Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Tuesday, October 29 2019 - 01:00
AsiaNet
Change Management Emerges As the Most Urgent Challenge Facing the Global Life Insurance Industry
WINDSOR, Conn. and BOSTON, Oct. 29, 2019 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

-- LIMRA and BCG release latest survey results showing shift in CEO priorities 

Change management has become the most important challenge in the minds of 
C-suite executives in the global life insurance industry, followed closely by 
the need to improve customer experience. Results from the new biennial global 
survey of C-suite life insurance executives finds a shift in priorities as 
economic, technological, regulatory and consumer changes press life insurance 
companies to reassess their business model.

Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1017737/LIMRA_Challenges_over_time.jpg

Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1017738/LIMRA_External_forces_impact.jpg

The study, conducted by LIMRA ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2622940-1&h=1712230443&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.limra.com%2F&a=LIMRA 
) and Boston Consulting Group (BCG), surveyed more than 500 C-suite life 
insurance executives, nearly one-fifth of them CEOs or presidents, across 62 
countries to identify their greatest challenges and the biggest external forces 
affecting their business and their priorities for the future. The findings are 
presented in a report titled "What's On the Minds of Life Insurance Executives: 
Managing Change in a Customer-Focused World, ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2622940-1&h=2779767731&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.limra.com%2FBCG-Managing-Change-Customer-Focused-World&a=%22What%27s+On+the+Minds+of+Life+Insurance+Executives%3A+Managing+Change+in+a+Customer-Focused+World%2C)" 
which is being released today.

Change management emerges the greatest internal challenge facing life insurance 
executives as they work to help their organizations keep pace with and adapt to 
a rapidly evolving business environment. The study finds one-third of 
executives cite change management as their greatest challenge. This is a 
significant shift from prior studies in 2015 and 2017, when executives cited 
talent management as their biggest challenge (Chart 1).

"In today's business environment, executives are realizing that having the 
right talent is not enough to address the external forces transforming the 
business landscape," said Alison Salka, Ph.D., senior vice president and 
director of LIMRA Research. "To transform their entire organizations, 
executives must cultivate corporate cultures that not only fully embrace 
change, but can also sustain it over the long term."

Part of this need to better manage the change in their organization is the 
recognition that life insurance companies need to improve their customer 
experience. Nearly a quarter of executives said this was a top challenge for 
their company. As leading companies embrace advanced IT and data capabilities 
to analyze customer behavior, cross-sell and customize products, other 
companies appreciate the need to invest in these technologies to compete for 
consumers' attention.

"Life insurance executives have long been aware they need to change their 
organizations and deploy new digital technologies to improve customer 
experience, become more efficient, and develop products that are more tailored 
to individual needs," said Tim Calvert, managing director and partner and 
global leader of BCG's Life Insurance practice. "Our research indicates that 
they are now ready to do something about it."

External Challenges Driving Change
As life insurers look to transform, there are external factors that are also 
spurring change. Nearly two-thirds (64%) of executives surveyed said technology 
such as artificial intelligence, automation, and customer-service tools, would 
have the greatest impact on their company in the next five years, followed by 
customer behavior and regulations (Chart 2).

"Advances in technology offer the most promise to help insurers transform their 
business but also reveal the acute talent management challenges they face," 
noted Calvert. "IBM reports the competition for skilled data scientists will 
increase nearly 30% by 2020(1). Insurers are grappling with not only finding 
qualified candidates but retaining these individuals in a highly competitive 
marketplace."

Regulation also plays a significant role in driving change. The strong push in 
many countries for greater fiduciary and suitability standards; transparency 
over pricing, commissions, incentives; and consumer privacy protection means 
that the regulatory environment will continue to have important implications 
for life insurers.

When asked to name the most challenging areas for regulation and compliance, 
"customer best interest," cited by 47% of executives worldwide, was the leading 
issue. This was closely followed by "analytics/modeling in risk compliance," 
"data privacy," and "cyber security."

"Fraud is also a growing concern among life insurance executives. More than 
three-quarters of CEOs and executives overall worry about the growing incidence 
of fraud," Salka remarked. "Fraud not only hurts a company's bottom line but 
damages its reputation and consumer trust. This concern led LIMRA to develop 
FraudShare ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2622940-1&h=1030189831&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.limra.com%2Fen%2Fsolutions-and-services%2Fmonitoring%2Ffraudshare%2F&a=FraudShare), 
a new tool to help insurers better detect and prevent account takeover 
attempts." 

The report's authors offer three suggestions for life insurers to consider as 
they realign, reimagine, and transform their companies for tomorrow:

Instill a pro-change culture. A corporate culture of change is a pre-requisite 
if life insurers are to make their businesses more customer-centric. That 
begins with having the right people across the organization that believe in 
change. 

Focus on the customer. The first thing to remember about improving the customer 
experience is that authenticity and agility are key. Insurers need to better 
understand the needs of their customers by closely and regularly monitoring 
customer journeys to determine what is going well and what needs to improve.

Think strategically about technology. For the industry to truly achieve the 
quality of digital experience and operational efficiency they desire, 
technology must become more central to the overall business strategy and be 
viewed as a source of competitive advantage--rather than merely a cost.

To download the report, please visit: "What's On the Minds of Life Insurance 
Executives: Managing Change in a Customer-Focused World, ( 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2622940-1&h=2779767731&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.limra.com%2FBCG-Managing-Change-Customer-Focused-World&a=%22What%27s+On+the+Minds+of+Life+Insurance+Executives%3A+Managing+Change+in+a+Customer-Focused+World%2C)" 


(1) The Quant Crunch: How the Demand for Data Science Skills Is Disrupting the 
Job Market, IBM 2017

About LIMRA
Serving the industry since 1916, LIMRA helps to advance the financial services 
industry by empowering nearly 600 financial services companies in 64 countries 
with knowledge, insights, connections and solutions. Visit LIMRA at 
www.limra.com.

About Boston Consulting Group
Boston Consulting Group partners with leaders in business and society to tackle 
their most important challenges and capture their greatest opportunities. BCG 
was the pioneer in business strategy when it was founded in 1963. Today, we 
help clients with total transformation--inspiring complex change, enabling 
organizations to grow, building competitive advantage, and driving bottom-line 
impact.

SOURCE  LIMRA

CONTACT: Catherine Theroux, ctheroux@limra.com, +1 (860) 285-7787

Translations

Vietnamese

Japanese