IT issues as insurance shifts to a permanent remote workforce

Many insurance carriers do not have the digital tools and platforms available to enable employees to work entirely remotely.

Working through today’s fresh IT problems will better prepare insurance organizations and employees for a productive, long-term remote work experience. (Shutterstock)

I had the opportunity to work for a major property and casualty insurance provider that was well on its way with technology research, development investments, tech deployment phases and business transformation. 

As part of a strategic 5-year plan, that carrier was eager to use emerging technologies in the areas of artificial intelligence (AI), augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR), machine learning, robotic process automation (RPA) and big-data analytics to achieve a competitive advantage, enhance operational efficiencies and foster a more satisfactory customer experience.

Now, the current global pandemic is accelerating insurance carrier-innovation timelines.

Adjusting innovation strategies

COVID-19 presents unique challenges to commercial, specialty and personal lines insurance. Nonetheless, it is more important than ever for the P&C industry to continue to innovate in order to prevent potential disruption in claims, premium trends, customer experience and more.

Insurance is intertwined with a broad spectrum of economic activities. It follows that information technology services are vital to support insurance carrier and partner business. 

Solving the pent-up demand for remote workforce support poses an urgent challenge. Today’s insurance technology does not serve an internal IT function. It also aids in front-line sales, underwriting, back-end policy administration, claims management, marketing and product development.

The sudden shift to a widespread remote workforce requires IT services to react immediately.  The rapid uptake of teleconferencing platforms and enterprise network connectivity, as well as the immediate deployment of collaboration tool sets, poses a major digital security challenge.

Stepping up cybersecurity

Enforcing security standards and putting a robust security program in place is key. The implementation of “end-to-end” encryption, identity access management, and continuous cybersecurity threat monitoring will reduce the risk to both insurers and policyholders. 

Here are just some of the insurance business process changes and technology demands spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic:

Preparing for a long-term remote workforce

Some P&C IT teams may have far better tools for remote workforce. For them, working from home isn’t a panacea for everyone or every situation. Although it is an added burden to IT staff today, working through these processes will better prepare both organizations and employees for productive remote work experience.

Marivi Stuchinsky (marivi.stuchinsky@technologent.com) is the global chief technology officer for Technologent, an information technology solutions and services provider for Fortune 1000 companies. Stuchinsky has more than 30 years of IT leadership experience with a proven track record in delivering secure, robust enterprise technologies, as well as large scale global IT projects.

These opinions are the author’s own.

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