
Charles-Pierre, New York-based co-founder and chief executive officer of
Semsee, which focuses on commercial policies. Many insurers have
recognized that "if a large agency is using the platform, you need to be
on that platform."
The growth of digital distribution represents a shift in how insurers
compete in markets for auto and homeowner coverage as well as business
and commercial lines worth hundreds of billions of dollars annually,
experts said.
Carriers also benefit from being able to meet more of a customer's
needs, even if they are not selling their own policy.
"It's all about who owns the customer relationship," said Mark Breading,
a partner at Strategy Meets Action, a management consulting firm in New
York.
The industry has been moving away from "captive" agents who sell only
one firm's policies, but digital exchanges are accelerating the trend,
said Matt Leonard, an Oliver Wyman partner who works on insurance.
"The whole process is now supercharged by technology and a broader
marketplace of players," he said.
Partnerships with the exchanges have grown over the past five years.
Despite digital revolutions in other industries, many insurance
customers – especially small businesses – prefer to work with agents who
can explain policies and find the best prices. As a result, the online
tools insurers created on their own did not take off as expected.
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The logo of Travelers Companies is seen in Los Angeles, California,
United States, April 27, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
The exchanges now allow agents to offer customers better prices and satisfy a
wider range of needs without necessarily harming profits, executives and experts
said.
"Chubb is actively engaged with a number of partners in this channel including
bolttech and Bold Penguin," said Sean Ringsted, chief digital officer at Chubb.
Rob Schimek, bolttech's CEO, offered an example: A company that writes policies
for autos but not homes can use bolttech to offer homeowner coverage from other
carriers. That keeps customers from shopping elsewhere. The auto-policy company
earns a sales commission on the homeowners policy while the other insurer gets
the premium revenue.
"Carriers are dying for access to distribution," Schimek said. If insurers don't
want to offer policies through the exchange, they will not have access to the
customers of other insurers on the exchange, he said.
Bolttech, backed in part by Chinese billionaire Richard Li, recently closed on a
$180 million funding round and expanded its reach to 26 countries from 14.
While exchanges bring more customers, they pose a threat by allowing smaller
insurers with specialized policies to reach a large market, said Matteo Carbone,
founder and director of IoT Insurance Observatory, a research group.
"This, for me, is the biggest risk" to big insurers, he said.
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Howard Goller)
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