An industry that’s changing particularly quickly is life insurance, where participants are seeing a major increase in demand from consumers. There are clear parallels with what happened just over a century ago when the Spanish Flu pandemic hit us.
There (was) a clear surge in life insurance sales in 1919 and 1920, particularly for ordinary insurance. Insurance executives… (reported that) 1919 was a banner year for selling life insurance and largely credit the epidemic for it… a survey of 32 life insurance companies operating in the state of Connecticut showed a 79% increase in life insurance written in the first six months of 1919, relative to the first six months of 1918.
As in 1919, the current pandemic has caused people to re-evaluate their lives. Confronted by an onslaught of graphic images of overcrowded ICU wards, they suddenly see death as something real and life cover for themselves and their families as necessary.
Demand for life insurance has surged as a result - this pandemic is going to trigger a life insurance disruption that will go far beyond just an increase in demand. The Covid-19 disruption will drive rapid, profound digital transformation of the industry, and fundamental changes in the way life insurers, brokers and customers engage through the value chain.
Up until February, insurtech was “selling policies online”, now it’s “using technology to make your business and your value proposition better, faster and more cost effective”.
It’s taken a massive global pandemic to force the life industry out of its comfort zone and into a new digital normal.
Lockdowns, social distancing regulations and the fear of contracting the virus have forced people to engage remotely. And not just in the sales process.
All functions have shifted online overnight. The transition hasn’t been perfect. There’s lots of sticky tape holding things together. And some businesses have been left behind. But, there’s no going back. Things will get more digital from here, not less.
So, traditional life players have a choice — adapt and thrive or don’t and become a Darwinian statistic. Demand is not gone.
If anything, it’s increased. But call centres can’t operate like they did — at least not for now. And customers don’t want to meet face to face, enter clinics or go for blood tests. They want reliable, no touch life cover, right now and at a reasonable cost.
We're not going to feel massive pain over the next 12 to 18 months as a result of Covid-19. We are. We’re also going to see some businesses — those that are well-suited to the new normal and others that can reinvent themselves — do better than they ever have.
This will likely be more true for life insurance than any other industry.
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