5 Key Takeaways From INTRCONNECT 2023
This post is part of a series sponsored by CoreLogic.
In January, the CoreLogic® Protect team hosted its first-ever INTRCONNECT™ conference where hundreds of property insurance and restoration professionals gathered to learn and collaborate on the development of the future of the industry, as well as strategize on how to remain relevant and successful within a changing insurance ecosystem.
The event was overwhelmingly successful. Conference attendees enjoyed expert panel sessions, collaborative breakouts and numerous networking opportunities where they swapped and enhanced their ideas on the trends and challenges that the industry faces.
From the enlightening speakers and panelists to great conversations with other influential industry professionals, we at CoreLogic came away with some key concepts that we think will define the future of Insurtech.
To help future-proof your business, we’ve put together our top 5 key takeaways from INTRCONNECT.
Whether you are part of the property insurance industry or the restoration sector, you must always look further afield than your immediate environment. Policyholders don’t think of claims and restoration as two separate processes, and neither should service providers. From filing a claim to having weather-related damage fixed, customers think of it as one operation. Carriers and contractors should follow suit.
To optimize the end-to-end process of restoring normalcy for policyholders – all while maximizing customer experience – insurance carriers, Third Party Administrators (TPAs) and restoration contractors must collaborate throughout the entire lifecycle. All three parties must have a shared goal and work as partners to achieve a more efficient claims completion process as well as keep policyholders informed and confident at every step. This connection is the only way to enhance the customer experience.
As one speaker at INTRCONNECT noted, “The carrier is selling a promise, which is a noble mission.” This begs the question, “How do we fulfill this promise across the entire value supply chain?”
The answer is to eliminate the tension between stakeholders, which was once typical in the dynamics between carriers and contractors, and make the entire process collaborative.
Until a policyholder’s claim is resolved, carriers and contractors must constantly communicate to make decisions and perform tasks based on consistent, up-to-date information. They must determine their direction and have one single source of data for every customer and every project.
The only way to connect all stakeholders with one central source of information is through integrated data sources and technology. To connect people, it is imperative to connect the different platforms they use to manage and execute every job.
For example, securely integrating carriers’ underwriting and estimating solutions with their entire suite of claims management software while also having integration points with their vendors’ restoration job management platforms allows data to automatically transfer and be shared in all systems and offers transparency to all stakeholders. Everyone works with the same data. This, in turn, eliminates errors and inconsistencies.
By integrating platforms across the entire claims and project lifecycle, service providers establish streamlined, simplified, end-to-end workflows. These workflows facilitate faster claims completion while removing silos and the resulting miscommunications that lead to errors on both carrier and contractor sides.
The bottom line is carriers and contractors must approach claims and jobs as one workstream with one goal to achieve. Eliminate traditional, fragmented processes by establishing better human relationships and complete digital connections.
When people start a claim with their insurance provider, they are in a time of great need. As such, each person must be treated not only as a project to complete but also as a human in a moment of need.
Carriers and contractors must deliver personalized customer experiences while managing multiple clients with different needs and varying projects at different stages.
In other words, it’s vital for every company to integrate personal touches into digital processes.
Companies must find a way to talk to policyholders so that clients aren’t overwhelmed by the claims and restoration processes. This is the most effective way to ensure that customers maintain confidence in both their insurance providers and the contractors repairing their properties. Translation: greater customer satisfaction equals retention.
With the right platforms – think texting alert platforms to contractor tracking applications – customers get automated, personalized updates and the communication they need to stay informed about the progress of their claims. Feeling a part of the process empowers customers and instills in them with greater confidence in their service providers.
Also, these technologies give insurance professionals and contractors better insight into every customer case so that they know precisely when to make a personal phone call or send a customized email.
Accurate data drives decisions that result in the greatest business value.
As CoreLogic Protect President Garret Gray said in his opening keynote presentation, it is sophisticated, transparent, accurate data that leads companies to achieve compliance more easily, improve communication between all stakeholders and settle claims more efficiently.
By using technology built on data, decision-makers pursue the best course of action – making decisions that optimize business – in every scenario.
CoreLogic platforms are embedded with property data so that contractors and carriers can look at the full spectrum of property characteristics as they make decisions. On the insurance side, CoreLogic offers data models so that insurance carriers have objective, clear-cut ways to build their rating systems.
By leveraging up-to-date, accurate digital information, such as data produced with artificial intelligence (AI) and image analytics, insurance carriers can make better underwriting decisions and create more accurate estimates. Similarly, contractors then know how to best proceed with every job, knowing that their actions align with the right insurance policies.
It’s essential to look at both data that pertains to specific properties as well as data that accounts for the climate conditions where a property is located. Looking at climate change models, for instance, also contributes to an insurance carrier’s ability to make important, accurate decisions about policies.
As the keynote speaker, Mike Walsh, the CEO of Tomorrow asked the audience at INTRCONNECT, “What if the future of your job was not to do your job, but to destroy your job?”
Don’t let the idea scare you.
Technology such as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) will only continue to change the way the property insurance and restoration industries work. It will also undoubtedly influence customer expectations. Instead of resisting change, professionals should strive to redefine their roles and responsibilities to complement AI, ML and other future technologies. These digital capabilities won’t eradicate jobs; they will continue to allow professionals to challenge traditional ways of working and expand their own uniquely human skillsets.
With this approach and relationship to burgeoning technology, humans will have the opportunity to do even more to differentiate their businesses and handle growing challenges more effectively. Walsh underscored this opportunity when he said, “When you automate, you elevate.”
Also, it pays to defy tradition and listen to the youngest people in your organization. A leap toward future-proofing your business is listening to those who will become the future. Understanding how the newest members of the workforce prefer to receive their information – and how they define a successful customer experience – just might be game-changing for strategic planning.
Uncertainty is the only constant we can count on, especially from an ecological standpoint. Due to climate change, natural disasters are only happening more frequently.
As temperatures increase globally, CoreLogic Chief Scientist Dr. Howard Botts said that we will continue to see increased flooding and intense rainfall at a much higher rate. The same holds true for other weather perils.
Climate change raises many questions about what the future will look like for everyone, and few industries are thinking harder about it than in property insurance and restoration.
To succeed in this industry, contractors and carriers must embrace these climatic uncertainties. There is no way to predict the environmental future with certainty, so businesses must constantly look at climate data and models to get a holistic – even futuristic – perspective of the properties and communities they serve.
With the right approach, there are opportunities for insurers and restoration contractors amid climatic uncertainty. For instance, as one speaker at INTRCONNECT said, “It will be crucial to the future of the insurance business to determine how teams will handle more and more claims quickly and correctly while maintaining customer service.”
While it’s hard to have a catch-all plan for the future, carriers and contractors can future-proof their businesses by using the right data sources and technology solutions to understand and prepare for a full range of climate risk-based scenarios, as well as establish a strategy that is as comprehensive as possible.
Incorporating catastrophe risk models in business planning – to analyze the frequency and severity of occurrences – will be crucial to the survival and continued success of players across the property industry.
It will also be increasingly important for carriers and contractors to leverage technologies that allow professionals to accomplish their jobs while not physically on site. Digital solutions will allow professionals to tackle a larger volume of jobs and execute them more efficiently and consistently, all while assuming minimal personal risk.
There were plenty of lessons to be learned at this year’s INTRCONNECT about actions we can take and approaches we can adopt in 2023 – and beyond.
Check back in the coming weeks as we delve more into these takeaways through a five-part blog series.
To learn more about CoreLogic, contact us here.
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