I hear confidence in responses whenever I ask insurance carriers or distribution firms if they've digitized their annuity business.
"Yup, we're digital!"
But maybe that's not the best question to ask. Perhaps a better one would be, "How digital are you?" There's a real difference between digital and Digital. So, you may call your business or process Digital, but is it?
The move to electronic order-entry platforms for annuities years ago was significant, but in the grand scheme it only represents about 10% of what's required. And it hasn't solved the nagging issue of not-in-good-order findings, or NIGOs, like most expected.
A recent Insured Retirement Institute study shows applications coming through e-order entry platforms still experience a NIGO rate of 40%. In an age of innovation, it's disappointing that four out of 10 apps are still being submitted with simple-fix errors that technology could easily prevent.
It may be hard sitting here in 2023 to believe this, but even while distribution firms across channels adopted digital applications, some annuity business is still done via fax.
That sounds like a joke, but I recently spoke with an advisor who works for a major distribution firm that had to buy a fax machine from eBay just for annuities.
There was a time when taking a paper application and digitizing it was revolutionary. That time's passed. It's a cog in the machine that's missing a lot of other cogs. By understanding that, our industry must finally realize that it's time to once and for all connect the other dots in the ecosystem.
A Broken Experience
Before the industry can move forward, we must fully recognize what's held us back. When the only part of your "digital operation" that's digital is the application, it's like telling someone you have a smart home just because you own an Amazon Echo.
With a true smart home, a homeowner has simple, easy access to controlling their water heater, thermostat, lights, door locks, security systems, and more. That's a smart home— just ask Alexa. It's more than just one component—it's the whole experience.
The process is disconnected and unnecessarily complex today.
Research happens in a different environment than the proposal or illustration, which often lives independently of the account opening system that isn't the same platform the advisor would use to manage and report on the annuity.
Worst of all, the annuity isn't integrated into the client's overall financial plan or into the advisor's wealth management dashboard.
From my own personal experience as an annuity owner, not having my annuity included in the statement makes an important part of my retirement plan feel like a bolted-on afterthought. It makes it more difficult to see the total picture and the impact the annuity has on my portfolio.
An advisor must jump from platform to platform, logging in and out to research hundreds of products from more than 20 major carriers.