Conning & Company Study: Property - Casualty Industry Must Re-Examine Its Distribution Capabilities and Costs.Business Editors HARTFORD, Conn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 17, 2000 New Conning & Company Study Says Market Fragmentation (1) Storing data in non-contiguous areas on disk. As files are updated, new data are stored in available free space, which may not be contiguous. Fragmented files cause extra head movement, slowing disk accesses. A defragger program is used to rewrite and reorder all the files. Requires More Flexible Business Models To Control Expenses Insurers in the property-casualty sector will not be able to reduce expense levels significantly unless they address their commission and other acquisition expenses, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a recent Conning & Company study. Insurers have been unable to reduce their underwriting Underwriting 1. The process by which investment bankers raise investment capital from investors on behalf of corporations and governments that are issuing securities (both equity and debt). 2. The process of issuing insurance policies. expense ratios and, in fact, have seen these ratios rise in the last few years, largely because competitive pressures have helped to keep expenses high. In order to compete effectively in what promises to be a more fragmented marketplace, insurers will have to develop multiple distribution channels, with varying expense structures, which will allow them to reach potential customers through a number of access points. The Conning study, "Property - Casualty Expense Management: Chipping at the Wrong Block in a Fragmenting Market," reports that personal lines expense ratios as a percentage of direct premium rose 7.9% from 1994 to 1998, and that expense ratios for the primary commercial lines jumped 9.7% over the same period. Insurers failed to control expenses because none of their strategies focused on reducing commissions and other acquisition expenses, expenses which combined represent roughly 70% of the industry's total underwriting expenses. "Because the bulk of insurers' underwriting expenses were considered sacrosanct sac·ro·sanct adj. Regarded as sacred and inviolable. [Latin sacr s , much of their effort to control expense ratios
was marginal, and ultimately doomed to failure," said Jack Gohsler,
Senior Vice President at Conning & Company. "Insurers have only
recently begun to re-examine re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines 1. To examine again or anew; review. 2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination. their direct sales costs because they have been afraid of disrupting their primary, or in some cases, only distribution channel." Technological change is expected to continue to drive the fragmentation of the insurance marketplace, and this fact will become the defining marketing imperative of the next decade. The near monopoly currently enjoyed by the agency business model is giving way to a new marketing landscape built around multiple market access points and an array of sales structures - many of them Internet based. Existing agency distribution and service models will continue to be a dominant force in the property - casualty insurance marketplace for the foreseeable fore·see tr.v. fore·saw , fore·seen , fore·see·ing, fore·sees To see or know beforehand: foresaw the rapid increase in unemployment. future. But to respond to the expense pressures resulting from the fragmentation of the marketplace, agency companies should perform a cost/benefit analysis of every distribution channel. For instance, insurers should accurately gauge the size of the market that will prefer a self - service model via the Internet, and then develop a model with a cost structure that can exploit this market segment. "Expense control will remain a critical issue, and we believe historical approaches that focus on expense control incrementally or independent of business strategies will become counterproductive coun·ter·pro·duc·tive adj. Tending to hinder rather than serve one's purpose: "Violation of the court order would be counterproductive" Philip H. Lee. ," said Gohsler. "Expense control must be addressed from within the constraints of each operating model Operating Model is a term that is used in many contexts. In essence an operating model describes how an organization operates across both business and technology domains. The Operating Model describes what is important for the organization. . The new competitive landscape leaves little margin for error." In the fragmented techno techno electronic dance music that first appeared in the U.S. in the 1980s and became globally popular in the 1990s. It originated with Detroit deejay-producers who, inspired by European electro-pop, underlaid dreamy synthesizer melodies with rapid electronic rhythms. - marketplace, focus will become much more important than scale. As market niches proliferate pro·lif·er·ate v. To grow or multiply by rapidly producing new tissue, parts, cells, or offspring. exponentially ex·po·nen·tial adj. 1. Of or relating to an exponent. 2. Mathematics a. Containing, involving, or expressed as an exponent. b. , the size of these markets will become increasingly smaller and insurers will need to do more with less. Companies that can serve multiple niches, particularly in personal lines, are expected to thrive. The Conning study, "Property - Casualty Expense Management: Chipping at the Wrong Block in a Fragmenting Market," is available from Conning & Company for $575 by calling toll free (888) 707-1177 or (860) 520-1245 or can be purchased through the company's web site at www.conning.com. A complete listing of all Conning Strategic Studies can also be found by visiting the site. About Conning & Company Conning & Company is a subsidiary of Conning Corporation. Conning Corporation, through its subsidiaries, provides asset management services to insurance companies, manages private equity funds investing in insurance and insurance-related companies, and conducts in-depth research on the insurance industry. Conning & Company is located at CityPlace II, 185 Asylum asylum (əsī`ləm), extension of hospitality and protection to a fugitive and the place where such protection is offered. The use of temples and churches for this purpose in ancient and medieval times was known as sanctuary. Street, Hartford, CT 06103. |
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