Can a DXP wake up insurers from their tech nightmare?
Apr. 19, 2023
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Can a DXP wake up insurers from their tech nightmare?

Insurance companies have been lagging in the tech space – it’s hard to modernize legacy infrastructure and automate complicated processes. That’s understandable, but with the rise of insurtech startups, the industry is getting disrupted; you must innovate or perish. Not only do you have to update, move, and improve what you already have, but you’ll also have to deliver the modern digital experience your brokers and customers are expecting. How can you possibly do all of that at once?

The existing insurance technology stack

In many cases, insurance companies are still restrained by the ball and chain of old systems that have been in place for years (sometimes decades). Moving these to the cloud is a major undertaking – not a straightforward “lift and ship”, especially given the concerns on compliance and security. In many instances, the existing tech is old enough that there’s no alternative but to re-architect and rebuild from the ground up, a potential nightmare scenario.

Of course, many companies will take the challenge as an opportunity. In underwriting, it’s an excellent moment to consider auto policies. Creating APIs for rate calls should be high on the list of priorities. At the very least, for initial quotes – but preferably working toward bindable quotes ready to be purchased directly.

Considerable human effort is still spent on handling claims. If there are tools for servicing customers, these will often still be for internal use. There are many good ideas about the importance of data science and AI. There are many ways to further automate manual processes (EDM, BPM, and so on). But getting there takes time and consideration; it’s not something you do overnight.

Meanwhile, customers expect a high level of self-service. Getting insured should be as easy as using any other app. And filing a claim should be something you can do entirely on your phone. Fill in the form, scan the documents with the camera, add pictures or a video of the damage. If you can open a bank account on your phone, why should dealing with insurance be any more complicated?

Consumers have little patience for how difficult it can be for an incumbent in a traditional industry to update their infrastructure, streamline processes, and add more features to improve convenience. To them, it simply has to work.

The modern digital experience toolset

This is also evident with the toolset required for digital experience. Shifting underwriting, claims, and other processes to a modern cloud environment that leverages microservices and APIs can seem like a daunting task alone. However, you also need a host of martech tools for analytics, measuring funnels, orchestrating journeys, improving conversion, activating and retaining customers. They’ll range from marketing automation, CRO to CRM, CDP, and, of course, a headless CMS to provide consistent content throughout the digital lifecycle and all channels.

With looming industry disruption by “digital-first” startups, you need them now. And your digital experience can’t be stuck in the past decade. Once you have the tools, you might also think about changing some for the next big thing by tomorrow – not in a few years. Digital experience needs to be agile and adapt much faster than back-office systems to keep up with customer expectations.

This leaves insurance companies simultaneously having to update, replace, and expand legacy infrastructure; for their digital experience to become agile fast. A formidable and almost paradoxical combination to manage. Because how can you bolt that fast-paced digital landscape onto a steady, well-considered change of your legacy infrastructure?

The solution: Magnolia’s composable DXP

Choosing a digital experience platform (DXP) for insurers

Find out how a DXP will transform your insurance business and consolidate your role in a changing marketplace.

Magnolia’s composable DXP is uniquely placed to resolve those conflicts. Composability means that the platform was designed to be modular: after all, your digital experience needs the newest best-of-breed tools. It also needs to interface with your back-office systems in order to provide efficient self-service across the insurance lifecycle.

Magnolia provides many digital experience tools out of the box (such as Personalization and Conversational Forms) but also happily integrates your choice of third-party tools. Crucially, it also makes it easy to integrate your current back-office infrastructure. In fact, you’ll find that this is easy enough and that there is no sunk cost for those integrations. What that means in real life: even if your infrastructure is currently on-premises, but you’re planning the move to the cloud, you can already do the initial integration and bring this functionality into your digital experiences. Once your cloud transition is complete, redoing the integration won’t be a major project. If your infrastructure doesn’t have APIs yet, you don’t have to wait to include it in your digital experience. Simply update any integrations in Magnolia when you do, instead of redoing them from scratch.

Even better, the Magnolia DXP will become the central hub for your digital team to orchestrate the digital experience coherently without jumping across systems. With Magnolia’s Integrated User Experience (IUX), your DXP stack can be integrated into one central user interface for experience orchestration. You can choose whichever DX tools you want, while still providing a unified authoring experience. Magnolia doesn’t lock you into a specific set of functionality – yet it enables you to control all of it in one place. That coherence will immediately start to be reflected across your digital channels.

Diagram

This means you can start using the Magnolia DXP while steadily evolving your back-office infrastructure, and at the same time maintain velocity in the digital experience for brokers and direct customers.

Everything, everywhere, all at once

Your digital customer experience needs to be connected to your back office for anything transactional – from quotes to claims. For that, you need a modern, integrated tech stack. Meanwhile, your digital experience also needs to have the edge over existing competitors and disruptive startups. Doing all of this at the same time is a gargantuan task. Where do you even begin? And how long will it take?

Here's the good news: You don’t need a multi-year project or a big bang to wake up from a bad dream. With Magnolia, you can get started right away. Update your digital experience using what Magnolia offers out of the box and incrementally add in back-office services when they're ready to be connected. Magnolia makes it easy to integrate them. Then – as you grow your level of sophistication in DX – rapidly iterate and experiment by adding new tools and replacing functionality.

In insurance, digital transformation happens at different speeds. But Magnolia will be there every step of the way, helping you go faster from day one.

Magnolia for insurance
Über den autor

Sandra Schroeter

Former Technical Product Marketing Manager, Magnolia

Sandra started her career managing mission critical environments at Hewlett Packard and found her way into product marketing via PostgreSQL consultancy. Having worked in the area of customer experience over the past few years, Sandra is passionate about creating customer-friendly digital experiences. In her role at Magnolia, Sandra is responsible for value-based product messaging for a technical audience as well as technical content strategy.