IRMI Update—Issue #154

An E-mail Newsletter for Risk and Insurance Professionals
ISSN: 1530-7948
February 7, 2007

In This Issue

Message from the Editor

Colleague,

It is common for even long-time IRMI customers to have a misunderstanding as to how IRMI develops and maintains the vast reference library it makes available to insurance and risk management professionals (25,000-plus pages of analysis, not counting sample policy forms). Since I'm frequently asked about this, I thought it would be worthwhile to spend an issue of IRMI Update explaining how we approach this important task.

About 80 percent of what we publish is researched and compiled or written by the IRMI research team. At 10 research analysts, this team is the largest in the U.S. property casualty insurance and risk management reference publishing field. It is also probably the most experienced team, having spent a combined 277 years working as underwriters, risk managers, consultants, agents, brokers, attorneys, and, of course, risk and insurance researchers. As you would guess, the team's educational accomplishments are also impressive. Collectively, the IRMI research team holds 10 undergraduate college degrees, 8 graduate level degrees, and 32 CPCU and other industry designations. Additionally, the team members have received many accolades, honors, and awards.

The other 20 percent or so of our publications are written by experienced and often well-known industry practitioners. We carefully select our contributors based on their unique expertise and communication ability. Then we work with them to provide the high quality information that you've come to expect from IRMI.

I am very proud of this internal and external team, and am continually wowed by the quality and quantity of the high-caliber, cutting-edge work these folks produce. When you subscribe to IRMI publications (whether in print, IRMI Online, or SilverPlume Sage), you are putting the very best research team available to work for your organization. Nowhere else will you find the breadth and depth of risk and insurance information as that available in the IRMI library, and using it gives you a competitive advantage that no other publisher can provide.

If you would like to learn more about the IRMI research team, you can review their biographies on IRMI.com.

Additionally, if you are interested in joining our team in Dallas, we have an opportunity for someone with 3–7 years of experience in personal lines insurance. Learn more about this position here.

Thank you for subscribing to IRMI Update. Have a great day.

Jack

Jack P. Gibson, CPCU, CRIS, ARM
President
IRMI

Risk Tip

Converting Insurance Broker to a Fee—In the wake of high level investigations by insurance regulators into broker compensation, many risk managers have demanded not only full disclosure of all compensation to the broker, but also conversion of compensation arrangements to "fee for services."

This has benefits for both parties, if handled properly and within an atmosphere of "full disclosure." Of course the full disclosure philosophy should also apply to the relationship between the insurance company underwriter and the placing broker. A reality of this relationship is that an underwriter will often reduce the amount of quoted premium by the amount of commission otherwise payable. However, in the real world, this reduction is sometimes not made when the underwriter knows that the broker is compensated on a fee arrangement prior to releasing the quote.

Therefore, it can benefit both the risk manager and the broker if the underwriter is told that the broker is being fee compensated after the underwriter releases the quotation for the insurance in question, rather than before. This disclosure and request for an appropriate offset of premium after the quote is received maintains a relationship of "utmost good faith," and removes any temptation that some underwriters may have to omit the reduction from their quotes. The bottom line is that it may provide a significant financial benefit to the buyer if the complete disclosure is made after the quote is released rather than before.

By: Richard Clarke, CPCU, CIC, RPLU
Senior VP and Corporate Resource
J. Smith Lanier & Co.
Atlanta
dclarke@jsmithlanier.com

Suggest a Risk Tip. Send us a practical tip (less than 300 words) for identifying and managing risks, buying insurance, managing claims, or filling gaps in insurance coverages. Submit your tips. We'll acknowledge your contribution as we did for Dick.

What's New in Your IRMI Library

We have recently updated a number of the reference manuals in the IRMI library and published new issues of The Risk Report and Captive Insurance Company Reports. To make sure you don't miss any of this new information take 30 seconds to scan the "What's New" summary page.

For IRMI Online and Print subscribers

For SilverPlume Sage subscribers

New Expert Commentary

There are now over 800 risk management and insurance articles on IRMI.com. Below you'll find summaries of some recent additions with links to the articles.

New Online Version of the Classification Cross-Reference

Always popular because it saves huge amounts of time when selecting or verifying the correct classification codes, this powerful reference has been upgraded on IRMI Online. Now it is even more user-friendly because it allows you to sort, search, and scan the codes in almost any manner you need. You must see this incredible reference. Subscribers, check it out today or request a demo by calling Client Services at (800) 827-4242. Learn more here.

Your View—Improving Service

In IRMI Update 153, Jack Gibson related Joe Plumeri's keynote speech, given at the 26th IRMI Construction Risk Conference, urging the industry to change its seemingly lackadaisical approach to policy issuance and claims service. In response, readers provided their thoughts on the problem and possible solutions, some of which are reprinted below.

  • This past renewal, we received all of our primary and excess casualty policies within 90 days of renewal. This is attributable to the efforts of our broker, our department, and the creation, by our department, of a prompt policy delivery award. Underwriters do compete to receive the award. Next year our stated goal is to receive all casualty policies within 60 days.

    —Mark Ryan, Director—Casualty Insurance, Occidental Petroleum Corporation, Dallas

  • Here is the "Policy Delivery Incentive" in our current broker service agreement. This is the first year we tried it. I am not expecting much, but one must start somewhere.

    • For each policy for which [broker] negotiates a "99%:1% Premium Payment," [client] will pay [broker] a $500 Policy Delivery Incentive Bonus. A "99%:1% Premium Payment" is where [client] pays 99% of the quoted premium, or the quoted premium minus $1,000, whichever is less, within the insurer's normal payment period and the other 1% or $1,000, whichever is greater, only if [broker] receives a reasonably acceptable policy from the insurer within 45 calendar days of the policy inception date. Policy Delivery Incentive Bonuses payable by [client] will be billed as line items on the Quarterly Installments of the Base Fee.

    Evaluating an insurer's claim payment philosophy and claim administration competence is mainly subjective. It must be a formal component of each insurance purchase decision, with the results compared to the price differences among insurers.

    —Greg Dodd, Risk Manager, Perot Systems Corporation, Plano, TX

  • I cannot respond to the claims side but find the carriers are really much better at issuing policies than they used to be. Most of the policies arrive at the agent’s or broker’s office quickly. The hang up is having staff review the policies and getting them out to the insureds. Agency and broker staffs are trying to take care of marketing new and renewal business and handling the day-to-day needs of their insureds, so checking policies often gets put on the back burner. It has been this way since I started in the business 25 years ago.

    —Nikki Grimes, Quality Control Manager, Allied North America, Fremont, CA

  • Please continue to put the press on the insurance community about the shabby work product policy issuance has become. It's an embarrassment.

    In Issue #67, in response to your customer service inquiry, I voiced my opinion about the "unintended (?)" consequences of delayed policy delivery and the 80/20 rule that might work to the benefit of insurers; and my disbelief that the efforts of conscientious underwriters, brokers, and insurance buyers are undermined by sloppy insurance company practices. Perhaps insurance commissioners need to enforce their binder extension regulations and crack down on claims practices.

    I don't think it is productive or fair to put the squeeze on the brokers for timely policy issuance or use them as whipping boys for a situation that is out of their control. Agents may be a different story. All brokers (including the nationals) I have dealt with are frustrated with the dead air that follows binder issuance and premium collection. They are well aware of their fiduciary duty to their clients, their professional responsibilities, and the E&O exposure that brews if they don't follow up and through.

    With the current data base technology and easy exchange of electronic files in Word and Excel spreadsheets, wouldn't you think that once a risk has been quoted the agreed upon named insureds, additional insureds, location schedule, policy forms and coverage enhancements would be a click away from a local laser printer? I even suspect that the hassles of verification of additional insureds and their notification of policy cancellation would be remedied by a data base registration under the policy number. Judging by the typos and disregard for the negotiated coverage terms and conditions that are delivered as the policy, I can't help but wonder if the hard copy specs and quotes aren't sent off to some policy typing drone to figure out.

    The question then is why are insurance companies not using technology to provide service? The capability is out there. Business savvy and forward thinking IT professionals who engage in designing Service Oriented Architecture can make it happen. It is evident that insurance companies are using technology—but in support of objectives other than customer service.

    How can we make insurance companies explain themselves on this issue? The silence is deafening.

    —Robin Foorman, CPCU, ARM, Consultant, Walnut Creek, CA

  • Plumeri's keynote speech at the IRMI Construction Risk Conference is right on target! Thank you for mentioning the industrywide inefficiencies. I recently read in an insurance publication (The Leaders Edge) that technology is at the bottom of both broker's and insurers priorities.

    We are in an industry that works for technology and does not make technology work for it. No wonder margins are shrinking, and the cost-saving tactic of "more with less" is at the expense of service to the client and creating an overstressed, overextended workforce.

    And you are right, if you don't make the timing of policy delivery, claim management, and claim payment (as well as many other services that are more than expected in other service industries) a part of a service plan up-front, and a part of the carrier choice/negotiation, it's all up in the air and not a priority.

    Your editor's letter spoke to me this morning when I read it. Thank you.

    —Bailey J. Siegfried, Gallagher

  • Great comments on Joe Plumeri. I answered your question in October 2005 in my "Expert Commentary" on quality in insurance. See Deming's Point #7 in which I quote Joe and how his comments coincide with Dr. Edwards Deming's philosophy.

    As you'll recall, the Quality Insurance Congress had its beginnings at Willis—until Hank Greenberg and a few others withheld financial support for QIC and RIMS's Quality Scorecard (that gave AIG a grade of "F," as I recall). Mr. Plumeri personifies Deming's Point #7—"Adopt and Institute Leadership." The other Deming points in my IRMI series expand on his (Deming's) answer to your excellent question.

    If CEOs were to review the Institutes' (American Institute for CPCU/Insurance Institute of America) program in quality (AIS-25)—and then make it "required reading" for all within their organization, the kind of transformation Joe is characterizing could occur. Many of these CEOs serve with me on the board of trustees of the Institutes, and I challenge each to do so (i.e., make AIS-25 required reading), if they haven't done so already (some have!). Thanks for raising this truly important question.

    —John Pryor, CPCU, ARM, John Pryor Insurance Consulting, Inc., Bakersfield, CA

  • Having experienced the frustration of delinquent policy issuance for many years, especially as it relates to surplus lines carriers, we devised a system that actually worked. Before submitting a bind order, and in concert with the formal written order, we confirmed in advance that there would be no premium payment until the policy was in hand.

    Granted this is a bit heavy handed, but a well-deserved long time in coming conclusion that would be the case in any other legitimate business. After all, we retailers are typically requesting similar documents time after time that include a dec sheet, terms, endorsements, conditions, limitations and exclusions, each being quasi-similar to what the insurer[s] issued on the policy right before yours!

    Furthermore, in this age of electronics, the excuse for not issuing a policy within 15 days of binding is all the more hollow. If it is something that we are not doing or supplying, then by all means, let us all know what that might be and we will accept full responsibility. As respects the accuracy of the issuance, it is safe to say that the majority of policies are in need of some attention so that what we as the retailer ordered is, in fact, in compliance with the order.

    This brings me to another point....the role of the wholesaler. Are wholesalers primarily marketing conduits or do they offer quality services such as policy checking, and coverage negotiations that may even exceed that which the retailer has requested?

    Ours is an industry in dire need of reform in these critical path areas. Using the tool of premium withholding until you at least have the policy in hand may seem as if we are holding the insurer[s] hostage, but what other nonpolitical pressure can we apply as an industry? I'm all ears.

    —Greg Econn, President, Guaranty California Insurance Services, Los Angeles

  • Jack, this issue has been discussed for as long as I have been in the business, 24 years. I really see two issues with this. The first regarding use of technology to speed the process is correct. For the second, we have to look in the mirror. We as brokers and insurance buyers have been trained and teach that pushing the process to the end is the best way to get the best price. How can we expect policy delivery when we bind then negotiate and bind the placement a day or two before binding. This is the same reason our industry has the reputation it does. My guess is that if we were more open to managing time, process and treating all markets, agents, brokers, and clients fairly and with respect, that this industry may change. The reality is that the majority of the industry is driven by getting the deal at all costs.

    —John Ratelle, Sr. Vice President, Oswald Companies, Minneapolis

  • RIMS has developed an interactive tool, under the Quality Improvement Process, to assist in evaluating the relationship with service providers. One of the measures of the interaction between both the broker and underwriter is timely delivery of the policy. Not only can you outline your expectations, but you can then use the tool to score how the service provider performed.

    —David Riggs, Insurance Specialist, Asplundh Tree Expert Co., Willow Grove, PA

  • When it comes to my opinion, "you are preaching to the choir." Anybody that has talked to me very long about this knows how it will get me on my soapbox. After 35 years in this business, with part of it on the company side as a commercial underwriter, I have consistently preached that we (mainly insurance companies) spend way too much on underwriter and other acquisition costs and not near enough on claims handling, service, etc. I am sure I make a few people angry when I tell people that if I walked into an insurance company office and had to pick a group of people I wanted to work for me that were trained in insurance, most of my team would come out of the underwriting side. This is not really a knock on the claims people but a knock on the companies in that they do not spend as much time or money in training of the claims folks ... who are the people with the company checkbook. I could go on and on, but I will get off my soapbox.

    —Jim Sammons, Producer, Watkins Insurance Group, Austin, TX

  • Your Editor's Message was a wonderful "call to arms." I am a former claims adjuster, underwriter, and now broker, and I totally agreed with Joe's somewhat "spirited" comments about our industry. I look forward to reviewing any and all feedback you get from insurance buyers and others in the industry on this fundamental issue. Thank you.

    —Patrick Kennedy, Vice President Sales, Kraus-Anderson Insurance, Minneapolis

  • Delayed policy issuance, and delayed claims payments, are the insurance industry's dirty little secret. You go to a McDonalds, order a Big Mac, fries, and a shake, you expect to pick-up your meal pretty much right away. You shop at a Wal-Mart store, Target, or at K-Mart, you also expect to take your purchases home with you. However, you spend $500,000 on a builders risk policy and maybe, just maybe, it might get issued in the next 6 months; and that's not to say it will arrive as ordered. Is this right? Are these good industry or for that fact good business practices? Or has the industry just deteriorated over time?

    Part of the answer is that we have allowed this to happen.—all of us. Go ahead and blame poor profitability, 9/11, and Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, but otherwise bright, earnest, and well-compensated people have ignored the fact that there is a retail customer, that we are selling something, and that the brand, yes, the brand called insurance has become tarnished. Allow me an example.

    Direct-writing personal lines automobile insurers must have sat in a room somewhere and figured out that if they just delivered what customers wanted, note I did not say exceeded expectations, they could—and did—increase market share. They understand that insurance is a brand, just like detergents, automobiles, and carbonated soda. They figured out how to call attention to themselves, and how to make purchasing insurance easy. And in the same room they realized that prompt and fair claims payments also increase brand value.

    Anyone who is in charge of operations at a major [independent agency system] insurer should be ashamed of themselves for allowing this to happen. Besides the fact that you deselected the industry as the choice of top college graduates, you also ruined the party for the rest of us on the front lines having to deal with ever more demanding personal and commercial clients.

    When you start to focus on insurance as a brand, you begin to put the customer back into the picture. When was the last time you saw insurance and "best practices" profiled in Fortune, Business Week, or any other business publications, or been a case study at the Harvard Business School? The point is that there was no one "big thing" to blame, and that it was nothing more poor management practices in slow motion.

    Like chronic alcoholics, we need to get beyond the denial stage, get focused on the fact that we are in the business of creating positive feelings, and find ways of uncomplicating our complicated business practices. Think about this. Not too long ago, one of the daily national business newspapers asked a discount airline executive what kind of business they were in. He replied that they were in the customer satisfaction business and just happened to be an airline. Right now our business model is just pissing people off. Somehow we have to recognize that there is a customer in the insurance purchasing process, and to quote the late advertising executive David Ogilvy, in the best organizations, promises are always kept. Right now we are breaking more promises than we are keeping.

    —E. Bernard McGlynn, Jr., Director - Claims & Surety Services, Lewis-Chester Associates, Inc., Summit, NJ

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