The Right Property Data Helps Better Serve Consumers
This post is part of a series sponsored by CoreLogic.
Why doesn’t the carrier already have property data on this home?
Is this quote accurate or will I have to go back to the homeowner with a revision?
Comparative rating vendors can help agents achieve the goal of recommending the best product by reducing the time it takes to bid multiple carriers and bind a homeowner’s policy. Unfortunately, timing is only half of the equation. The other half is accuracy.
Often a carrier will quote a policy based on limited pre-fill data or homeowner-supplied
A quicker and more accurate scenario would be one-time entry of the customer’s new address by the agent into a comparative rating platform. A single valuation of the new home would be generated from integrated pre-fill property and building cost data then electronically delivered to multiple carriers. The agent is able to provide value to the customer by getting an accurate policy bound in a timely manner without having to ask multiple questions about the new property—information that the homeowner may be lacking.
While comprehensive and complete data solves the problem of accuracy and timeliness, it’s important to remember the stringent regulations surrounding the protection of non-public personal information (NPPI). It’s the agent’s responsibility to know the lineage of all non-public data and to protect it once it’s in their possession. Once public personal information (PPI) is combined—either knowingly or unknowingly—with non-public personal information, it can quickly all become Non-public Personal information.
Bottom line? When underwriting property insurance, carriers and third-party comparative rating vendors should continue to work together to enable consistent and accurate property valuations as well as a faster, more streamlined point-of-sale experience for the agent and the consumer.