Title: PRACTICAL ISSUES IN UNDERWRITING MANAGEMENT
1PRACTICAL ISSUES IN UNDERWRITING MANAGEMENT
- Prepared by Joe Ganly
- Joe Ganly International
- June 2009
Disclaimer The Insurance Institute of Ireland
does not endorse or approve the content of any
third party.
2What is Insurance Underwriting....And why is it
important?
- Underwriting is one of the aspects of Insurance
that makes most Peoples eyes glaze over.
Underwriters deal with statistics they are
number-crunchers. Many People who have an
Insurance Policy do not even know that at some
point their Application passed through an
Underwriters hands. - Â
- However Underwriting is one of the most important
parts of the Insurance Process and knowing what
an Underwriter does and why it is so important
is helpful for People who are shopping around
for a new Policy.
3What an Underwriter does
- Insurance is based on risk. When you get an
Insurance Policy, the Insurance Company is taking
on some of your risk e.g. if you drive a car
there is a risk that your car will be damaged in
an accident but having Motor Insurance means that
if your car does get damaged, your Motor Insurer
will pay for the repairs. By having a Policy a
risk is lower. - The Insurance Company makes up for the risk it
takes on by charging Premiums and setting
Deductibles or Excesses. If a Company charges
too little it could go bankrupt when and if large
Claims are filed. If a Company charges too much
it will lose business to its competition. - Â
- An Underwriters job is to make sure that the
Insurer charges the right amount for the coverage
it provides. They figure how much risk you
represent, how much Cover their Company can offer
and how much that coverage should cost.
4Why Insurance Underwriting is important
- Insurance Companies want to stay competitive and
stay open for business, so it makes sense why
Underwriting is important to them.
5Underwriting in the Irish Insurance Market
- In light of recent market developments, one must
question whether Insurers are Underwriting for
profit or for market share. - We have also seen how Insurance Companies are now
dealing with the Insurance Customer. Are
Insurers managing or processing their business? - Insurance Companies have made the whole Insurance
delivery process so easy for the Personal Lines
Customer, and further strides have been made to
improve matters from the Commercial Insurance
Customers perspective.
6Best use of technology
- Are we making the best use of modern technology?
We have certainly moved away from the paper
trail. The Personal Lines Customer in many
cases now no longer has to complete the
traditional Insurance Proposal Form but rather
Cover is arranged by way of a conversation with a
Telesales Operator and the completion of a
Statement of Fact which is a form that is sent
out to the Proposer to confirm that the
information collated is correct.
7Can we do more insofar as the delivery of a
service to the Commercial Customer is concerned?
- The answer in my view is yes. By way of
example, the traditional paper presentation or
Risk Submission which has become the norm for the
placement of many Commercial Risks could be
replaced by way of a short DVD or video
presentation of the Risk in question. Think of
how easy this would make life for the Insurance
Underwriter and the savings that could be
achieved by avoiding the necessity to send out
Risk Surveyors. - A complicated trade process system of work etc.
is far more easily explained by way of a video
presentation rather than a paper submission. - Â
- We have within the Insurance Industry been
perceived as Imitators rather than
Innovators. - Â
- If we are trying to portray ourselves to the
Insuring Public as a Profession, then we should
be leading by example and coming up with
innovative ways to manage the Underwriting
process.
8Liability Insurance Business placed in the
conventional wayor by way of large Excesses
- In the days of the Celtic Tiger, and prior to the
establishment of the Injuries Board (formerly
known as the Personal Injuries Assessment Board),
IBEC and Commercial Clients took a very keen
interest in the management of their Claims. - Many Clients felt that by managing a lot of the
smaller Claims themselves, they have far more
control over their Insurance costs. - Â
- Many Commercial Clients had geared themselves up
to being able to deal with many of the Claims
that would come across their desk in a very
proactive and economic fashion. Now, with a
downturn in the economy and lack of cash,
Insurers are encouraging Clients to return to the
conventional way of writing Liability business
i.e. from ground up. - Â
- I ask the question is this a backward step?
9Insurers role in accident prevention and road
safety
- Insurers spend a significant amount of money
sponsoring radio and television advertisements
dealing with the horrors associated with road
accidents. Despite this, drink-driving continues
to be a significant factor. Insurers could lead
the charge quite easily by implementing across
the board a situation whereby a Policyholder
found to have been involved in an accident whilst
under the influence of alcohol or indeed drugs
will not be compensated for the damage to their
own vehicle. We have all seen the rude awakening
which Policyholders receive when they are hit in
the pocket. Why are Insurers so reluctant to go
down this particular route? I accept that some
Insurers have led the charge on that front, but
if the Insurance Profession is to be serious
about this issue, more drastic steps need to be
taken.
10Criminal Activity and Insurance Fraud
- Drug-dealing, gang warfare and gun-running have
now reached epidemic proportions in this Country. - Can Insurers play any role in trying to address
that particular issue? - The Insurance Fraud hotline has proved to be a
huge success insofar as the control of fraudulent
claims is concerned. However it is my belief
that Insurance Underwriters could work much more
closely with the Gardaà and in particular with
the Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB). In my early
days of Insurance studies I learned that
Insurance Companies were not set up to cover acts
or events which are contrary to public policy. - Are we really only paying lip service to that
particular principle? - We all know compulsory form of Insurance in
Ireland is Motor Insurance. As a consequence if
we work closely with the Gardaà can we not
isolate these Villains of society by refusing to
protect their assets?
11The Financial Services Sector
- The Financial Services Regulator and the Banking
Industry have come in for some very severe
criticism over the past 12 months. - Are Insurers next in the firing line?
- Â
- What should Insurers be doing to show themselves
to be behaving in a professional manner? - Â
- We are now in a worldwide recession, but if you
think back on major world events over the last
number of years Insurers have shown themselves to
be Masters in dealing with catastrophes and
surviving. - Think of the attack on the World Trade Centre in
New York, and the hurricanes in New Orleans.
Many Financial Commentators felt that events of
that magnitude would wipe out the Insurance
Industry but that however proved to be far from
the truth. - Insurers are in the business of analysing risks
and charging an appropriate Premium for those
risks. - Â
- One of the key things to remember about Insurance
Companies compared to Banks is that if somebody
enters into a long-term commitment with a Bank
and then runs out of finances to be able to fund
that commitment, then that becomes a major
headache for the Bank. If that happens on as
large a scale as it has done in recent times, it
makes the position of the Banks untenable. - Â
- Insurance Companies on the other hand are in a
much stronger position. Having analysed the risk
Insurance Companies then charge a Premium. If
the Premium is not paid then the Policyholder
simply does not have Cover.
12Analysis of Risks
- In recessionary times you are seeing Companies
slashing their training budgets and indeed their
maintenance budgets. One does not have to be a
Rocket Scientist to realise in the short-term
what impact that is likely to have on the
Insurance Industry. With lack of training and
instruction there is likely to be a higher number
of Personal Injury Claims and if maintenance and
repairs are ignored, that is only going to give
risk to significant property losses. - The recession has also impacted on Insurers in
that rates are down and expenses are up, so in
order to slash expenses Insurance Companies in
some cases are abandoning carrying out risk
surveys or in other cases they are asking for
such surveys to be done at such a low rate that
the job just cannot be done properly. - Â
- There is a duty on Insurers to make sure that in
employing Experts to carry out surveys and other
roles within the Organisation that those carrying
out such jobs are paid commensurate with the
quality of the work that they do. There is a
huge risk that standards will drop as prices are
slashed. - Â
- We all know that there is an inextricable link
between claims costs and Insurance Premiums. For
that reason there should be much greater
interaction between the Claims and Underwriting
function. - Â
- The strong likelihood in recessionary times is
that Claims will increase. If Claims increase
that means that there will be a more intimate
relationship in the short-term between the Claims
Department and the Policyholder, rather than the
Underwriter and the Policyholder. - Â
- Why not use the information gathered in the
course of Claims Investigations to assist in the
Underwriting Process? - Â
- Use the outside Experts engaged in investigating
Claims to also highlight inadequacies that they
may see in the risk that could give rise to
future Claims.
13Actions taken by Underwriters
- We are now likely to see much greater use of
Premium Payment Warranties in the Underwriting of
Commercial Insurance products. Premiums will
have to be paid within a specific timeframe or
else Insurance Cover will just not be in place. - Not alone must the Underwriting Department be
looking at the control of Claims costs and
administration expenses but Management expenses
must also be addressed.
14E-Tendering
- In many other Jurisdictions E-Tendering over the
Internet is now becoming the norm. What will
that do to Insurance Premiums? Are we using a
pricing model at all? Is there in reality any
Underwriting? How many times has a Broker heard
the question being asked when dealing with an
Insurance Company and seeking Terms what do I
have to beat?
15The role of the Broker
- What skill-set does the Broker bring to bear on a
risk? Is it only a marketing skill? What do
they do from an Underwriting perspective? Is it
all about placing a risk by "ambush?
16Have we done enough in revolutionising the
business?
17Conclusion
- What I have tried to do in this Presentation is
outline a number of practical issues in
Underwriting Management. - Continuous Professional Development lectures, of
the type you are all attending here today, have
been set up as a means of taking some thinking
time to analyse the problems that we are facing
within the Insurance Industry and what we are
doing to address those problems. - Â
- It is my strong view that there are a number of
very sensible measures that can be taken by
Insurers without incurring any major costs. - Â
- In summary, such measures could include -
- Â
- Greater use of technology e.g. video and DVD
Presentations of Commercial Risks. - Closer liaison with the Gardaà and the Criminal
Assets Bureau. - Greater communication between Underwriting and
Claims discipline and outside Experts. - Road Safety Initiatives.
- Policy wordings such as Premium Payment
Warranties etc.
18Question Answer Session