Fairer pricing: how insurers can win back customers’ trust

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The introduction of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)’s new policy on pricing practices in the general insurance market is one of the biggest shake-ups the insurance industry has seen in more than a decade. It’s not just a significant implementation challenge that needs to be delivered in a short deadline. It’s a change that affects many of the underlying assumptions around insurance market dynamics, and could potentially change the way the whole industry works.

Opportunities beyond compliance

I recently discussed this topic with a group of industry experts as part of a webinar hosted by InsuranceERM—you can register to listen to the full discussion here. The panel acknowledged that practices such as price walking have gradually eroded customers’ trust, and led to a market where customers know that there is no value in being loyal to their current insurer. There was general agreement that the new regulations are a major opportunity for the industry to regain consumers’ confidence.

The changes will benefit firms that are agile enough not only to implement effective new pricing models and product governance but also to react quickly as pricing dynamics shift to position themselves in a changing market. There’s scope to build stronger client relationships with higher retention rates, and reconfigure products to offer better features and greater long-term value, rather than focusing solely on pricing.

Accountability spurs change

Under the new rules, senior managers will be directly accountable for attesting that pricing models are compliant, and we’ve seen elsewhere that personal accountability is a powerful lever to drive cultural change and reduce conduct risk. But for senior people to be confident in providing that attestation, they will need to be able to monitor, measure and manage operations transparently from top to bottom.

One of the big challenges here is data, especially for long-established insurers that have built up a complex network of legacy systems and departmental silos over the years. The data is all there, but it’s difficult to get an overarching view across the whole business—which means imposing the kind of enterprise-wide governance required by these new regulations is a major headache.

Measure, then improve

However, as one of our panelists pointed out, the type of metrics and insight into products and customer relationships that the FCA is asking insurers to provide is information that most insurers’ boards should want to be monitoring anyway, regardless of regulatory expectations.

On the principle that “what we don’t measure, we can’t improve”, it’s vital for senior leaders to be able to drill down and understand what pricing they are offering to new and existing customers so that they can guide the company’s product and pricing strategies effectively. So, the motivation shouldn’t just be regulatory compliance—there will be ongoing value for the business if these changes are implemented correctly.

Finding a pragmatic solution

Regardless of whether your pricing processes depend on complex legacy systems or more modern architectures, it’s clear that the right approach is not to attempt to rearchitect or replace existing core pricing systems. The deadlines are too tight for that kind of radical change—such projects typically take years, and the current timeframe for implementation is a matter of months.

Instead, SAS believes the right approach is to implement a governance layer that sits above the existing systems and provides a single source of truth for pricing, renewals and other relevant data. We have worked with the industry to develop a solution that bridges the gaps between systems, controlling and monitoring the flow of information to ensure good governance, end-to-end traceability, and comprehensive auditing of pricing decisions.

At the same time, our solution helps to automate pricing processes by building a seamless, API-connected ecosystem that eliminates the need for manual hand-offs between teams. This not only accelerates the delivery of pricing decisions—but it also reduces the risk of human error and frees IT teams and analysts from hours of routine, low-level tasks.

Critically, our approach is highly extensible, so firms can roll it out quickly to meet the immediate requirements of the new regulations, and then expand to add new features over time. It’s also available as a cloud service, so firms can get up and running and start gaining new insights within weeks.

If you’re interested in learning more about how SAS can help the UK insurance sector rise to the challenge of fairer pricing, respond more effectively to market dynamics, and build stronger relationships with customers that go beyond pricing to offer more holistic value, download our new eBook: “Beyond price walking: achieve fairer pricing and prepare for the era of customer-centric insurance”, or contact our team today on +44 (0) 1628 490427 to discuss your next steps.

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About Author

Dean Lowson

Dean is an experienced presales consultant with 20 years of experience in software, analytics and data driven roles. Dean’s consultancy skills and analytical expertise helps the clients he works with develop innovative solutions that solves business problems. Dean has worked across many different industries including FMCG, Travel, Retail and Financial Services. Before joining SAS in April 2019 Dean spent five years at Equifax as the SME expert in insurance. He has been working in the Insurance world for the past 9 years and now runs the insurance risk function in the UK working with some of SAS’ strategic Insurance customers.

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