Coverhero
Coverhero
Coverhero
“Today’s brokers are not suited for mobile-sourced customers who expect
instantaneous results from interaction: namely quotes and the ability to
convert,” says Cover CEO Karn Saroya. “Our goal is to do more for the
mobile consumer, because they expect more. If they have downloaded
our app and entered their information, their intent is very strong and we
want to satisfy that intent.”
Microinsurance
Rather than blanketing an entire entity like a car or health with a lengthy,
lifetime policy, investors are looking for companies that are trying to focus
on events like a car ride or doctor’s appointment to insure instead —
e.g., microinsurance.
Many of these policies were designed 100 years ago, before modern
technologies and the complexities of a digitally connected, shared world.
Design a policy in a way that simplifies the coverage, eliminates exclusions
and makes it easy for people to articulate the benefits. Like rounding the
edges on a sharp corner, it’s simple to do and makes it less likely for
people to get hurt.
Put in plain English what you are covering and what you aren’t covering.
Eliminate exclusions and address the nuances that happen today. If you
are a homeowner’s insurer, you should allow for limited use of Airbnb. If
you are an auto insurer, you should be allowing for limited use of driving
for Uber. If someone is going to make it a full-time job, then it veers into
the commercial space — but give people room to dabble with their lives.
Make sure your policies are easy to understand and actually cover the
issues your customers face. This will lead to people spreading your
policies by word of mouth.
The small expenses cost the same to process as the big ones. Aligning
incentives so the user is incentivized to handle small issues themselves,
with zero handling cost, and using their insurance for the big expenses,
saves insurance companies a lot of money. This can allow you, as the
insurer, to pass on savings to your customers.
There also has been a shift in thinking. Millennials want access to cars and
houses, but don’t want the responsibility of owning them. In fact,
a Goldman Sachs report states that 60 percent of millennials would prefer
to rent things like homes and cars rather than own them.
Solaria Labs, Liberty Mutual Insurance’s tech incubator, has created an API
developer portal to bring together public data and “proprietary insurance
information” to help users find potentially safer routes — and help them
assess damage when that doesn’t work out.
The AI in the API gives users repair estimates post-crash. “The AI Auto
Damage Estimator app technology was trained using anonymized claims
photos so the software could be built,” wrote Ted Kwartler, the assistant
vice president of Liberty Mutual Innovation, in an email. So if you do end
up in a crash, you can take a picture of the crumpled fender and upload it
to the app. The AI will compare it with thousands of photos to determine
which one is most like your car’s damage and tell you on the spot what
the likely cost of repair will be.
The API also aggregates public data on things like auto theft, parking
citations, and crashes to help drivers find the safest routes and parking
places. The “proprietary insurance information” is added to make the
collected data useful for users. “It’s a combination of insurance expertise
and consumer testing to help guide the decision of what services to make
available and how to organize the data,” Kwartler said.
Photos are anonymized for the purpose of training the AI, and the data
used by the API to determine routes is publicly available. “Liberty Mutual
will not share personally identifiable usage data we collect with any third
party except to service customers’ auto policies, for research, or as
required by law,” according to Kwartler.