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  • user 7:35 am on June 6, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: axzz4ALNEamMS, , , , ,   

    The Road Ahead: 3 Big Insurance Trends for the Next 12 Months 

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    and prognostication must be traits buried right in the genetic core of the human species. People’s desire to peer around the corner into what they can’t see and try to make sense of the shapes and shadows is almost a basic need.  It makes us feel smart, it provides comfort as a source of clarity, it lets us show off our expertise.

    So, while I may be motivated by some weird base instinct to call the industry’s shots- I also genuinely think the next year will turn out to be unlike any the industry has ever seen. At the least, we’re beginning to see some tectonic shifts in how insurance does business as it starts succumbing to the inexorable forces of , customer demand, and most importantly, as it finally gives in to good old fashion evolution.

    Here are the three big trends in insurance that I see taking shape over the next twelve months.

    1.  Venture capital firms will start to pick leaders

    There’s strong demand for insurance technology investments in the VC community right now. According to CB Insights, there was $2.65 billion in VC investments in insurtech companies in 2015, about three-and-a-half times the amount invested in similar companies the prior year. This makes sense too. Insurance is one of the remaining industries that hasn’t yet taken a huge, technology-based step forward and VCs are finally realizing the potential impact technology could have on how it’s bought, sold and administered.

    So, while there has been a massive demand for insurance investments from the VC community, beyond employee benefits, the actual pace of investment has been relatively low due to an almost complete lack of investment opportunities with attractive business models, proven teams, and productive uses for their capital.  Even including benefits, while $2.65 billion is a lot of money, it’s a small percentage of the $128.5 billion in VC money that was raised last year.

    Over the course of the next year, we’ll see a few strong financial models emerge from companies who took seed rounds over the last 18 months that will attract sizable Series A rounds to fund growth and establish leads in their market segments.  The noise and buzz around insurtech has already spawned a growing number of me-too copycats and business model clones but, as has happened with other formerly hot sectors for venture capital- the on-demand economy and marketplace lending- the benefits of scale and access to capital will accrue almost entirely to the innovative first movers. 

    2.  Carriers will start more meaningful partnerships with startups to drive innovation

    You can bet that all carriers are already having discussions about this in their boardrooms right now, it’s reflected in strategic VC investments even if not yet in meaningful operating partnerships, but over the next year we’ll see which carriers will actually pull the trigger on deals – be it acquisitions or partnerships – that lean on startups to help them jumpstart the pace of innovation inside the company.  We’ve started to see meaningful partnerships with technology companies from the large only recently, but there is reason to think that insurers will move faster.

    Most of this activity will happen around finding new means of distribution, new ways to help claims adjusting, big data analysis for underwriting, and early efforts at incorporating the Internet of Things. It will be a fairly incredible thing to see for a couple reasons: first, it will be impressive to see massive companies realize that they can no longer “move at the speed of insurance,” and, second forward-thinking carriers who welcome technology to the fold will create sizeable business advantages against their more luddite rivals, and do so more quickly than ever before possible.

    3.  Migration of talent from old guard companies to insurtech startups

    As insurtech companies raise larger amounts of capital, more and more executives from established insurance companies will start to join their ranks. Lemonade’s hires from AIG and ACE and Embroker’s own recent addition of Tom DeMichael from Willis will be the first wave of a larger trend as property and casualty focused startups will by their nature require more industry expertise than the first wave of employee benefits startups like Zenefits.

    As funding increases for insurtech leaders (see prediction No. 1), on-hand cash at these startups will allow them to lure top talent away from the industry giants, just as the massive carriers and brokers alike will be adjusting to the brave, new world of insurance by trying to cut bloated cost structures. Seasoned execs that are dynamic enough to thrive in the fast-moving startup environment will be in short supply, creating great opportunities for the available free agents and new entrants alike.

    Each of these are trends that will be at play not only over the next 12 months, but for several years at least to come.  However, I expect now is when we’ll start to see real movement on each.  One thing is clear: the insurance industry – as well as the burgeoning insurtech market – will be an incredibly interesting space to watch.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/millermatthewc” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Matt Miller”] is founder & CEO of Embroker and a version of this post first appeared in the Embroker Blog

     
  • user 11:44 am on June 3, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , italy,   

    Four Italian start-ups shortlisted for the Insurance IoT Europe Awards in London 

    Insurtech is becoming one of the most relevant sources of change in the sector, being characterized by a growing request for innovation of  both approach and .

    Italian insurance IoT is taking over the international scene thanks to the excellence of its offer, being one of the top countries globally – this applies to the car sector but also to health and home. According to the data elaborated by the Observatory of Connected Insurance, the Italian market has the highest levels of penetration – 16 % – in the car insurance sector. The Observatory of Connected Insurance is a think-tank created by Bain & Company which has managed to get together ANIA alongside 30 primary international insurance and reinsurance groups.

    This trend has been confirmed by the Italian start-ups in the sector that have a crucial pioneering role thanks to the innovation proposals that they bring as an answer to a sophisticated market request. The recent nomination of 4 Italian start-ups among the 5 finalists in their category for the Insurance IoT Europe Awards which will take place on the 7th of June in London, supports the fact that is ahead of the game.

    The shortlisted candidates for the Insurance IoT Newcomer Award are: DigitalTech, Domotz, Innotech Connected Solutions, Neosurance and Roost. The shortlisted candidates for the IoT Innovator of the Year Award include Baseline Telematics, Dacadoo, Homeserve Labs, ROC Connect and Things Network. Insurance IoT Europe (7-8 June 2016, London), is a two-day event that brings 150 insurers together to talk about how to thrive in a connected world as digital and big data collide. This is the only event focusing 100% on IoT for the insurance industry.

    The winners will be announced during the networking drinks reception on June 7th at the Insurance IoT Europe Summit. More information coming soon on the official website of the event: http://www.fc-bi.com/insuranceiot 

    Insurtech news

     
  • user 9:34 pm on May 23, 2016 Permalink | Reply  

    A market map of insurance startups 

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    Last night, Sarah Tavel and I hosted a small dinner for founders and builders of insurance startups, and I was fascinated by this market. I wanted to dive deeper into this space and share some market observations.

    Some caveats before we dive into the analysis.

    This ecosystem map is not designed to be 100% comprehensive. It’s to understand all the different startups within the insurance space

    If I am missing something, tweet me @mccannatron.

    This space is developing quickly so take this into consideration.

    Market Map

    • Graphic is above and a full list of all of the companies on the market map is below.

    Reflections on the insurance market

    What is changing in the insurance space (why now)

    Most of the startups in the ecosystem are taking advantage of one or more of the major forces in the market today.

    • New channels (web/mobile) — Today the bulk of insurance is sold through agents in-person or over the phone. We now have the ability to sell insurance directly at the point of need in shorter durations.
    • New sources of data (big data, machine intelligence, wearables, connected cars) — We now have the ability to collect more data which potentially could better inform the insurance risk models we use today.
    • Potential for new types of insurance (ie. sharing economy, self driving cars) — Because people can now be providers and users of services (ie. Airbnb renting homes and renting out your own home) there is a potential for new types of insurance.
    • Potential for new structures of insurance (P2P, lowering the barriers of self insurance) — Some startups are trying to reinvent the entire model of insurance and apply new models to the business of insurance.

    Key Question

    If you are building a startup in the insurance space, a key question you should ask is:

    • Are you innovating on the sales channel of insurance or are you innovating on the product level (aka. trying to create a next-gen carrier)?

    Both are viable but depending on your end goal, you will have very different considerations on how you enter and compete in the market.

    Additional resources

    If you are looking to learn more about the insurance space, I highly recommend you check out this four part series written by Kyle Nakatsuji:

    1. https://www.cbinsights.com/blog/transforming-insurance-distribution/ — intent vs. opportunistic types of insurance products.
    2. https://medium.com/@kylenakatsuji/insurance-2-0-new-products-and-combined-approaches-4e75d333892d#.g7k18oey4 — how to rethink the product level of insurance.
    3. https://medium.com/@kylenakatsuji/insurance-2-0-p2p-and-structural-innovation-94ee6bf5643c#.8gxx89cjz — how to rethink the structural level of insurance.
    4. https://medium.com/@kylenakatsuji/so-your-startup-wants-to-sell-insurance-a0167581f7b1#.6jraw5xwe — breakdown of sales channels for insurance products.

    Breakdown of all of the companies on the market map

    Comparison Insurance

    • PolicyGenius — Raised $20M, online price comparison for insurance. All types of insurance.
    • Coverfox — Raised $12M, creating a comparison site for largely auto insurance.
    • Coverhound — Raised $56M, creating a insurance comparison site — also offering fulfillment services during the insuring process.
    • Insurify — Raised $2M, creating a virtual insurance agent to compare and recommend auto insurance options.
    • Goji — Raised $70M. Creating an online auto insurance comparison site.
    • Insureon — Raised $31M, comparison site for business insurance.
    • Next Insurance — Raised $13M, building a product to compare and purchase business insurance.
    • Zebra — Raised $20M, comparison site for car insurance.
    • Credit Karma — A platform for credit scores, also offers a insurance comparison site.
    • NerdWallet — Credit card comparison site, also offers an insurance comparison site.

    Life

    • Ladder — Still in stealth, in the health insurance space.
    • Abaris — Raised $720K, creating a new type of annuity insurance for retirement.
    • Sure — Raised $2.5M Micro-duration life insurance coverage during travel.
    • Sureify — Engagement platform between clients and the insurance carriers. Creates potential upsell opportunities.

    Auto

    • Metromile — Raised $14M. Creating a new type of auto insurance — pay-per-mile car insurance. Policies are underwritten by National General Insurance.
    • TrueMotion (Censio) — Raised $10M, Creating behavior based car insurance.
    • Cuvva — Raised $750K, Creating a per hour auto insurance product, focused for the UK.
    • Snapsheet — Raised $11M, greatly improves the claims process for carriers.
    • Auto/Telematics
    • Driveway Software — Raised $11M. Collects telematics data to rank how well you drive, potentially to sell this information to insurance companies. Doesn’t sell insurance directly.
    • Automatic — Raised $24M. Collects telematics data through both hardware adapter and mobile app. Provides data to insurance companies but doesn’t sell insurance directly.

    Health

    • Oscar — Raised $727M, trying to build next gen health insurance from the ground up. They are attempting to be a next gen insurance carrier, not just a broker.
    • Clover Health — Raised $135M, creating a new type of health insurance that uses data to be proactive about improving their clients health outcomes. I believe they act as the carrier as well.
    • Collective Health — Raised $125M, creating a platform to make it easier for SMB’s to self insure, rather than using standard plans from traditional carriers.
    • Melody Health Insurance — stealth, trying to create a new type of lower cost health insurance.
    • Sherpaa — Raised $8M. Connects employees directly with doctors (telemedicine) and also offers guides to help in the insurance selection process.
    • Limelight Health — Raised $3M. Building a white labeled insurance quoting app for brokers and agencies.

    SMB/HR

    • Zenefits — Raised $583M. Creating a cloud HR platform which also sells- insurance to SMB’s — however they have been in a bit of trouble recently
    • Gusto — Raised $161M. Platform from SMB’s to manage payroll, benefits, and workers comp — including insurance.
    • Namely — Raised $107M. HR and benefits platform, also offers insurance through the platform.
    • JustWorks Raised $53M. Building a platform for payroll, benefits, and compliance — including insurance.
    • MaxwellHealth — Raised $56M. Software platform for SMB’s to manage health plans, benefits, and payroll.
    • SimplyInsured — Raised $8.4M. Creating a health insurance platform for SMBs — to find and administer health insurance. Was part of YC.
    • Embroker — Raised $14M. Platform for purchasing and managing business insurance — including property and casualty insurance.
    • Coverwallet — Raised $2M.Platform for purchasing and managing business insurance.

    Sharing economy

    • Stride Health — Raised $15M, Health insurance broker for freelancers and independent contractors, most notably used by Uber drivers.
    • Slice Labs — Raised $3.9M. On-demand insurance for on-demand workers, still in stealth.

    Home Insurance

    • Quilt — Next-gen home insurance, still in stealth.

    P2P

    • Lemonade — Raised $13M, P2P insurance company, still in stealth.
    • Gather — Building a P2P insurance model for SMB insurance.
    • Friendsurance — Raised $15M, P2P insurance, based in Berlin.
    • Guevara — P2P auto insurance, not launched yet.
    • Inspool — P2P auto insurance, not launched yet.
    • Jointly — P2P auto insurance, not launched yet.
    • BoughtByMany — P2P health insurance.
    • WorldCover — Was part of YC, building a P2P insurance product for crop insurance in emerging economies.

    Product Insurance

    • Trov — On demand insurance for individual products. Creating a new type of insurance.
    • SimpleSurance — Raised $11.5M, provides product insurance (electronics, bikes, appliances etc) — based in Berlin.
    • Gaggel — Smartphone insurance.
    • Asurion — Not a startup, but Asurion dominates the $7.8B protection plan market for cell phones.

    I hope this landscape sparks a conversation and if you have any feedback feel free to tweet @mccannatron or email me — especially if you feel I am missing any other categories of companies. I’m still learning about the space so would welcome any feedback. I’m also happy to connect with anyone working on a new insurance company — feel free to reach out anytime.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/mccannatron” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Chris McCann”] is Community @ Greylock Partners, founded StartupDigest, and Photographer. This article was originally published on linkedin.

     
  • user 12:16 pm on May 21, 2016 Permalink | Reply  

    Secrets InsurTechs can learn from the auto insurance industry’s telematics experience 

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    The insurance sector is becoming more innovative. Various initiatives and projects launched around the globe are proof of that: from the classic “call for ideas” and corporate venture capital to innovation labs and accelerators that involve the largest insurance companies. According to CB Insights, InsurTech —which involves rethinking one or more steps of the insurance value chain through the use of — received $650 million in funding in the first quarter of 2016, and the number of transactions more than doubled compared with the same period in 2015.

    InsurTech investment in Q1 2016 more than doubled [ Click to Tweet]

    The Italian insurance sector represents an interesting case history about InsurTech. Italy has the most advanced experience in combining the car insurance contract with hardware (the black box) and using that data throughout the insurance value chain. According to the Bain Telematics, Connected Insurance & Innovation Observatory—a think tank that Bain & Company developed with ANIA, AIBA and other insurance and non-insurance partners to help spread innovation culture in the insurance sector—telematics penetration reached 16% of all cars insured in Italy by the last quarter of 2015.

    In Italy this type of approach is already mainstream, in contrast with other countries, where it is still a niche value proposition. By looking at the Italian best practices, one can identify certain critical success factors. The most important element is telematics’ capacity to improve the insurance bottom line: A significant self-selection effect exists on customer acquisition and material savings related to claims settlement (provided that adequate processes are in place and use the telematics information). The second aspect is represented by the benefit of introducing value-added services around the driver journey. The key element for both the client and the distributor is the partial kick-back of the value generated by the telematics approach on the insurance bottom line to both the client (via a discount) and the distributor (via additional fees).

    The current discussion of how telematics will evolve focuses on gamification and reward mechanisms: mechanisms to manage client engagement and retrocession prizes other than insurance premium discounts. For example, Allstate in the US has adopted a score- and prize-based system related to driving behavior. The international best practice is undoubtedly Vitalitydrive, the approach through which Discovery (South Africa) has managed to create a motor-telematics policy based on driving behavior. In this case, the cash-back incentive for gasoline bought from partner gas stops replaces the premium discount.

    By comparing gamification use cases with Italian best practices, insurers can retain an incremental quota of generated value, through telematics solutions that provide rewards financed by partners instead of through premium discounts. This approach requires the creation of an ecosystem of partners to provide a tangible value for the customer.

    Rewards can be effective ways to steer behavior if they are built on mechanisms that result in frequent interaction with the client. From this point of view, the integration of monitoring driving behavior and the reward-system mechanism has a greater influence on behavior than a tariff that calculates the renewal premium based on those same variables.

    InsurTech: Reward is the new black                [ Click to Tweet]

    The stakes are high for the insurance sector, and the auto insurance mandate has created the conditions for insurance companies to become relevant actors within the ecosystem. That said, the insurance sector faces a double challenge: first, to introduce this type of creative thought inside the product development process and second, to become equipped with competencies and instruments that enable the management of both gamification dynamics and the partner ecosystem. These challenges are forcing insurance carriers to start thinking and acting like InsurTech entities.

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    Matteo Carbone – Insurtech Thoughts


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://it.linkedin.com/in/matteocarbone” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Matteo Carbone”] is InsurTech Enthusiast, Insurance Thought Leader, Principal in Bain’s Finacial Service and Digital Practice, Founder and responsible of the Observatory on Telematics, Connected Insurance and Innovation. This article was originally published on linkedin.

     
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