In our new consumer research report, The Rise of the New Insurance Customer: Shifting Views and Expectations, we captured the views and expectations of today’s consumers in the midst of the disruption and change rapidly unfolding in the insurance industry. Insurers, MGAs, reinsurers and others must embrace this shift by understanding changes at play and accept that everything we have known about insurance was good for yesterday, but not good enough for today or tomorrow.
The trends are fueled by the insurtech movement that wants to take advantage of the disruption and by a rapid, perpetual shift in customer expectations. Our research took a deeper dive into the people component, to understand 11 key insurance industry perceptions across the spectrum of researching, buying and servicing, consumer response and the implications for the insurance industry. Specifically, the research dives into this shift with more insights on the move to digital, an expected shift by millennials and Gen Z — and highlights that Gen X is often dramatically aligning with the Millennial and Gen Z consumer behavior.
See also: Dare to Be Different: New Ways to Communicate With Customers
The Rise of the New Insurance Customer compares insurance against nine other industries across the spectrum of consumer experience. The resulting perspective is that insurance is not “easy to do business with.” Some key insights from the research are:
- Insurance is “dead last” in terms of industries that are easy to do business with and are a good value. Life and annuities is significantly lower than P&C compared with the other industries/businesses with which consumers regularly interact.
- The Net Promoter Scores across the industries/businesses show insurance as relatively low.
- No industry is perfect when it comes to creating customer experiences for research, buying and servicing, but online and national retailers set the standard for all industries. We refer to this as the “Amazon effect.”
- Millennials and Gen Z clearly show different expectations than the silent generation and baby boomers. Gen X often aligns with millennials and Gen Z, highlighting the gap between traditional insurance over the last 50 years to insurance today and looking forward.
- The generational gap reflects an insurance industry steeped in tradition, where business models, business processes, channels and products are becoming rapidly irrelevant for the younger generations. The result is an open door to fresh, culture-savvy competition.