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‘The most important standard is to start with the customer and their needs’

As the mil­len­ni­als and gen­er­a­tions after them go through their life cycles, the demand for seam­less and intu­itive con­sumer jour­neys will con­tin­ue to increase rapid­ly, and no busi­ness will be able to sur­vive if they do not cater for it.

We must embrace inno­va­tion and dis­rup­tion, but the true test of the suc­cess will not be in how advanced and impres­sive the tech­nol­o­gy is, it will depend on how much it has actu­al­ly ben­e­fit­ed the cus­tomer and how “good” the cus­tomer out­comes are. For exam­ple, advice from health insur­ers about main­tain­ing men­tal health is a good exam­ple of a valu­able and low-tech inno­va­tion.

We have a duty to ensure all the fast-mov­ing changes have the pub­lic inter­est at the core of think­ing. We must also raise the ques­tion of what pro­tec­tions are being put in place to pre­vent cus­tomer detri­ment and pub­lic dis­trust in insur­ance.

So there is a unique oppor­tu­ni­ty to set the stan­dards by which suc­cess should be mea­sured and help encour­age inno­va­tion that leads to the best pos­si­ble con­sumer out­comes.

Stan­dards must not be con­fused with reg­u­la­tions. Stan­dards are in place to com­ple­ment reg­u­la­tions and form the basis for a pro­gres­sive, cus­tomer-focused eth­i­cal approach that is seen as pro­fes­sion­al and best of breed, rather than an enforced set of min­i­mum require­ments.

Inno­va­tion will not auto­mat­i­cal­ly ben­e­fit the cus­tomer unless there are clear and defined stan­dards the sec­tor can be held account­able to. We must not lim­it our under­stand­ing of cus­tomer ben­e­fit to just prices, how­ev­er. Cut­ting prices at the expense of bad ser­vice would still be very detri­men­tal from a holis­tic cus­tomer expe­ri­ence per­spec­tive.

The most impor­tant stan­dard is to start with the cus­tomer and their needs. The insur­ance sec­tor and finan­cial sec­tor as a whole has in the past been too prod­uct focused. Things have start­ed by cre­at­ing the prod­uct, then wrap­ping the sales and mar­ket­ing around it so cus­tomers fit the desired demo­graph­ic. The pro­fes­sion must dis­rupt this tra­di­tion to start with the cus­tomer and their needs, then cre­ate prod­ucts that become the solu­tion.

True inno­va­tion starts with a desire to under­stand cus­tomers proac­tive­ly to gain insight into their wants and needs, and then move to find­ing ways to achieve that.

Inno­va­tion should also change the rela­tion­ship between sec­tor and cus­tomer. It is not just about help­ing peo­ple fill out forms at a time and place which is con­ve­nient for them, but it allows insur­ers to help cus­tomers man­age their risks.

Inno­va­tion is chang­ing the role of the insur­er so that they utilise their exper­tise to get a bet­ter deal for their cus­tomers. Great exam­ples of this are Aviva’s safer dri­ving media cam­paign, AXA’s resilient home demon­stra­tion, Pru’s Vital­i­ty scheme, RSA’s Weath­er the Storm cam­paign and, of course, there are many more.

The cus­tomer ben­e­fits by pay­ing less as risks are man­aged bet­ter, and the insur­er ben­e­fits by few­er claims and cre­at­ing more loy­al cus­tomers.

As a pro­fes­sion­al body, the Char­tered Insur­ance Insti­tute has a respon­si­bil­i­ty enshrined in our roy­al char­ter to “secure and jus­ti­fy the con­fi­dence of the pub­lic” in insur­ance. One way we can do this is to make sure any­one employed in the pro­fes­sion, who designs or sells ser­vices, or advis­es on insur­ance prod­ucts, has the right exper­tise to do that com­pe­tent­ly.

But, impor­tant­ly, it also means we set up and dri­ve an eth­i­cal approach for those pro­fes­sion­als to sign up to. Our chal­lenge is to make sure those eth­i­cal stan­dards remain rel­e­vant and mean­ing­ful to cus­tomers today and in the future, regard­less of the tech­no­log­i­cal advances that shape the look of the prod­ucts and ser­vices cus­tomers see.