In our earlier blog, Insurance Agents - Will They Disrupt or Perish?, Aureus' Life Insurance SME Arun Agarwal shared his views on why insurers will remain invested in the agency channel by identifying the successful agent.
It was a pleasure to have Tarannum Hasib, Chief Distribution Officer at Canara HSBC OBC Life share her expertise on the current state of insurance distribution as well as strategies to optimize it for the next stage of evolution.
The pandemic has affected how people engage with one another across industries and geographies. Physical distancing and other quarantine measures have shifted activities once considered critical to have in-person to digital and remote channels. This change has affected insurance distribution, and it is no surprise that the COVID-19 situation poses a wide-ranging series of challenges for insurance companies to maintain their operations. Going forward, insurance companies will need to rethink their distribution model across three dimensions: customers, sales force, and enablers (including investment in data and digital tools)
Insurance being a long-term contract with financial gains accruing in the future has led to trust and confidence being the single most important factor while making a purchase decision by an individual. Advisory and relationship, therefore, play a vital role even today; however, this is now coupled with self-exploration considering the ease at which information is available in digital media.
Consumers embrace digital channels, and their experiences with leading tech companies have also raised their expectations when buying insurance online and offline. The standard customers are now expecting a seamless, consistent "multi-access" experience across all touchpoints.
Traditionally, insurance companies have agents, bank relationship managers, or brokers designated as the primary interaction channel with their customers. Changes in customer behavior are causing a fundamental shift in how insurance companies are now re-aligning their distribution models.
Now, customers demand multiple access points for engaging with their insurance company in their financial journey. While they consider service quality and trusted advice from a salesperson to be an essential part of their decision to purchase, due to the convenience of online channels, customers engage more frequently with the companies directly through digital channels to explore on their own. Therefore, supporting a multi-access customer journey will be critical for insurance companies in the future. Going forward, relationships and advisory will co-exist with self-exploration.
I would say physical sales forces, including agents, corporate agents, and brokers, are responsible for the majority of insurance distribution. While the share of business conducted via these channels has been shifting during the past decade as some customers migrate online, they remain the primary channels.
We have seen a shift in terms of products purchase behavior, with more and more customers opting for online purchases. However, for savings products and large value purchases, the primary channels remain face to face.
To earn customer loyalty, drive growth and attract new customers, agents are adopting and mastering unique technology that can provide continuous engagement. In this way, agents partner with technology to manage leads and organize marketing programs to guide consumers through an elevated, sequential customer journey geared at building relationships that future insurance policyholders highly value and thus stay as the largest contributor in the distribution model.
Insurance is a highly regulated industry. Perhaps, this is the primary reason insurance companies have been slower to embrace technology change than other industries. Insurance is still entrenched in manual, paper-based processes that are time-consuming and require human intervention. That said, we are starting to see a global push by insurance companies to augment their technological capabilities to do business faster, more securely, and cost-effectively.
In the next normal, distribution leaders who understand the need to build a future-ready sales force and plan for the longer term will be better able to lead.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tarannum Hasib is the Chief Distribution Officer at Canara HSBC OBC Life Insurance. She has over 22 years of experience across a number of functional areas, including Financial, Retail Sales, Corporate Sales, Business Development, and developing sales models and strategies for Life Insurance and Non-Life Insurance companies. She served as Head of Bancassurance & Alliances & Rural at Max Bupa Health Insurance previously. She headed the Employee Benefits business at Canara HSBC OBC Life Insurance before joining Max Bupa Health Insurance.
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