Subscribe Today
INDEX
Features
Buyers' Guide
Get in the Buyers' Guide
Insurer's Choice Technology Ranking 2008
Departments
ACORD LOMA
Agent Relations
Automated Exec
Business Solutions
Groundbreakers
Industry Intelligence
Stats Watch
The Business Side
Top Tech
IASA
Columns
CIO Chronicles
Editor's Note
Inside Track
Shop Talk
Tech Tattler
Tech Therapy
Trends&Tech
Channels
Services
Charter Sponsors

Features

Putting the Pieces In Place

The goal of claims administrators is to make the customer whole again at an appropriate price. One way to accomplish those sometimes clashing aspects of the job is by getting an early jump on them, which speeds the process and keeps customers happy.
Putting the Pieces In Place

When customers purchase an insurance policy they are seeking some form of security from their insurance carrier. They are not purchasing a piece of paper; they are purchasing a promise from the insurer that if something happens, the insurer will do what it can to make things right. “[Customers] want to be returned to whole as quickly as possible, they want to understand the claims process, and they want to be taken care of throughout the process,” says Peter McMurtrie, chief claims officer for Grange Insurance.

Do those needs match those of the insurer? McMurtrie believes they do. He claims Grange is focused on early intervention and timely resolution, which he feels are the same things sought by customers. “What we’ve done is look at ways to do both equally,” he says. “[The goal is] to benefit both our overall claim accuracy in paying the right amount owed while at the same time getting the customer to whole as quickly as possible.”

Settlement time is a major issue for claims managers because, as McMurtrie explains, the least amount the carrier is going to pay on a claim occurs at the moment the loss happens. “Through the passage of time the value of that claim goes up,” he says. That increase usually is caused by external factors, he adds, such as continuation of damages or influences such as attorneys or public adjusters. “Those things can adversely affect the value of the claim,” he says. “Our focus is to intervene in the process as quickly as possible and [keep] our customer informed throughout the claims process.”

Whenever an insurer deals with a property/casualty claim, there usually is a wronged or injured party, explains Kevin Turner, executive vice president of business development with Cambridge Integrated Services, a claims management firm. In order to deal effectively with those claimants, a company has to have top-notch customer service skills, he adds.

From a customer service standpoint, technology has been effective in improving Cambridge’s intake model, where workers’ compensation claimants go through an online routing system and fill out a customized script. “When losses occur, people log in and fill out the scripts and answer questions that are germane to that particular policy or that particular employer,” says Turner. “That helps in the adjusting process. Once you receive the report, you can assign an adjuster to verify the report and develop further information.”

More >>