Disrupt: n. Disturbance or problems which interrupt an event, activity or process. – Oxford Dictionaries
In an age where everything and everyone is being "disrupted," where even TechCrunch, a technology news site, has its own set of conference-type events in different countries called TechCrunch Disrupt (recently featured on the HBO TV show Silicon Valley), and where all media outlets keep talking about disruption, is the insurance industry responding to being disrupted? Or is the fabled disruption a sleeping giant?
Some of the industry's most prominent figures have spoken about change, including Henri de Castries, AXA Group chairman and chief executive officer. Here at LifeHealthPro.com, our analysts and editors have reflected and written about the industry's need to change. But with communications and technology advancing at an unprecedented pace, with a learning curve that can change in the blink of an eye, can the industry really keep up?
The director of MIT's Technology AgeLab, Joseph Coughlin, Ph.D., recently said that technology has always been disruptive and "now consumers are disruptive, too," during a presentation at the 2014 LIMRA Marketing Research Conference, according to Todd A. Silverhart, Ph.D., corporate vice president and director, Insurance Research, LIMRA. "Life insurance companies are experiencing this to a degree with policyowner expectations for digital services," Silverhart added during our brief interview.
Others in the industry agree. We wrote about it on our "24 most creative people in insurance" article back in April of this year.
"I think this industry is on the cusp of a big disruption, and has been on that edge for the past decade or so. The longer it lies dormant, the more disruptive it's going to be when it happens," said Transamerica's chief innovation officer for the life and protective division Aaron Proietti to our editors.
And he paints a picture that might not be pretty for many, but is laden with opportunity for those who know how to seek it, plan for it and put that plan into action: "I think it's more likely that someone from outside the insurance arena will barge in with a completely different, technically savvy way to protect against risk, and that this will be the major disruption. Our industry is ripe for it, given the immense under-penetration of the middle market, so I'm not sure we have time to evolve," added Proietti.
Take a look at what Uber is currently doing to the taxi industry. Or look at how Google AdWords has changed online ads. You might call these companies disruptive, and they are: They've made a lot of older well-established companies stop in their tracks, scratch their heads in disbelief, rethink their purpose, and adjust … or perish.
While we don't have a set time frame of "when" it's going to happen — just like we still can't predict when an earthquake will occur, though science is getting close — there are a few things we can do.