Insurers are increasingly interested in developing more consumer-centric products and processes and enabling more flexible underwriting decisions. This effort achieves the twin aims of increasing sales opportunities and extending insurance to previously unrepresented and underrepresented populations.
This article details three approaches that have made insurance accessible to more people: digitalizing the insurance pipeline; developing products for specific populations; and shifting from exclusions to loading during underwriting.
Digitalization of the insurance pipeline
Digitalization automates repetitive tasks, speeds data analytics and discovery, and strengthens online product offerings. The industry’s embrace of digitalization has expanded the services and products available to customers.
In addition, the emergence of technology like OCR (optical character recognition), which converts an image of text into a machine-readable text format, has streamlined the underwriting process for insurance products. With OCR, users scan paper documents, photos, or PDFs. Then, the OCR software identifies text and processes the information to pinpoint alphabetic letters and numeric digits. The text is further transformed by Natural Language Processing (NLP), another machine learning tool that processes human language. In an insurance underwriting context, NLP identifies key information in medical reports, such as lab test results, vital signs, prescriptions, and physician statements.
An OCR-enabled underwriting tool enables more granular risk assessment by assessing complex multivariate information in various combinations within the trained model. This helps insurers provide more inclusive underwriting to applicants who, under traditional underwriting, may have been not accepted.
Product development
One of the most direct pathways for expanding insurance options for previously underserved populations is to create specialized products that respond to the needs and challenges faced by a specific group.
For example, a decade ago, insurers in South Korea identified surging demand for the protection of impaired lives. They responded by leveraging simplified issue (SI) products, which provided a new source of effective and economically feasible insurance coverage.
SI usually features only three core questions that can be answered simply for quick review and approval, reducing the time and effort required and increasing customers’ ability to obtain coverage.
SI offerings have evolved quickly in Korea over that time, becoming the gold standard in providing protection for impaired lives and enabling the Korean life insurance market to overcome what had been a significant obstacle to business growth.
Today, China faces challenges similar to those once faced in South Korea. Among the aging population in China, the proportion of impaired lives – people with diabetes, hypertension, or other chronic diseases – who can obtain insurance coverage remains low, creating a significant coverage gap.
In 2022, RGA partnered with a leading insurer in China to launch that market’s first SI critical illness (CI) product. Teams from RGA and the insurer worked together closely for four months to transplant this originally Korean concept, adapting the underwriting approach and product design specifically to the Chinese market. The result is a truly innovative product that retains the essential risk protection of traditional CI products while bringing greater access to insurance protection and financial security for people living with chronic diseases.