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Winning the future: five strategic themes for insurance leaders


A constantly changing market presents compelling growth and transformation opportunities.


In brief

  • In a dynamic European insurance landscape, five strategic themes are shaping the growth outlook for all types of carriers.
  • New products and enhanced experiences remain priorities against the backdrop of macroeconomic uncertainty and increasing regulation.
  • Firms act boldly today – modernizing technology, enriching talent and embracing product innovation – will position themselves for market leadership tomorrow.

From one angle, the European insurance industry appears to be in quite good form. Financial results have been on a positive trajectory, with significantly improved ratios for many carriers and solid solvency metrics across the board. A hardening market in some lines of business has restored pricing power and rising interest rates have provided investment tailwinds.

But today’s relatively strong position is no guarantee of future success. Indeed, in our conversations with senior leaders across the industry, we sense a strong consensus about the need for ongoing investments in innovation and transformation across the business. For all the change going on today, leaders are bracing for more in the years ahead.

This article will highlight five themes or forces that are shaping the industry’s near- to mid-term outlook and setting the agenda for senior leaders.

  1. Achieving operational excellence in finance, risk and actuarial in the post-IFRS world

  2. Navigating the new regulatory landscape with principles-based risk management frameworks

  3. Unleashing the power of purpose to drive product innovation

  4. Re-energizing people, capabilities and culture with GenAI and partnerships

  5. Creatively structuring and capitalizing the business for the future

Some of these themes may feel like perennials, reflecting the long-standing challenges and evergreen need for new offerings and enhanced experiences. Macroeconomic and sociocultural volatility, relentless technology advancement, intensifying competition and shifting regulation continue to influence the threats and opportunities carriers face.

The urgency and impact of these issues and opportunities will vary by line of business. Property and casualty (P&C) carriers are looking to increase cost-efficiency, lean out their operations and digitize the customer experience. Life and health insurers and pensions providers are pivoting to product innovation and enhanced shareholder returns. Large commercial insurers and reinsurers are focused on new business and operating models. The most forward-looking firms are proactively reimagining core business models and future-proofing their operations. We believe these efforts and investments are not only necessary but likely to pay off in market leadership in the quarters and years ahead.

The following themes are not meant as a comprehensive list, but rather as top agenda items for boards and senior leaders in the foreseeable future. They’re not monolithic issues either. The need for more attractive value propositions to meet changing customer needs should be a focal point in all change initiatives, as well as regulatory compliance efforts. The need for advanced technology, stronger data management capabilities and more extensive connectivity (across the enterprise and with external partners and regulators) are other common themes across all these areas.

1

Chapter 1

Achieving operational excellence in finance, risk and actuarial

Insurers are still adjusting to the post-IFRS 17 world.

Beyond the necessary modifications to accounting and reporting processes required by IFRS 17, insurers are rethinking the strategic role of finance, risk, actuarial and tax as well as how to best organize and operate these critical functions with peak efficiency and effectiveness. Regulatory changes – including Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and BEPS 2.0 – along with cost and competitive pressures have put a premium on integrating, synchronizing and optimizing the data and processes that connect these units.

The impact on performance management – how insurers define success, measure their progress against objectives and use data to make decisions – will be profound, both internally and externally. It will take some time for all stakeholders to understand the meaning of IFRS 17 metrics and the new key performance indicators (KPIs) that have emerged. Finance leaders will have to work with their peers across the business (particularly those that have always questioned internal data sources) to help build confidence in data used for decision support. Advancing the sophistication and accuracy of forecasting will benefit both finance and the business as a whole.

For external stakeholders, senior leaders must also rethink how they communicate and explain their performance to investors and analysts. New narratives around growth and innovation strategies, as well as technology, data and transformation plans, should be a priority. Some prominent insurers may need to explain the rationale beyond their tax decisions to authorities, as well as to the media and general public if there is a perception that profitable carriers are not paying their fair share.

Here again, looking beyond the minimum standard of compliance can help organizations generate value from the necessary investments. The key is to use the new KPIs and other forward-looking reporting metrics to bolster internal decision-making relative to resource allocation and strategic investments.

Key actions for senior leaders and boards:
  • Deepen the organizational expertise about the subtleties and nuances of new accounting standards and reporting regimes

  • Prioritize the integration and standardization of data sets and the digitization of processes in finance, risk, actuarial and tax

  • Engage investors and analysts to shape their understanding of new metrics and provide context about performance

  • Deploy GenAI-based and data visualization tools to empower users in exploring new data and metrics and to enhance forecasting capabilities
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Chapter 2

Navigating the new regulatory landscape

A new wave of regulations requires principles-based risk management frameworks.

Before insurers have fully settled into the world of IFRS 17, they must prepare themselves for the pronounced regulatory shift – from a focus on prudential and accounting matters to an emphasis on conduct and resilience. The Consumer Duty in the UK has increased the urgency around conduct matters, though similar supervision activities are on the rise in other European markets as well. The duty requires insurers to demonstrate how they provide customer value. Firms may need to adjust their risk management frameworks to make them more fit for purpose and principles-based, reflecting the design of the recent regulations. Conduct risk may increase for those firms that fail to adapt to increased regulatory scrutiny. But the Consumer Duty may also serve as a prompt for innovation for those firms that use it to understand what customers want and find new ways to deliver value.

The Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) and AI Act are also forcing firms to examine how they identify, assess and manage risks. Regulators are calling on insurers to clarify how they use, share, protect and manage customer data, and whether consumers are aware and approve of these practices. The same applies to the use of AI; the first priority is fair, unbiased and responsible usage. Looking forward, the Financial Information Data Access (FIDA) proposal and further advancements in Open Banking will also increase the regulatory burden for insurers.

For insurers, the challenges of compliance typically start with rigid legacy systems and standalone data repositories. But rather than focus on minimum standards of compliance, insurers can seek ways to generate business value (e.g., increased efficiency from process automation) from their regulatory investments. For instance, the FIDA proposal emphasizes the need to benefit consumers by offering more data-driven tools that support informed decision making, which could provide a further impetus to insurers’ ability to connect to partners for seamless and secure data sharing and to develop more holistic solutions.

Key actions for senior leaders and boards:
  • Enhance data management and sharing capabilities in advance of new regulations

  • Identify opportunities to align compliance investments with those that can benefit the business (e.g., core system modernization, technology transformation)

  • Engage regulators proactively and participate in industry efforts to shape future legislation and regulation

  • Regularly revisit and refine governance models to guide expanding AI deployments across the business
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Chapter 3

Unleashing the power of purpose to drive product innovation

The industry’s unique expertise and purpose can create substantive value for individuals, families, businesses, communities and society as a whole.

Purpose is a strong potential differentiator for insurers. But, since the pandemic, the industry has experienced an erosion of consumer trust and confidence. Repositioning as a force for good is how the industry can win back consumer trust.

Consider how new life insurance offerings, along with new pensions regulations and standards, could help bridge the huge retirement savings gap in various markets around Europe. Life insurance products are evolving to reflect market demand for financial wellness and security, as well as the efforts of wealth and asset managers to develop more holistic solutions.

Embracing the industry’s higher purpose can inspire carriers to address other protection gaps, particularly those related to climate change and cyber. Large commercial insurers and reinsurers can play a critical, catalyzing role in the shift to a more sustainable economy by serving as financial risk management partners for energy firms undergoing the transition to green operations and energy sources. Similarly, developing coverage for intangible assets (e.g., patents, intellectual property, software) – which are estimated to represent up to 80% of overall value on corporate balance sheets and are mostly unprotected by insurance today – is another opportunity to achieve profitability with purpose. Indeed, insurers would do well to view the huge protection gaps as high-priority growth opportunities.
 

Both risk protection products and risk engineering services (as well as educating clients and the general public) contribute to a more purposeful go-to-market approach. The industry has deep and broad knowledge of what causes both individual and commercial losses; purpose can provide the impetus to design new products that reflect how people live and businesses operate today. Such forward-looking, market-facing steps will have a bigger impact on brands and growth strategies than narrowly focusing on adding more riders and further restricting loss terms within standard policy language.
 

In personal lines, the path forward starts with simpler products, richer experiences and increased personalization and flexibility. In digitizing the customer journey, carriers must resist the temptation to prioritize cost savings over service enhancements. To become true digital leaders, insurers must explore ways to automate and digitize their core value proposition, embedding risk prevention and engineering services directly into the structure of protection products and within routine interactions (e.g., renewing policies, submitting claims). Further, by deeply embedding risk prevention within customers’ lifestyles or in the everyday operations of commercial customers, insurers can put their purpose at the heart of the business.
 

Insurance can – and should – be the most purpose-led industry on the planet, the first sector consumers think of when they think of protection, security and confidence. That’s not the case today. Any insurer that can restore some of that shine to their brands will gain an advantage in competing against other non-traditional players that have entered the insurance space.

Key actions for senior leaders and boards:
  • Examine how your purpose aligns to changing customer needs and shifting market dynamics

  • Define the right metrics to monitor the execution of ESG strategies and communicate progress to stakeholders

  • Identify specific actions to embed purpose in operations and specific product features

  • Engage partners in ecosystems to support more holistic solutions, service bundles and a broader range of products

  • Expand and enrich data management capabilities with the goal of generating insights to personalize every experience and interaction
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Chapter 4

Re-energizing people, capabilities and culture with GenAI and partnerships

Even in the age of AI, talent remains critical to overall success, as well as a key differentiator, for market leaders.

The insurance industry has been struggling to upgrade its talent base and workforce for quite some time. An aging workforce has prompted a gradual shift to younger, more digitally inclined workers – a shift that should accelerate with the advent of generative AI. Actuaries and underwriters remain at the heart of the business and stand to benefit significantly from new AI-enabled processes and toolsets.

To make the most of GenAI deployments across the business, technical agility and digital proficiency will need to increase. Finding in-demand data science and analytics pros, prompt engineers, customer experience designers and beta underwriters is – and will remain – difficult (and expensive). Ecosystems, partnerships and other collaborations can provide easier access to these scarce skillsets. However, those engagements will also require new skills, namely strategic partner selection and relationship management.

Empowering people and teams across the business to experiment with GenAI (within well-defined parameters) and encouraging them to collaborate more openly will boost returns on technology investments. That may require some culture change, however, especially at carriers with rigid organizational charts and hierarchical management styles. Reporting lines and P&L ownership may need to be adjusted to reflect more holistic metrics, such as those that track customer value rather than simply revenue growth.

Culture change can also facilitate the development of external partnerships and ecosystems, as new paths to market and growth strategies require new ways of working and fresh management approaches. Carriers might partner with InsurTechs for tools to support specific tasks and activities in underwriting, digital marketing and other functions. They can work with banks, medical firms, pharmaceuticals and fitness companies to augment their product offerings.

Senior leaders recognize they need the upside offered by GenAI and partnerships. But beyond their bottom-line impacts, they can be used to refresh the organizational culture, foster new capabilities and boost employee engagement.

Key actions for senior leaders and boards:
  • Model the impact of GenAI on the overall workforce, including the upside of increased employee engagement and empowerment

  • Assess GenAI governance models to ensure that bottom-up experimentation is possible and encouraged within the context of clear policies

  • Evaluate how alternative sourcing strategies can provide access to the most in-demand skills and specialist expertise

  • Rethink current management practices in light of partnership and ecosystem strategies
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Chapter 5

Creatively structuring and capitalizing the business for the future

The industry continues to attract funding from diverse sources, putting a premium on creative capital management strategies.

The insurance sector remains attractive to capital providers (particularly those in Asia and the Middle East). Though alternative capital is now fully mainstreamed, new models and structures are developed and launched on a regular basis.

Forward-looking insurers continue to get creative with their capital sourcing strategies. In some cases, firms look to divestments to free up capital for investing. Other carriers are exploring unique entity models and partnerships to fund digital transformation, develop new business models (including ecosystems and embedded plays), launch entirely new brands and enhance customer journeys.

The dynamics around capital management strategies vary by line of business. For instance, there has been an uptick in sidecar deals among life reinsurers, substantial casualty buyers and their asset management partners. Sidecars have traditionally been used more frequently by property and casualty reinsurers. But, thanks to a confluence of macroeconomic trends and market forces, point to further expansion for longer-tail risks in 2025 and beyond. Sidecars look like a win-win, given that reinsurers see a need to significantly increase capacity and capital providers want to generate relatively predictable, risk-adjusted returns across longer time horizons.

Sidecars aren’t the only form of alternative risk transfers, of course. Insurance-linked securities (ILS) and catastrophe bonds are poised to continue on their growth trajectory of the last decade. Even more experimentation is to be expected in the future, as climate, cyber and other risks proliferate.

Not all investment will flow to traditional carriers and reinsurers. Other recipients will include InsurTechs and new entities founded by banks, wealth and asset managers, brokers, tech platforms and other players looking to enter or expand their presence in the insurance sector. Carriers have ample incentives to build strong relationships with the full range of capital providers, if only because there are multiple areas of the market and in existing businesses where substantial investment could unlock breakthrough results.

Key actions for senior leaders and boards:
  • Evaluate new capital sources for funding necessary investments in digitization, transformation and innovation

  • In evaluating capital partners, look for strategic focus and alignment around common goals, especially relative to bridging large protection gaps in markets around the world

  • Assess the options for structuring entities and refining capital strategies in line with long-term objectives

Summary

Fresh thinking and new ways of working. A younger and differently skilled workforce. Purpose-driven cultures motivated by – even obsessed with – customer value and well-being. Advanced technology, extensive automation and digital-first operations. More flexible capital structures and organizations. These will be the attributes of tomorrow’s insurance leaders in Europe, the firms where employees want to work, partners want to engage and customers want to do business. More tellingly, these firms are actively working today and investing boldly to build out the necessary capabilities, establish effective partnerships, and create the necessary operational and technology foundation to execute their growth and innovation agendas.

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