Susan Kuchinskas looks at open niches within the lucrative UBI space
According to Towers Watson research, insurers representing 60 percent
of the personal auto insurance market have implemented a version of a
UBI program in at least one state. Many more are running or preparing to
run internal UBI pilots. And Ptolemus Group forecasts more than 100
million vehicles will be insured with telematics globally by 2020,
generating premiums of approximately $60 billion.
The advantages for consumers and insurers are clear: More accurate
ratings of risk factors will lead to lower claims and lower premiums for
safe drivers. Technical barriers to these offerings are minimal, but
the industry will need to appease consumers and regulators.
Pay-as-you-drive solutions
Many US insurers offer pay-as-you-drive (PAYD), also called
usage-based insurance (UBI). This option is available in the majority of
states. These plans use a plug-in device to measure actual miles
driven: The less you drive, the less you pay for insurance.
Progressive’s PAYD program, SnapShot, provides a free device that
drivers plug into their cars for six months; after that, they send it
back and the rate based on miles driven is finalized. State Farm’s Drive
Safe & Save program uses OnStar to validate mileage, and it just
inked a similar deal to let consumers transmit mileage info via Ford
Sync.
Because insurance rates have long used driver-reported mileage as one
rating factor for evaluating risk and setting rates, PAYD is a
relatively easy product to get approved by state regulators. Each state
in the US regulates auto insurance independently. (For more on US state
regulation, see Insurance telematics: US state regulators tackle UBI
[2].) It also makes sense to consumers, because they’re used to this
metric. And it doesn’t raise privacy concerns.
Pay-how-you-drive schemes
Things get more interesting, and potentially more lucrative, when
insurers use additional ratings factors that allow them to better
calculate an individual driver’s risk. Telematics devices incorporating
accelerometers and other sensors can provide accurate information about
driving style that could impact a consumer’s risk profile. So-called
pay-how-you-drive (PHYD) schemes use a variety of factors, including
speed, time of day, braking, acceleration and cornering, to paint a more
accurate picture.
State Farm’s PHYD plan is called In-Drive, and it uses a device
created by Hughes Telematics. In-Drive has rolled out in Illinois and
Utah, with more states in the offing. “Obviously, mileage is a good
predictor,” says Dick Luedke, spokesman for State Farm. “The more miles
you drive, the more likely it is you’re going to file a claim.”
State Farm did quite a bit of testing to find what other factors
would be most useful for rating an individual’s risk by installing the
devices in the cars of associates across the nation. The secret sauce,
of course, is the algorithm each insurer uses to weigh all these
factors. Each firm guards them as trade secrets. Luedke says drily, “I
doubt we’d be too specific.”
Simply gathering data from telematics devices is not that difficult.
Doug VanDagens, director, Connected Services Solutions at Ford Motor
Company, says that, while the agreement with State Farm calls for only
transmitting mileage information, Ford already can technically
accommodate transmission of any metric needed for PHYD. In fact, Ford’s
Crew Chief product for fleets, powered by Telogis, provides information
on braking, acceleration, maintenance warnings and more.
“Anything happening in the vehicle, we can communicate outside of
it,” VanDagens says. It’s easier and cheaper to do so via Sync, he
points out, because Sync uses the driver’s cell phone for connectivity.
“We can provide all of that relatively easily, as soon as insurance
companies want to set up the programs.”
Insurance companies want to take the lead in marketing and managing
UBI services. It makes sense since they already have familiar brands as
well as the customer base. Most important, they are the ones with
relationships with state regulators, keeping track of the myriad
regulations and requirements of individual states.
A Company in Cincinnati, Lynx Telematics has developed a device called the Lynx Safe Teen Driving Monitor
that can not only provide insurance companies with a UBI telematics
device, but is the first of its kind to give parents “real-time”
parental control and live monitoring of their teens driving habits,
while at the same time, preventing texting and driving.
Vincent Rush, President of Business Development for Lynx Telematics,
commented in Nashville recently that, “While we realize that quality
and integrity of data is paramount in the UBI market, we also saw a
gigantic void. Many insurance companies have the programs, however
parents really have no control over their children’s driving habits,
until the company reports back to them. We wanted to bring, not only
savings to a parent, but peace of mind as well. As a parent, I don’t
want to receive a report about my kids poor driving habits, 3 days after
their funeral. I want to know the instant my teen is getting careless.
I’ve already had one personal experience and I don’t care to have
another”
With the LynxSafe telematic device,
"Mom & Dad are now, figuratively in the front passenger seat with
their teen driver from the moment they pull out of the driveway”. Rush
went on to say that, “Our single user interface model allows Mom and Dad
to set parameters as well as receiving immediate text alert and emails
when their son or daughter is speeding, driving radically, or in any
type of accident as well as experiencing any mechanical break down.”
The manage-how-you-drive model
As consumers get more comfortable with these products, they may shrug
off the Big Brother warnings and embrace the manage-how-you-drive
(MHYD) model. With MHYD, drivers get feedback that helps them improve
and potentially lower their rates.
American Family Insurance says its Teen Safe Driver Program has
helped teens reduce risky driving behaviors by 70 percent. The program
includes a free in-car device attached to the review mirror. When
incidents like extreme braking, cornering, and accelerating too fast—as
well as actual crashes—take place, it saves eight seconds of footage
prior to the mishap and the four seconds after it. The information is
transmitted wirelessly to American Family’s data center for review by
driver coaches.
Parents get a weekly driver report card that measures the teen’s
performance against safe driving objectives and peer averages. They can
log in to see the report, watch video of incidents, and get tips for
safer driving that they can share with the kid.
State Farm’s In-Drive, created by Hughes Telematics and currently
offered only in the US states of Utah and Illinois, provides an entrée
for State Farm into stronger customer relationships and value-added
services competitive with OnStar and motor clubs. It offers one-touch
emergency response, roadside assistance, stolen vehicle location
assistance, vehicle diagnostic alerts and maintenance reminders, plus
parental monitoring tools for location services and speed alerts.
It also includes the MHYD program, Drive Safe & Save. In-Drive
will provide driving performance data, and the customer’s savings will
be based on mileage, turns, acceleration, braking, speed and time of day
vehicle is operated.
New revenue streams
While State Farm will provide discounts on rates of up to 50 percent
for the safest, lowest-mileage consumers, In-Drive also represents an
opportunity for new, recurring revenue streams. The service offers four
subscription levels with additional services like stolen vehicle
assistance, emergency calling and alerts for events like speeding, with
subscription fees from $7 to $22 per month.
Tim Moroney, insurance regulatory attorney with the law firm of
Barger & Wolen LLP, thinks these services can help insurers get off
the rate-cutting treadmill. “Personalized automotive insurance is very
competitive,” Moroney says. “While cheaper premiums are usually the
biggest hook, [by coupling services with telematics] you can offer more
things. Insurers are now offering concierge benefits. They can do all
things automotive and be very creative.”
Insurers could take it even further by offering classes, content,
applications and third-party offers. The strategy could be similar to
that used by health maintenance organizations that provide weight-loss
and smoking cessation classes to members. (For more on new sources of
revenue, see Consumers and UBI: The power of value-added services [3]
and Telematics and UBI: How to increase consumer acceptance [4].)
Says Frederic Bruneteau, managing director of Ptolemus Consulting
Group, “Thanks to insurance telematics, the insurer can become an
insurance service provider. Today, the notion of insurance is, ‘They
take your money and then you hear from them if you have a problem.’ With
telematics, they have a real-time relationship with any policy holder.”
Susan Kuchinskasis a regular contributor to TU.
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