Small and medium enterprises (SME), or businesses, make up the majority of businesses across the globe. 99% of businesses employ fewer than 500 people. However, SME businesses are critically underserved. There have been limited improvements in SME insurance offerings over the past decade, as insurers have fallen behind other industries in terms of customer-centricity, speed of innovation and use of data. As a result, there is a real opportunity to deliver a next-generation experience for customers and underwriters.
Why is it so hard to serve SMEs, and what can insurers do to capture more of the market?
The SME insurance market represents an $11 billion opportunity for insurers—but the market is complex, with varying business sizes across industries like construction, retail, health, transportation and manufacturing, among others. However, SMEs remain underserved, while their business models and appetite for coverage have been evolving rapidly.
The small and medium enterprise market remains underinsured and underserved
Lines between traditional insurers, brokers and agents have blurred as digital self-service increasingly becomes a customer expectation and standard. This opens the door for insurers to capture the vast SME audience by improving customer service—and by providing an experience that customers are used to seeing in other industries they interact with every day. In contrast, insurers haven’t kept pace when it comes to digital transformation; they have lost track of the changing nature of SMEs, their business focus and their level of business savviness. There have been limited improvements in SME insurance offerings, with some emerging niche coverage players. Players like Simply Business are gaining share with a ruthless focus on operational and UW efficiency. The technology and data landscape has moved on, making it significantly easier to build data-centric, personalized experiences; however, few incumbents are taking full advantage today.
The next-gen SME insurer needs to build out an integrated end-to-end approach, with consistent experiences and capabilities across customer engagement, product, underwriting and services to capture trade-specific propositions and unlock customer value. There are seven key dimensions to consider as part of this journey:
With the latest digital technology and data solutions, insurers have the opportunity to build much greater levels of personalization, potentially augmented by conversational AI, to build engagement with micro-SMEs that surpasses those experiences currently provided by either brokers or insurers. The data solutions available allow for far greater contextualization and less generic input from the end business owner, thus demonstrating that insurers understand their business and their needs.
Within SME insurance, it is essential that the different capabilities across marketing (for direct), product, underwriting, digital and data work effectively together to continuously refine capabilities and offerings. In this way, insurers can continue to tackle new trade segments, expand their underwriting footprint, use new data sources and increase automation of new pricing and underwriting on the fringes of where they are operating today.
Insurers can collect, process and utilize large amounts of data, both internally and through third-party vendors. This data includes things like customer risk profiles, telematics and location analytics, among others. But it’s become incredibly difficult to process and keep pace with the speed at which this data becomes available, resulting in massive amounts of data being captured but not utilized. Putting data at the core is a critical step as insurers find the best ways to automate manual processes for underwriting, claims processing and analytics. New data sources and technologies are offering the opportunity to be increasingly informed and personalized (e.g., real-time integration of SME customer data, digitization of risk processing, etc.).
There’s a considerable gap between the amount of insurance that could have been purchased by end users and the insurance that is actually bought. According to Swiss Re Institute, this protection gap amounts to $1.2 trillion dollars—and closing this gap is a $60-80 billion-dollar opportunity per year for the insurance industry. Embedded insurance is an opportunity to bridge the gap. End users are looking for a more personalized and accessible experience—if they are made aware of insurance products right at the time they need them (for example, when purchasing a car), they will be more likely to buy. Additionally, embedded insurance allows insurers to capture new markets that want to add to their policies.
With the latest digital technology and data solutions, insurers have the opportunity to build much greater levels of personalization, potentially augmented by conversational AI, to build engagement with micro-SMEs that surpasses those experiences currently provided by either brokers or insurers. The data solutions available allow for far greater contextualization and less generic input from the end business owner, thus demonstrating that insurers understand their business and their needs.
Within SME insurance, it is essential that the different capabilities across marketing (for direct), product, underwriting, digital and data work effectively together to continuously refine capabilities and offerings. In this way, insurers can continue to tackle new trade segments, expand their underwriting footprint, use new data sources and increase automation of new pricing and underwriting on the fringes of where they are operating today.
Insurers can collect, process and utilize large amounts of data, both internally and through third-party vendors. This data includes things like customer risk profiles, telematics and location analytics, among others. But it’s become incredibly difficult to process and keep pace with the speed at which this data becomes available, resulting in massive amounts of data being captured but not utilized. Putting data at the core is a critical step as insurers find the best ways to automate manual processes for underwriting, claims processing and analytics. New data sources and technologies are offering the opportunity to be increasingly informed and personalized (e.g., real-time integration of SME customer data, digitization of risk processing, etc.).
There’s a considerable gap between the amount of insurance that could have been purchased by end users and the insurance that is actually bought. According to Swiss Re Institute, this protection gap amounts to $1.2 trillion dollars—and closing this gap is a $60-80 billion-dollar opportunity per year for the insurance industry. Embedded insurance is an opportunity to bridge the gap. End users are looking for a more personalized and accessible experience—if they are made aware of insurance products right at the time they need them (for example, when purchasing a car), they will be more likely to buy. Additionally, embedded insurance allows insurers to capture new markets that want to add to their policies.
All of this is easy to say, but organizations really struggle with understanding the right strategy, the pace of change and execution, interlocking technology and data availability to deliver value effectively. We see different pathways and considerations for insurers based on their existing maturity and diversity of distribution. Some example questions that insurers should be asking about how to deliver across capabilities and pathways:
Publicis Sapient has proven approaches and frameworks to rapidly define strategy and build out proofs-of-concept with our SPEED capabilities to validate propositions and pathways to build scale.
Daniel Cole Senior Managing Director, EMEA & APAC Let's connect
Andrew Tan Principal, Financial Services, UK Let's connect
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