Secrets to successful commercial segmentation: commercial insurers are beginning to develop customized predictive risk models, operationalize the models and harvest the business benefits.When James Watson and Francis Crick Noun 1. Francis Crick - English biochemist who (with Watson in 1953) helped discover the helical structure of DNA (1916-2004) Francis Henry Compton Crick, Crick discovered that differing sequences of amino acids amino acid (əmē`nō), any one of a class of simple organic compounds containing carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and in certain cases sulfur. These compounds are the building blocks of proteins. create the DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. molecule and hence the basis that all life is built upon, science had effectively unraveled what makes each organism unique. Similarly, since insurance was first sold, underwriters have searched for the perfect combination of information that would help them segment the good from the bad risk and then help price such risks commensurately com·men·su·rate adj. 1. Of the same size, extent, or duration as another. 2. Corresponding in size or degree; proportionate: a salary commensurate with my performance. 3. . Predictive models based on consumer credit data and other relevant data have been proven to provide significant risk segmentation for personal lines carriers. For small to midsized commercial insurance, however, the development of predictive models has been more challenging. Disparate product and data standards, heterogeneous policyholders, significantly varying premium sizes, multiple technology platforms, slow computing power and business inertia inertia (ĭnûr`shə), in physics, the resistance of a body to any alteration in its state of motion, i.e., the resistance of a body at rest to being set in motion or of a body in motion to any change of speed or change in direction of have made the progression of predictive modeling for commercial insurance less rapid--until now. Over the past seven years, innovative insurers and professional service firms have worked hard to develop predictive models for commercial lines insurance. This progress has provided early adopters with the ability to select, manage and price risks better for a variety of products including business owners policies, commercial package, commercial automobile, general liability, commercial property, workers' compensation workers' compensation, payment by employers for some part of the cost of injuries, or in some cases of occupational diseases, received by employees in the course of their work. , umbrella, errors and omissions errors and omissions n. short-hand for malpractice insurance which gives physicians, attorneys, architects, accountants and other professionals coverage for claims by patients and clients for alleged professional errors and omissions which amount to negligence. , directors and officers, employment practices liability and medical malpractice Improper, unskilled, or negligent treatment of a patient by a physician, dentist, nurse, pharmacist, or other health care professional. . By coupling advances in high speed computing, actuarial ac·tu·ar·y n. pl. ac·tu·ar·ies A statistician who computes insurance risks and premiums. [Latin and statistical modeling methods and new industry intellectual capital, leading companies have made significant advances in better risk segmentation and portfolio management by using predictive models. They knew it was essential to uncover not only the best combination of risk characteristics but also the ideal weighting of each risk characteristic relative to the others. Furthermore, they thought that these insights needed to be derived with a well defined statistical and actuarial rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity. rigor mor´tis the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers. so that the results were usable, repeatable and executable. To do so would provide underwriters with a powerful new 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. tool to more accurately price each and every risk in varying market conditions. In fact, they knew that segmentation was the name of the game and they wanted to be an early entrant en·trant n. One that enters, especially one that enters a competition. [French, from present participle of entrer, to enter, from Old French; see enter. to gain a competitive advantage. This ability is particularly important now because the consensus is that the rates of the hard market of the early 2000s are gradually but decisively moving downward. The market is softening. Companies want to grow their market share, their premium base and their product diversification. Some say that a perfect storm is brewing for the return of the irrational soft market of the 1990s. Leading companies know that if you can price more accurately than your competition (not necessarily price more aggressively), you will always be better off, despite market cycles. Models on the Move Previously in personal lines, with the use of credit-based predictive models, early adopters outperformed the competition. But over time, the majority of personal lines companies took advantage of the models. Numerous mistakes were made, including creating the concept as an industrywide in·dus·try·wide adv. & adj. Throughout an entire industry: sales that have decreased industrywide; industrywide cooperation. black box, but those who implemented the models most effectively were able to emerge from the pack. Today such credit-based predictive models are table stakes In poker, table stakes refers to the maximum a player can bet and possibly lose during the course of a single hand. It is the money he or she has on the table at the beginning of that hand. , and the generic industry models that are widely used provide little competitive advantage except for two potential key differentiators--effective business implementation and the company's commitment to continue to innovate in·no·vate v. in·no·vat·ed, in·no·vat·ing, in·no·vates v.tr. To begin or introduce (something new) for or as if for the first time. v.intr. To begin or introduce something new. . The early adopters of the technology were able to remix re·mix tr.v. re·mixed, re·mix·ing, re·mix·es To recombine (audio tracks or channels from a recording) to produce a new or modified audio recording: their portfolio of risks and improve the quality of the book of business. Once optimized, the benefits of this action are recurring re·cur intr.v. re·curred, re·cur·ring, re·curs 1. To happen, come up, or show up again or repeatedly. 2. To return to one's attention or memory. 3. To return in thought or discourse. and compounding--the improvement of a book of business continues to produce financial benefits as the good risk outweighs the bad risk. The race has begun in commercial lines with approximately 30% of small commercial premium being scored by predictive models today. The competitive landscape is becoming broad and varied with a mixture of national companies, super-regionals and regionals as the early adopters. The smaller companies have been able to move faster, implement the models more effectively and bring their underwriters and agency forces on board more quickly with these new underwriting tools. Here, being small and nimble nim·ble adj. nim·bler, nim·blest 1. Quick, light, or agile in movement or action; deft: nimble fingers. See Synonyms at dexterous. 2. has been an advantage. There are clearly the market leaders who not only have been able to develop customized models (leverage their data) but who also have excelled at implementation both on their technology platforms and, more importantly, within their underwriting selection, pricing and work flow processes. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently , these market leaders have learned how to operationalize the models and harvest the business benefits. Leading companies are using models to help achieve a significant reduction in their loss and expense ratios through right pricing and higher levels of automated renewal processing. Steps to Success The companies who have begun to travel this path, and are excelling on it, have concluded that developing customized models (using a combination of internal, external and synthetic data) would allow them the best opportunity to reflect the uniqueness of their book of business and distribution system. They have concluded that generic industry models provide little competitive advantage and that the initial step is usually a very challenging process because, historically, data quality and integrity were not considered to be high priority. However, going through this process has enlightened many companies to conclude that their own data may be their largest off-the-balance sheet asset. Applying the appropriate actuarial rigor and choosing the right statistical approach are the next key steps. Companies have found that this step goes far beyond actuaries choosing a modeling software package and curling curling, winter sport, similar in principle to bowls and quoits (see horseshoe pitching), played on an ice court by teams of four. Each player hurls a squat, circular stone—weighing 38 lb (17. up next to the fireplace with their statistical books. It requires years of experience, a deep understanding of the industry, and a realization that the findings must be actionable by the business units. Those companies who approach predictive modeling solely as a technical or actuarial exercise typically do not succeed. Experience has shown there are three drivers for business success--implementation, implementation and implementation. The implementation of predictive models is not about scoring; rather, it is about how scores, the interpretation and explanation of the scores, and the associated business rules can be deployed to help drive key business decisions. (See "How to Realize the Business Benefits of Predictive Modeling" on page 86.) Companies who view predictive modeling as a business initiative are able to better define a set of business applications that are enabled by predictive modeling and realize a significant business benefit. In fact, companies typically realize a benefit that represents a five-to-10-times rate of return on their initial investment. Typical applications that companies focus on initially are shown in "Applying Modeling Results" on page 87. Make It Actionable The critical success factor for deploying the models is that the key business decisions must be actionable, defensible de·fen·si·ble adj. Capable of being defended, protected, or justified: defensible arguments. de·fen and measurable, and individuals must be accountable for producing the intended business benefit described above. Successful companies focus on developing a "decile decile one of the groups when a series of ranked data is divided into ten equal parts, or dividing points between such groups. See also quartile. management" approach that links business actions to the indications that are produced by the predictive model. Decile management involves dividing risks into rank-ordered buckets where each bucket represents 10% of risks and then based on the positional ranking and profitability of each decile (bucket), business actions can be assigned to each decile. In other words, individual risk decisions with respect to non-renewal, renewal retention, and pricing are tailored based upon the loss ratio estimation for the subsequent policy term. This is the approach companies use to realize the significant business value that is enabled through the use of predictive models. Effectively developing and implementing predictive models into a commercial insurance business requires a significant investment of time, money, human capital and intellectual property. The latter is an important consideration because the process to create and leverage models is unique for each company. Beyond Decile Management As models for individual lines of business are deployed, companies have learned a number of other considerations could help to produce an evolutionary change in business processes. Initially the focus is learning where the predictive modeling footprint could be expanded in a manner consistent with the company's underwriting philosophy and culture. The process begins with account underwriting and extends to service, expanding pricing detail and determining the key performance measures to validate that the organization is achieving the desired results. Companies ask themselves a number of questions to better understand the options that might be available. For example: * What will be the account vs. line of business strategy as respects as regards; with regard to; as to. See also: Respect profitability? In other words, will each line of business stand on its own or will line subsidiaries be allowed based on the total account profitability? * Will there be different levels of service provided in areas such as billing, loss control, audit, claims and customer service based upon the decile ranking Decile rank Performance over time, rated on a scale of 1-10. 1 indicates that a mutual fund's return is in the top 10% of funds being compared; while 3 means the return is in the top 30%. ? * Since predictive models enable more detailed pricing for the individual risk, will an expansion of pricing tiers be a likely outcome? * What are the performance metrics Performance metrics are measures of an organizations activities and performance. Performance metrics should support a range of stakeholder needs from customers, shareholders to employees [1]. that can be measured by decile and who in the organization will be accountable for the specific actions? Finally, the last step is to develop a commitment to search for new data sources and risk characteristics so the company can extend its competitive advantage through predictive models. The Next Generation Up to this point, companies have taken a very tactical approach to the use of predictive models with sound business reasons for doing so. Now the early adopters are posing the question: How can I leverage my investment in predictive models to gain a strategic advantage over my competitors? Some companies have expanded the use of predictive models from a product to a client view. Others have used models only to help underwrite To insure; to sell an issue of stocks and bonds or to guarantee the purchase of unsold stocks and bonds after a public issue. The word underwrite has two meanings. the midsize commercial risk, but they also have been used to enter new markets and new products. How the models are implemented might change but they have been deployed very effectively by several companies. They have expanded their underwriting appetite, and now they are poised to grow profitably during a soft pricing cycle. During the next few years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time winning strategy will be to link predictive models with supporting technology to bring insurance company functionality to the point of sale, independent of the channel of distribution. This means that companies will be able to price, underwrite and complete the entire policy transaction in real time using predictive models and download the completed transaction at the point of sale. For small commercial business, the company that can implement this strategy will likely gain significant market share and achieve a level of profitable growth that outpaces its competitors. Key Points * Implementation of predictive models is about how scores, the interpretation of the scores and the associated business rules can be deployed to help drive key business decisions. * The critical success factor for deploying the models is that the key business decisions must be actionable, defensible and measurable. * Successful companies develop a "decile management" approach that links business actions to the indications that are produced by the predictive model. Contributors: Rebecca Amoroso Am`o`ro´so n. 1. A lover; a man enamored. adv. 1. (Mus.) In a soft, tender, amatory style. and John Lucker are principals at Deloitte Consulting LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol ; James Marino is director, Deloitte Services LLP, and Frank Zizzamia is director, Deloitte Consulting LLP. They can be reached at jmarino@deloitte.com.
Applying Modeling Results
Successful companies define a set of business applications in which
modeling results can be used. Typical targets and expected results are
shown below.
Business Applications Expected Results
Target Non-Renewals Loss Ratio Savings--4 point
* Automatic cancel worst-of-the-worst minimum
Renewal Pricing Expense Ratio Savings--2
* More accurate pricing upon renewal point minimum
* Improve retention
* Fine-tuning pricing to influence
retention
* Customer service retention programs
New Business Growth Automated Renewals--90%
* Apply new insights to target the best
business
Automate Underwriting Process Profitable Growth--Better
* Enhance underwriting efficiencies than the industry
* Disciplined and consistent approach
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion