For the past couple of months and even before starting PolicyDock, we’ve made it a point to speak to as many people in insurance as we can: insurance carriers, underwriting management agents, managing general agents, wholesale brokers, retail brokers, digital brokers, insurtech companies , insurance consultants, systems integrators, accounting firms, and the list goes on. From there, we really extrapolated what are the common nuances and problems each entity in the value chain faces.
In general, we pretty much thought the landscape looks like this:
The problem:
Wherever you go in the value chain (broker, agent, insurtech, insurer, re-insurer, BI department etc…), there’s a PDF, CSV (comma separated value) or Excel file being interchanged via a lengthy email chain, which can be excruciatingly painful to reconcile, import, export, format from or into current systems. For example, a re-insurer typically wants to see a Bordereaux report from the insurer on a monthly basis, which is basically a granular breakdown of insurance premiums, taxes, claims and broker fees for each product. Imagine the offline work that goes in with legacy systems into preparing that report each month.
Essentially, what we derived from all our communications is that insurance breaks and becomes inefficient due to ineffective communication — in a perfect world, if we all spoke the same language, wouldn’t it be so much easier to get our points across? Then it basically dawned on us, insurance products globally do not differ much — there are only so many re-insurers in the world, it’s a top down pyramid.
Innovative insurance technologies are needed
At PolicyDock, we decided that to fix insurance, we need to fix the protocols. Global languages that people understand: body language, mathematics, finance. The language of the web to make devices interoperate: API’s (Application Programmable Interfaces). The above picture should look more like this:
What is an API ?
Whoa! This post is getting complicated, API’s, modules, machines, web languages, is it AI? Are machines taking over the world? What’s going on here? Relax… All an API is, is that when you click a button on a webpage, a signal is sent to a server telling the software program which button is clicked and subsequently the software program will send a digital signal back to your web browser to tell it what to do. Those digital signals contain data via an API. It’s like emailing an Excel sheet to your colleague and then telling your colleague what all the rows and columns of numbers mean, via an API, the software program knows automatically and then knows what to do next.
To illustrate the difference:
Once a specific insurance product can be controlled via these API’s, a lot can happen (think www.lemonade.com).
We will be visiting a lot of these use cases in future posts, but here’s a non-comprehensive list of what PolicyDock can be used for and I’m sure there’s still more we haven’t thought about (get in touch if you have an idea, we’ll find some way to reward you 😉)
For Insurance Product Carriers (re-insurers, insurers, MGA’s, UMA’s) can use PolicyDock to:
For insurance brokers and product distributors:
For Insurtechs / Tech Companies:
And I’m sure there’s a whole host more use-cases!
Get in touch with us: info@policydock.com