Three factors are combining to increase the pressure on insurance companies to transform their distribution strategies. The first is costs: insurers’ distribution costs have been increasing faster than their premium income for several years. This trend is likely to accelerate as high inflation boosts distribution costs (especially increasing salaries and costly IT investments) while the economic downturn reduces the scope to push up premiums.
The second factor is the evolving mix of distribution channels for insurance products. Across Europe’s five main insurance markets (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK) the relative shares of traditional intermediaries are changing. Meanwhile, the newer B2B2C partnerships channel is becoming steadily more important, as insurance is embedded in third-party products and services or sold by non-insurance brands via white-label deals.
However, the mix of channels varies enormously across each of these five major markets, and between life and non-life lines, making the distribution challenge especially complex for international multi-line insurers. A number of the value levers that we highlight apply across all distribution channels, such as the need to examine compensation models and improve sales support, but many others apply only to particular channels. Channel-specific approaches and customized client offerings are therefore essential.
Finally, the different market segments that insurers address – retail, SMEs, mid to large corporates and emerging groups such as public authorities – have very different needs and priorities, requiring insurers to choose where in the market to play. While retail customers are usually seeking intuitive self-service solutions and easy access to relevant guidance, larger corporates put more emphasis on covering new risks such as cybersecurity and require a sophisticated risk model tailored to their business model. Achieving relevance across such diverse customer segments represents a huge challenge – insurers need to choose where to focus.