COO Amir Nooriala on supporting SMEs through fintech www.fintechmagazine.com
APRIL 2019
A digital transformation through agile partnerships
GROWTH OF A LEADING INSURANCE GIANT
DIGITAL DISRUPTION THROUGH BI AND DATA ANALYTICS Vice President Jamie McDougall on the company’s technology transformation
Driving global e-commerce sales
TOP 10
Disruptive insurtech companies
FOREWORD
H
ello and welcome to the April
companies in our reports on
edition of FinTech Magazine!
Plymouth Rock, Finning International
Our cover star this month is Gore
and Berkshire Hathaway GUARD.
Mutual, a business truly disrupting
Not stopping at the established
the insurance space through
giants, we’ve also taken a look at
technologies such as BI and
what exciting startups are doing
data analytics. It may be
in the finance space: read
Canada’s oldest insurer,
on to find out how tech
but the company has
unicorn Collibra is
a firm commitment to
transforming data in
being agile and keeping up with the latest innovations.
Jamie McDougall, Vice President, Business Intelligence & Analytics, Gore Mutual Insurance
Elsewhere, we spoke to Amir Nooriala, COO of OakNorth. Fresh
the B2B space. We also have insight on ecommerce trends from ACI and on facial
recognition from IDNow.
from SoftBank investment and
Be sure to check out our list of the
a debut on the Martin Lewis Money
top 10 insurtech companies and take
Show, the cloud-based challenger
a look at our selection of the biggest
bank is set to transform the way
and best industry events.
SMEs gain capital in order to scale and grow. As always, we bring you insight into
Enjoy the issue! Olivia Minnock olivia.minnock@bizclikmedia.com
the digital transformation journeys of leading finance and insurance w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
03
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CONTENTS
10 GORE MUTUAL: DIGITALLY DISRUPTING THE CANADIAN INSURANCE SPACE
30 OAKNORTH: HELPING SMEs FLOURISH THROUGH FINTECH APRIL 2019
38 Collibra Safe and secure digital disruption of finance giants
48
58
ACI Universal Payments: Driving global e-commerce sales in 2019
66 80 Top 10 insurtech companies
The biggest industry Events
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3 1
2
5 4
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84 Finning International
102 WestGUARD Insurance Company
114 Plymouth Rock Assurance w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
10
DIGITALLY DISRUPTING THE CANADIAN INSURANCE SPACE WRIT TEN BY
L AUR A MULL AN PRODUCED BY
JA K E MEGE ARY
APRIL 2019
11
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GORE MUTUAL INSURANCE
Gore Mutual Insurance may be Canada’s oldest property and casualty insurance firm but thanks to its latest digital transformation it’s more agile than ever 12
F
ounded in 1839 – 28 years before the founding of modern Canada – Gore Mutual Insurance is defined by its rich
history. The insurer has borne witness to two world wars, having pledged $50,000 and $100,000 to support the Canadian war effort in WWI and WWII respectively. The Canadian insurance company has also seen the advent of automobiles, offering automobile insurance for the first time in its centennial year, and then went on to help the victims of the catastrophic Grand River Flood. Later, in 2015, when new legislation offered the chance to demutualize, the firm decided against this, harking back to its long held desire to help communities in their times of need. Rooted in a tradition of courage and cooperation, Gore Mutual may be Canada’s oldest property and casualty (P&C) insurer but it isn’t bound by its historic legacy. APRIL 2019
Gore Mutual employees on site
13
In fact, in many ways, it has always been at the forefront of innovation. With almost two decades of experience at Gore Mutual, Jamie McDougall, Vice President, Business Intelligence & Analytics, has had a lasting impact on the firm’s digital and insurance footprint. Marrying his innate knowledge of the claims and underwriting business with a zeal for technology, he affirms that digitisation is helping the company “enable our broker partners in an increasingly digital world”. “We are using the w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
Impacting Business Results For almost two decades, Earnix data scientists, financial experts, and software engineers have worked to create a comprehensive analytics software solution that solves some of the most difficult product, pricing and channel challenges faced by financial institutions. With Earnix insurers, lenders, and other financial institutions can now incorporate into their product, risk, and delivery systems the same advanced analytics that make personalization possible for the tech giants.
www.earnix.com
Follow Us:
Gore Mutual Insurance Partners with Earnix to Improve Analytic Agility and Speed Time to Market Gore Mutual, a Canadian mutual insurance company that has provided community protection to personal and business customers for over 175 years, has partnered with Earnix to provide the best service possible to their broker network and customers. As part of an initiative to better understand their end customers and improve responsiveness to a constantly changing market, Gore has partnered with Earnix to continually improve analytical processes and better operationalize the speed of rate deployment to the marketplace.
Analytical Process Improvement. Gore traditionally has done risk and demand modeling, in order to understand customer propensities and exposure and determine the appropriate costs of risk transfer. As Gore has advanced to managing this modeling process holistically, through the use of an end to end data management, analytics, and pricing platform, they have realized the ability to understand their customers at an even deeper level. Gore utilizes predictive analytics to derive insight from the information that they receive, and in turn support the effective underwriting of risk accepted. Understanding and applying risk and demand thresholds to customer segments enables a more effective insurance transaction for all stakeholders. Speed Rate Deployment. Managing the rate deployment process at organizations like Gore requires accounting for many variables. Price changes must be made, approval and governance of changes must be received, and proposed changes must then be deployed to the market. Gore knew that only an end to end system with real time rating engine capabilities, integration to touchpoints such as core and policy admin systems, and the ability to monitor rate change performance would be the best solution for them. Gore has turned to Earnix as a partner to provide an end to end pricing and personaliza-
tion platform, which takes their operationalization of analytics to the next level. Earnix will provide a real time rating engine that is connected to all of Gore’s core platforms – including policy admin systems in the back office, and customer interaction systems in the front office. The ability to develop, execute, monitor, and refine multiple pricing structures and strategies with high performance and reliability allows for improved governance and control. For Gore, the capability to deploy rates and rate changes in real time allows the pricing process to be operationalized very quickly. As Gore works to distribute these analytic and time to market improvements across the business, many other future advancements are being considered as well. Machine learning tools and capabilities are being researched, as a way to automate processes and understand their customer base even further. Being able to use the Earnix rating engine capabilities to take any analytical model developed by any tool and use it in a real time manner is also an exciting possibility. The partnership between Earnix and Gore is creating a strong foundation for future advancements, including the use of analytics and personalization in every project that Gore undertakes.
GORE MUTUAL INSURANCE
1839
Year founded
500
Approximate number of employees
16
explosive developments in digitization
the aim of making its use more
data, business intelligence (BI),
pervasive in the business, Gore Mutual
self-service analytics, machine
established BI and analytics as a sepa-
learning (ML) and artificial intelligence
rate entity and asked McDougall to
(AI) to enable a mature business
take on the role of Vice President of
transformation that is both genuine
Business Intelligence and Analytics. In
and thoughtful,” he explains.
doing so, Gore Mutual has sought to
The handling of data is nothing new
put more meaningful data, analytics,
for the insurance industry, but disrup-
insights and information at its leaders’
tive technologies are helping to
fingertips so that they can make better
uncover endless new opportunities.
decisions whilst enabling conversa-
Gore Mutual Insurance has identified
tions across the business. “Ongoing
BI and analytics as one such innova-
advances in data analytics allow us to
tion which is a “strategic priority”. With
be more agile and gather insights in
APRIL 2019
Gore Mutual employees assessing fire damage E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Jamie McDougall Jamie McDougall is responsible for advancing Gore Mutual’s business intelligence, analytics and actuarial capability, which are central to the company’s ability to continue providing leading products and solutions to its customers. His previous experience as Gore Mutual’s Vice President of Claims and Vice President of Personal Insurance are key to his current role, which also involves leadership in the implementation of major data and systems transformation across all lines of business. Prior to joining Gore Mutual, he spent several years as a Management Consultant in process improvement and performance management with a boutique consulting firm and completed his MBA with the Haskayne School of Business at the University of Calgary.
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17
TRANSFORMING THE INSURANCE WORLD
Visit our Site
FROM INFORMATION TO INSIGHT What gives Opta Information Intelligence a competitive edge in the market? What makes it unique? I believe our number one competitive edge is that our people possess an extraordinary amount of information about the Canadian market and specifically the Canadian insurance industry. In addition to this, we’ve also amassed the largest property data set in commercialized property. By utilizing the wealth of our dataset and our analytical capabilities, as well as our ability to understand the Canadian insurance market we have a unique perspective in the market. What advantages does the company’s technology offer? What outcomes can customers expect? We offer superior property information intelligence for underwriting purposes. Canada is the second largest country in the world; there are varying degrees of elevation, areas where there is floodplains or unprotected fire zones and then there are urban centres which have their own risks. We understand the Canadian geography and are the number one data provider to help organizations turn this into actionable insights. How has Opta Information Intelligence supported Gore Mutual Insurance in its latest digital transformation? Gore Mutual Insurance has been a very strong partner and believer in Opta’s solution. The company has also been a very helpful co-development partner in services that we’ve brought the Canadian market such as iClarify, which is the number one personalized property under-
writing quoting tool in the country. With Gore’s digital transformation, I believe that we were able to understand its unique position in the Canadian market place and respond with solutions in a customized fashion that help improve efficiency and drive improved underwriting results. Could you provide another example where Opta Information Intelligence has helped to enable digital transformation? When the Fort McMurray fire happened in Canada, nobody was able to really understand which properties were total loses and damaged or which ones weren’t. This was because you weren’t able to get on site for weeks after the fire. We were able to utilize advanced artificial intelligence (AI), satellite imagery and train computers to recognize which homes were lost and how much those losses would be. We hired a satellite to go over the area and within days of the fire, we were able to deliver a solution which demonstrated to a lot of insurers, the power of artificial intelligence, the potential of data and the realm of the possible. What does the future hold for Opta Information Intelligence? Are there any upcoming developments we should watch out for? We’re exploring opportunities within Fintech and Municipal markets within Canada. Our massive amount of data and professional attributes can offer new insights to different markets but ultimately our number one goal is to always be a relevant and meaningful partner to our Canadian insurance customers.
GORE MUTUAL INSURANCE
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘GORE MUTUAL’S DISCOVERY CONCOURSE TOUR’ 20 the business,” says McDougall. “It
digital transformation efforts. “We’re
helps us improve our broker experi-
heavily focused on creating curated,
ence and the experience of our
quality data assets to build trust in the
consumers. We’re becoming more
information,” says McDougall. Forging
proactive and not just reactive. We are
a promising partnership with Informa-
driving improved claims and underwrit-
tion Builders, the Canadian business
ing operations,” he adds. “The new
has worked hard to master its data
entity is ensuring clarity of focus. It
and build quality data assets. “We
indicates to the organization that this
utilized their platform as a way to
is an enabling set of technologies and
distribute information and insights to
we recognize their value in the
the appropriate individuals so that we
insurance space.”
can make better and more informed
Good BI requires good data – and
business decisions,” he adds. “It has
this was top of the agenda for Gore
absolutely delivered concrete value to
Mutual as it embarked upon its latest
our consumers, to our brokers and to
APRIL 2019
our business.” This has allowed Gore Mutual to provide more sophisticated pricing to the market, whether offering auto insurance or even flood and earthquake insurance. Gore Mutual has also developed close ties with integrated software company Earnix, using its software to further empower the organization. In the fast-moving world of technology, close collaboration is everything. Championing this spirit, last year Gore Mutual built its
“ We’re becoming more proactive and not just reactive. We are driving improved claims and underwriting operations” — Jamie McDougall, Vice President of Business Intelligence and Analytics, Gore Mutual Insurance
Discovery Concourse in its campus
Gore Mutual – Innovation Lab
w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
21
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Actuaries get granular pricing and reserving data to be more accurate and faster
Claims knows where to cut leakage, tighten steps, and improve service
Information Builders can help.
We bring clear, actionable, and complete data – fast – to your executives, brokers, managers, and underwriters. With one unified, historical view of your business, you can drill down to address risk, pricing, and market segmentation. Shift from product-centric to customer-centric views of your business – giving a unique view to insured parties, brokers, policies, underwriters, assets, and claims. Just like that, your entire team can leverage all of your data to manage your book of business more effectively.
See the impact we’ve made for other P&C companies informationbuilders.com/omni-insurance
“ In our business, responsiveness to the consumers’ needs is critical: we want to be there when they need us” — Jamie McDougall, Vice President of Business Intelligence and Analytics, Gore Mutual Insurance
to transform with it, not only to remain commercially viable but also to protect customers. “In our business, responsiveness to the consumers’ needs is critical: we want to be there when they need us,” notes McDougall. “If we know that a dramatic storm is coming or a forest fire is burning, we can be proactive and identify the exposure, policies, and those consumers at risk. At times we have proactively called brokers, identified the consumers in their portfolio that are at risk and then proactively contacted them to ensure that they’re okay and that they didn’t
in Cambridge, Ontario. This is a spot
experience loss. This data offers
where continuous innovation seems to
transformative value that we can bring
be in the air and where the hands-on
to the business.” As well as using its
creation of insurance solutions is
own analytics, Gore Mutual has
commonplace. Featuring a high-tech
worked shoulder to shoulder with Aon
innovation lab, McDougall says this
to try and understand the “complexity
area acts as a hub where “brokers,
of catastrophic loss protection” when
insurtechs, reinsurers, technology
creating models for flood or earth-
partners and Gore Mutual employees
quake risk. The firm has also forged
from different departments can
ties with DMTI for detailed location
collaborate on solutions to solve
information, which McDougall
industry issues”.
describes as “a quality data provider”.
This proactive stance is a must in the
Another key insurance industry data
insurance world. The nature of risk is
partner, OPTA Information Intelligence,
ever-changing – and insurance needs
has enabled Gore Mutual to improve w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
23
GORE MUTUAL INSURANCE
Gore Mutual – Discovery Concourse
Model with confidence in Canada Impact Forecasting’s enhanced flood model for Canada, covering both fluvial and pluvial flood perils, enables insurers to delve into the latest scientific data to support both primary underwriting and portfolio risk management. Moreover, high resolution flood hazard and risk maps provide detailed and methodologically-consistent insights into flood risk across populated Canada. How can YOU benefit from partnering with Impact Forecasting to tackle risk assessment for this increasingly important peril? NEW! We are working on an earthquake model in collaboration with Global Earthquake Model foundation to leverage the state-of-the-art local science and data to complement our suite of products available for Canada – watch this space! If you would like to demo our catastrophe modelling solutions and risk mapping products, please contact sarka.cerna@aon.com
25 its assessment of risk through advanced information tools as well as through OPTA’s developing of advanced analytics and modelling. Gore Mutual’s openness to enhancing its abilities through quality partnerships is a credit to the insurer and a recognition that in advanced analytics there are many paths to success. As well as industry partnerships, McDougall is keen to shout about Gore Mutual’s remarkable network of brokers as well as its internal team. Attracting and retaining talent may be a challenge for some businesses, but
“ Our value proposition for attracting and retaining talent is about creating a very complete and holistic value proposition for employees” — Jamie McDougall, Vice President of Business Intelligence and Analytics, Gore Mutual Insurance w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
GORE MUTUAL INSURANCE
at Gore Mutual McDougall asserts that individuals seeking “breadth of scope, accountability and ownership” are easily attracted to the firm. “We’re large enough to be dynamic and creative,” he adds. “Our value proposition for attracting and retaining talent is about creating a very complete and holistic value proposition for employees.” McDougall has evidence to back up this claim: last year Gore Mutual was awarded for being a ‘Best Workplace in Canada’ and also 26
recognized as a ‘Best Workplace in Financial Services and Insurance’ by
“ I’m confident that Gore Mutual will continue to evolve to become an increasingly analytic yet always human business” — Jamie McDougall, Vice President of Business Intelligence and Analytics, Gore Mutual Insurance
APRIL 2019
Gore Mutual – Cambridge Campus the Best Workplaces Award and Great Place to Work® Canada respectively. In February 2019, the business was named an ‘Employee Recommended Workplace’ for putting employees’ health, wellness and workplace experience at the forefront of its operations. McDougall is confident that 2019 will remain a banner year for the firm as there has been a “resurgence or recognition of the mutual proposition”. On the road ahead, Gore Mutual is set to keep its finger on the pulse of the
27
latest technology trends as it constant-
“We continue to grow and invest in our
ly evolves and grows into a leading
people, our business and our commu-
mid-market modern mutual insurance
nities. I’m confident that Gore Mutual
company. Yet it’s clear that despite this
will continue to evolve to become an
bright future, the firm won’t forget its
increasingly analytic yet always
historic legacy any time soon. “Gore
human business.”
Mutual will be 180 years old this year and we’re very proud of our history,” concludes McDougall. “The organization started as a district mutual fire insurance company and has become ingrained in the communities where we live and work – it’s part of our story.” “We’re a modern mutual,” he asserts. w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
Covering every angle in the digital age The Business Chief platforms offer insight on the trends influencing C and V-level executives, telling the stories that matter
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LEADERSHIP
30
HELPING SMEs FLOURISH THROUGH FINTECH Fresh from SoftBank investment and a debut on the Martin Lewis Money Show, we caught up with COO Amir Nooriala to find out what’s next for the cloud based challenger bank WRITTEN BY
APRIL 2019
OLIVIA MINNOCK
31
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LEADERSHIP
I
n the past, high street banks each had a bank manager familiar with local businesses, who could approve loans based on knowledge
of a small or medium business and its owner. Amir Nooriala, COO of
UK-based challenger bank OakNorth, says that nowadays, with local branches disappearing across the
“ ACT AS IF YOU HAVE NO MONEY, EVEN IF YOU HAVE MONEY. IT WAS THAT LEANNESS THAT GOT YOU THERE IN THE FIRST PLACE”
UK and larger financial institutions concentrating on huge capital investments, SMEs have been left
Amir Nooriala, COO, OakNorth
significantly underserved. “Those 32
bank managers have gone,” he comments. “There’s now a central computer. So in a world where people have gone to technology and scale, we can actually recreate the
at Barclays Investment Bank. “I spent
bank manager using artificial
my career working across pretty
intelligence (AI) and machine
much every area of tech you can, as
learning.” Enter OakNorth, launched
well as lots of different operations
in 2015, which provides business and
departments – I’ve run lots of change
property loans worth between
programs,” he comments. Now,
£500,000 and £45mn in order to
Nooriala is in charge of operations
help businesses scale and grow.
at a fast-growing unicorn which has
Becoming COO in July 2018, Noo-
soared into pole position as the most
riala brought with him experience
valuable fintech in Europe – operat-
from software and consultancy
ing directly in the UK and across
giants Cisco and Accenture, his own
the continent via licensed platforms.
startups, as well as a significant stint
Nooriala cites the hugely under-
APRIL 2019
33
served SME market as key to the
that we’ve gone from zero to profit-
business’ rapid growth – at the end
able, to a multi-billion-dollar loan book,
of 2017, OakNorth had lent £852mn,
we actually think that’s small com-
and by the end of 2018 this had
pared to what we’re going to achieve
grown to £2.2bn.
in the next two years.” Nooriala’s faith
“Within that £2.2bn, we’ve had
in the organisation is shared by
£500mn in repayments,” Nooriala
outside investors, too, with OakNorth
comments. “So about 15% of our
having recently received $440mn in
loans have already been repaid and
investment from a funding round led
we’ve never had a default,” he adds,
by Japanese tech giant SoftBank’s
illustrating that when served correctly,
$100bn Vision Fund. The company’s
SMEs can be reliable and lucrative.
valuation had already surpassed $1bn
“As much as it sounds phenomenal
in 2017, and then reached $2.8bn. w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
LEADERSHIP
34
A LEAN, AGILE FINTECH
thing: it clouds your vision. Even
OakNorth has leveraged the latest
though we were cash flow positive
technology in order to provide a
within 11 months of founding this
bespoke service to clients which
business, it didn’t change our
cannot be offered by smaller or
behaviour. Even with several hundred
more corporate lenders. Machine
million from Softbank, that still won’t
learning deals with the unstructured
change. Every decision will be made
data provided by clients. “You need
commercially – is there a business
to be able to take that spreadsheet
case? Is there a return on that money
– SMEs aren’t sophisticated enough
within a timeline we’re happy with?”
to have a big, expensive accounts
For any growing business, Nooriala
package – and structure this
offers the same advice. “Act as if you
information.” The firm then adds
have no money, even if you have
localised market data to this
money. It was that leanness that got
information and uses AI to draw
you there in the first place.”
insights. “That’s then handed to
The company has not only
a human to do analysis on: nobody
remained lean but also humble, keep-
in our company wastes time doing
ing operations and services simple
things that do not add value. They’re
and relevant to customer needs, as
doing deep credit analysis insights
well as retaining an original ethos of
that then lead to underwriting
ensuring employees are valued and
decisions. That’s how we can scale
feel part of the business, often in
and serve these customers in
more ways than one. In fact, Nooriala
a profitable manner.”
himself has invested in the company.
And scale OakNorth has – but
“I got shares when I joined and I’ve
integral to its success has been
bought additional shares since. I
retaining a startup mindset.
believe in the company and I think
“Businesses can get bloated.
that earnest mentality our employees
Having too much funding is a bad
have is a massive advantage.”
APRIL 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘AN UPDATE FROM OAKNORTH’S FOUNDERS’ 35
THE MARTIN LEWIS EFFECT
“ WHEN YOU BUILD perhaps its greatest test when the YOURSELF IN THE CLOUD, business was featured on the popular Money Saving Expert’s ITV proYOU CAN SCALE UP FOR gramme, The Martin Lewis Money Show. The programme, which airs on THESE RANDOM a Monday night for viewers across EVENTS AND the UK, contacted OakNorth on a Thursday to confirm rates as it NOT CRASH” intended to feature the company the This mentality and attitude took
following week. OakNorth readied itself for the so-called Martin Lewis effect: every bank featured on the
Amir Nooriala, COO, OakNorth
w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
LEADERSHIP
36
show receives an overwhelming
AWS to add more infrastructure for
amount of web traffic, with many
the anticipated surge, as well as
sites crashing as a result.
bringing the launch date of its new
This was a huge opportunity
ISA product forward in time for the
OakNorth had the infrastructure to
show. A dedicated team worked
seize, and the team got to work
throughout the weekend and when
taking advantage of both a can-do
Monday arrived, at OakNorth’s TV
attitude and scalable architecture.
mention traffic on the website spiked
“We architected our current technol-
over 50 times. “Nothing crashed,
ogy to scale horizontally,” Nooriala
nothing slowed down. People started
explains. “You can bolt on more and
to deposit money, exploring the ISA
more hardware as you need, without
product. When you’re a brand new
having to change the actual code.”
bank that’s architected correctly,
The company spoke with partner
when you build yourself in the cloud,
APRIL 2019
“ NOBODY IN OUR COMPANY WASTES TIME DOING THINGS THAT ARE NOT VALUE-ADD” Amir Nooriala, COO, OakNorth
or down on demand. We’re not tied to a physical location. In addition, the tools that come from providers like AWS as part and parcel of the cloud experience will allow OakNorth to experiment with new technologies. “That’s something key to tech companies: we can experiment, fail, pull out and try something different,” he adds. To fulfil Nooriala’s lofty ambitions for OakNorth over the next two years, the business will continue to grow organically, looking outside Europe toward APAC and the US to raise more awareness of its service. SoftBank’s funding will be used to
you can scale up for these random
expand capabilities to North Ameri-
events and not crash,” Nooriala
can banks so they, too, can better
comments, “and when you have
serve SMEs and the unicorn’s AI and
an agile team that’s fully motivated
machine learning capabilities will be
and bought into the company,
further strengthened to that
they’ll put in the hours to bring
OakNorth can continue in its aim to
something forward.”
help those underserved businesses grow and flourish.
A FUTURE IN THE CLOUD As OakNorth grows, Nooriala is adamant that cloud technology will drive its expansion. “We’re not tied to anything. Being on the cloud means we can change a lot quicker, scale up w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
37
D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
Collibra Safe and secure digital disruption of finance giants
38
Collibra provides data governance for some of the world’s largest companies, including financial institutions. CEO Felix Van De Maele explains how the European tech unicorn helps organisations navigate the disruptive fintech landscape WRITTEN BY
APRIL 2019
OLIVIA MINNOCK
39
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D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
40
I
n 2008, nobody was really talking about Big Data – but the financial crash led to more
stringent regulatory requirements for banks to manage the sensitive information they possessed.
Meanwhile, data governance firm Collibra was formed out of the University of Belgium’s research into semantic technology. CEO and co-founder Felix Van de Maele explains: “We were researching how to bring domain experts together and help figure out what data really means, because semantic technology is about how you define data in a way that it can be understood not just by people, but also by computers.” Now, financial institutions had to be even more in control of their data, knowing where it was APRIL 2019
FACTS
• Collibra raised $100mn in its latest funding round, bringing its value to over $1bn. • Collibra is backed by Google’s investment arm, Capital G
41
coming from, who was responsible for
“We were very happy that CapitalG and Google reached out to us” — Felix Van de Maele CEO and Co-Founder, Collibra
it, and that processes were in place to fix any problems that cropped up. Since this initial approach to compliance, which was defensive and reactive, data has been brought to the fore of the finance industry. Fast forward to 2019 and Chief Data Officer is a key role for companies as data management is recognised as a core strategic function. “Today, data drives the whole digital transformation,” says Van de Maele. “AI, machine learning, IoT: it’s all about data.” w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
“Today, it’s not just about compliance. It’s about how we can compete with those data first companies like Google, Amazon or Facebook” — Felix Van de Maele CEO and Co-Founder, Collibra
42
A COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE Nowadays, financial institutions are not just in competition with each other, but with all kinds of client-facing organisations which serve an increasingly demanding consumer with their efficiency and ease of use. “Today, it’s not just about compliance. It’s about how we can compete with those data first companies like Google, Amazon or Facebook,” Van de Maele explains. “How can we extract more value? How can we serve our customers better? How can we build better products?” Extracting value from the reams of data available nowadays and using this to disrupt the financial landscape is where Collibra comes in. “We believe data is becoming so valuable we need to treat it as a real asset and a key part of the business process. Just like you have SAP to automate and formalise your financial processes and Salesforce for your customer processes, you need a system to run and support your data processes.” Collibra’s data governance products and solutions are instrumental in helping organisations unlock the value of data, whilst remaining secure
APRIL 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘COLLIBRA DATA GOVERNANCE’ 43
and compliant with regulations such
CapitalG and Google reached out to
as GDPR. “We are, so to speak, the
us because the Google engineers said:
system of record for the data team.”
‘This is a really important problem and
It’s certainly a service with high
Collibra is the company that’s solving it
demand – last year, the company
in the best way.’ I think Google is probably
celebrated a growth rate of 80% and
the most mature data company in the
today it serves around 300 customers
world – even around artificial intelligence
including some of the largest compa-
(AI) and machine learning.”
nies in the world. In January, Collibra
Tech giants are rightly taking an
raised $100mn in its Series E funding
active interest in what Van de Maele
round, led by Google’s investment arm
dubs the ‘fintech revolution’. “It’s all
Capital G. This brought the company’s
about the customer, and I think within
value to over $1bn, affording it unicorn
the financial services industry it’s hard
status. “We were very happy that
because you still have that need for w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
D I G I TA L T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
compliance,” he comments. “Some of the large established banks have legacy infrastructure which makes it harder for them to move faster.” This is where data comes in, helping to improve customer service, build new products and drive automation. Secure, compliant transformation As part of any digital transformation, security is often a concern for clients and end users, and this is only heightened when dealing with finance. “Data is going to become the differentiator, but what is going to be really 44
important is that the consumer trusts the company that handles their data,”
companies in the world,” Van de
Van de Maele explains. “I think that’s
Maele comments. “We have real
a unique opportunity for larger financial
strategic partnerships with our
institutions because they often have
customers. From a support, services
that trust – but it comes with a lot of
and sales perspective it’s really
responsibility. I think the key challenge
important to keep investing to meet
is how we leverage data to extract the
customer expectations.”
most value, while still making sure we
In addition, Collibra’s partnership
comply with regulations and keep the
with – and investment from – CapitalG
trust of our customers.”
will allow the startup to leverage AI
Building on its impressive growth,
and machine learning further than ever
Collibra will look to remain sustainable
before. “There are two ways we will
and maintain the quality of its product
leverage that: one is embedding even
as it expands and innovates. “Our
more AI and machine learning into our
product is enterprise grade because
own products, and driving automation.
we’re working with the largest
Through AI and machine learning, we
APRIL 2019
“The largest institutions are going to feel the pressure of those fintech startups” — Felix Van de Maele CEO and Co-Founder, Collibra 45 can automatically route data to the right
competition which will always breed
approval to show it’s GDPR compliant.
innovation – it’s likely that yet more
“The other way is within data science
banks will look to tech startups like
teams themselves. We’re now seeing AI
Collibra to transform safely and securely.
and machine learning become more
“The largest institutions are going to feel
mature. As a bank, you need to make
the pressure of those fintech startups,”
sure you are compliant: you need
says Van de Maele, who feels this is the
transparency, predictability and
time for banks to ask themselves
traceability… and you can enable that
serious questions. “How do we make
with AI and machine learning. That’s
the most of the unique data assets
where there’s a big opportunity to
we have to really drive innovation and
extend the platform, and to provide
serve our customers better? I think
transparency and control of data.”
they’ll feel the pressure to do that.”
As the finance space begins to grow and change – with fintechs and challenger banks providing increasing w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
M O B I L E PAY M E N T S
48
APRIL 2019
Driving global e-commerce sales in 2019 EXPERTS FROM ACI WORLDWIDE TAKE A LOOK AT THE CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES SET TO IMPACT THE GLOBAL E- COMMERCE MARKET THIS YE AR WRITTEN BY
RICHARD JOLLY, PHILLIP FINNEGAN & LESLIE CHOO
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49
M O B I L E PAY M E N T S
E
very industry varies from region to region, with each location in the world having its unique challenges. However,
when it comes to e-commerce, there are some elements that all business leaders should take note of. In this article, experts from ACI Worldwide – Richard Jolly, Direct Merchant of e-commerce, EMEA, Phillip Finnegan, Vice President and General Manager, Pacific region, and Leslie Choo, Managing Director
50
in the ASEAN region – come together to share their thoughts on what’s set to disrupt the e-commerce market in the coming year. Across the world, retail e-commerce sales continue to rise: this year alone, sales are expected to grow by 21.5% compared to 2018. While it’s no surprise that merchants face different challenges depending on markets or geography, there are also many similarities. A primary requirement for retailers and merchants this year will be understanding and planning for increased physical and digital convergence as a way to serve customers in all areas of commerce. Retailers are also focused on ensuring their shopping, payment and fulfilment methods easily support the increasing demands from customers for seamless APRIL 2019
‘ Payments remain one of the most vital customer touchpoints during the entire shopping experience’
51
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M O B I L E PAY M E N T S
transitions from one chanel to another.
top three payment methods in a coun-
This article discusses the global
try have increased conversion rates
trends in e-commerce across
by up to 30%, it has become crucial to
EMEA, the Pacific region and ASE-
tailor payment methods. This is par-
AN area, comparing and contrast-
ticularly significant in Europe, where
ing what is expected for 2019.
there is a vast selection of payment preferences across the region, such as
52
EMEA INSIGHTS
traditional cards (credit and assorted
As payments remain one of the most
national debit schemes), mobile wallets
vital customer touchpoints during
(e.g. Apple Pay and Samsung Pay), on-
the entire shopping experience, this
line bank transfer and invoice. Payment
year will see one main challenge for
preferences can vary significantly
merchants in EMEA: how to deliver
between markets and across various
a seamless experience that maxim-
demographic groups, particularly in
ises the chance of converting sales.
countries like Germany where there is
With research showing that
a very distinctive payments landscape.
businesses which offer the
APRIL 2019
Although this isn’t a new challenge,
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘UNIVERSAL PAYMENTS FROM ACI: TRUE ENTERPRISE PAYMENTS’ 53
it is becoming an increasingly impor-
part of this challenge for merchants
tant one for European merchants who
in the EMEA region. Addressing this
are investing more efforts in cross-
entails implementing the right tech-
border and cross-channel trade. To
nology and enlisting expert support.
give themselves the greatest chance of international success, they need
PACIFIC OVERVIEW
to offer the local payment methods
With Europe concentrating on creating
that are recognised, trusted and used
a seamless experience and how to
by the end consumer. Many payment
maximise conversion, the Pacific
methods that were previously nascent
region is more focused on how to
are now described as mainstream.
alleviate merchant fraud. Although
Cost-effectively accessing the right
EMV chip acceptance has significantly
acquirers and ensuring exact, frictionless
reduced certain types of merchant
fraud protection is also an imperative
fraud, there is undoubtedly more work w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
M O B I L E PAY M E N T S
required in the coming years. 85% of fraud in Australia is currently driven by card-not-present fraud. With online shopping traffic growth increasing to 19.2% in 2017, up from 11.5% in 2016, there is plenty of opportunity for retailers, as long as they are able to implement the appropriate fraud protection measures. In line with global trends, we can expect to see significant growth in alternative payments. Last year, Alipay and ‘buy now, pay later’ schemes such as Zip and Afterpay saw significant 54
uptake. Merchant demand has seen acquirers and larger payments players work hard to make sure these payment methods are accepted across in-store and online channels. Additionally, many domestic debit card schemes are also set to move online and drive widespread acceptance this year. For retailers in the Pacific region, the unique opportunity is to capture a greater share of the giant Asian markets. Products from Australia and New Zealand are in high demand in Asia, so the ability to effectively service cross-border trade from these markets, particularly into China, will be a critical challenge for merchants this year. APRIL 2019
‘ Many payment methods that were previously nascent are now described as mainstream’
ASEAN TRENDS Although it could be argued that merchant fraud remains a global concern, the major trend in the ASEAN region for 2019 is set to be the uptake of new payment options. There has been a significant rise in payment options compared to two years ago. We’ve seen payment methods such as Alipay and WeChat Pay that are now well entrenched in China becoming an increasingly important part of the payment mix across ASEAN, as these countries also strive to capture a share of the Chinese market. Additionally, national real-time payment schemes are increasing usage of realtime payments by consumers – notably in peer-to-peer funds transfers, but increasingly in interactions between consumers and businesses. Singapore’s w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
55
M O B I L E PAY M E N T S
PayNow Corporate and Malaysia’s DuitNow both launched in 2018 and will have an impact in 2019. China has become one of the largest markets for both domestic and international transactions. This development has encouraged many of the very large merchants such as Alibaba Group and JD.com to investigate the idea of branching out
‘ For retailers in the Pacific region, the unique opportunity is to capture a greater share of the giant Asian markets’
their e-commerce services to capture more ASEAN customers. This is expected to continue driving 56
the trend towards cross-border commerce in the region and it is expected that both B2C and B2B cross-border commerce will be a major growth
area for merchants in the ASEAN region this year. There will, however, be many challenges to address, such as understanding and addressing the local regulations in each country. The other big challenge that will be faced with this cross-border growth is the capacity to understand and secure against fraud in various countries and new markets. Taking advantage of global consortium data and seeking advice from global e-commerce experts will be a crucial step for merchants as they plan their growth path.
APRIL 2019
57
COMMON THEMES ACROSS GLOBAL E-COMMERCE Even though it is intriguing to see
and adapt their fraud and security approaches over multiple jurisdictions. As the growth in IoT-connected
perspectives on payment behaviours
devices continues to rise, these shared
from around the globe, it is evident
challenges will persist as merchants
that there are many common themes
seek ways to take advantage of the
and challenges. Cross-border and
emerging opportunities. Overall,
international expansion is clearly
a clear and tailored payment and fraud
a priority shared across the global
strategy is critical in guaranteeing
merchant payments community,
a seamless and safe experience.
and could well increase the focus on fraud and compliance, especially considering PSD2 and GDPR in Europe require merchants to monitor w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
The eve increas role of facial recogni CYBERSECURITY
58
APRIL 2019
ersing f
59
WRITTEN BY
ition RUPERT SPIEGELBERG
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CYBERSECURITY
Rupert Spiegelberg, CEO at identity verification platform IDNow, discusses how facial recognition can provide both security and convenience in the world of finance as customer expectations continue to increase
60
D
igitisation is influencing the majority of industries, and it is driving an increasing consumer demand for
highly personalised, fast, convenient,
connected interactions that suit busy ‘onthe-go’ lifestyles. Our expectations of how we interact with companies have never been higher. In today’s hyper-connected global society, we are in an economy of ‘right now’. From ordering our favourite food to applying for a loan, customers want instant service. This is leading to a rise in digital identities which are becoming the new currency, as companies need an easy, compliant and trusted way to find out who their customers really are. Through the development of facial
APRIL 2019
61
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CYBERSECURITY
“ The challenge for businesses as they digitise their services is to quickly and confidently verify customer identity” 62
— Rupert Spiegelberg, CEO, IDNow
recognition software, organisations are able to achieve this and, as a result, offer more services online which may previously have been limited due to age or legal restrictions, such as online gambling, applying for a credit card or mortgage, or even renting a car. This demand for instant gratification is no different in the financial industry – consumers want quick and easy access to accounts, loans and mortgage applications, and as a result more and more transactions are moving online. Both challenger banks and traditional banks are moving towards a more digital centric approach: for challenger banks, this provides a perfect platform to gain a more aggressive market share; traditional banks are looking to modernise and adapt to cater for a more digitally driven generation. However, in a world where data breaches are becoming commonplace,
— Rupert Spiegelberg CEO, IDNow
persuading a customer to share their personal and financial details online requires two important things: trust in the institution and a positive user experience. Fail on either of these levels and the customer will likely
APRIL 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘IDNOW IDENTITY-AS-A-SERVICE SOLUTION DESIGNED FOR THE NOW ECONOMY’ 63
terminate any transaction before
financial crisis, global institutions have
signing on the dotted line. In addition,
been fined US$26bn for violations
the challenge for businesses as they
relating to AML and KYC regulations.
digitise their services is to quickly and
With this in mind, it’s imperative that
confidently verify customer identity.
businesses adhere to regulations while
Online banking is governed by
still providing a fast and convenient
special regulations, such as the Know
service. This, after all, is why custom-
Your Customer (KYC) standards set
ers have chosen to sign up online in the
out in the EU’s Third Anti-Money
first place, rather than visit a traditional
Laundering (AML) Directive. This
institution.
means that handling online transaction
Artificial Intelligence (AI) powered
processes in the financial sector is
technology, with tools such as facial
considerably more challenging than it
recognition, allows organisations to
is in other sectors. Since the 2008
address these concerns. These w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
CYBERSECURITY
solutions use algorithms to read security features embedded in ID documents, such as driving licenses and ID cards, in order to detect forged identities. Facial recognition is today considered to be a preferred biometric benchmark and can enable financial institutions to accurately and securely valid customer authenticity, without pulling consumers into a timely and drawn out process. Facial recognition is already accepted as a valid method of ID in the 64
financial sector across Europe – even in the most highly regulated countries such as Austria and Germany. However, it’s not just the financial sector which is benefitting from facial recognition software. More organisations and departments are starting to roll this out as a way to help validate identity. In fact, anyone with a new Apple smartphone will already be aware of the technology. Apple recently switched out its fingerprint identity for facial recognition software, and we are seeing other sectors such as online gambling sites look to support this as valid method of ID. Other organisations are also looking APRIL
2019
“ It’s imperative that businesses adhere to regulations while still providing a fast and convenient service” — Rupert Spiegelberg, CEO, IDNow
at ways to embed facial recognition as a way to improve services. Dating sites, social media platforms and PlayStation games are starting to consider ways in which facial recognition can enhance their service. Likewise, Amazon recently announced its plans to look at using facial recognition to support Alexa when it comes to making purchases. Biometric identification methods that are already established in the public sector can also be of interest to private companies, and we are likely to see more organisations deploy this. It is a fast and effective method of customer authentication, already proven within the banking industry – one of the most highly regulated industries in Europe. Facial recognition will only continue to grow and encompass more industries and sectors as we become focused on a digitally driven world.
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T O P 10
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APRIL 2019
Top 10
insurtech companies 96% of insurers think digital ecosystems are having an impact on the insurance industry, according to Accenture — and perhaps nothing demonstrates this better than the rise of disruptive insurtech enterprises. Using the Post Insurtech 100 ranking, we take a look at the top ten insurtech firms. WRITTEN BY
LAURA MULLAN
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T O P 10
68
10 BIMA Headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden, BIMA has proved to be a leading insurtech player, reaching around 26mn customers across 14 countries. The business hopes to promote financial inclusion by offering insurance and mobile health services for low-income families. In fact, BIMA says that 75% of its customers are accessing insurance for the first time and 93% live on less than US$10 per day. Ranked 10th in the Post Insurtech 100 ranking, BIMA has raised $110mn in capital so far. Allianz’s digital-focused investment arm, Allianz X, invested $96mn in the startup in 2017.
APRIL 2019
69
09 Quantemplate Quantemplate is a London-based insurtech firm than offers machine learning, data transformation and analytics solutions for insurance professionals. Led by CEO David Lundgren, the firm has an international footprint with offices in the USA and EMEA. The insurtech business is supported by leading investors and financial and insurance companies such as Anthemis Group, Route 66 Ventures Inc., Transamerica and Allianz.
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T O P 10
70
08 Slice Providing pay-per-use insurance for the on-demand economy, Slice was listed 8th on the Post Insurtech 100 ranking. Founded in 2015, the firm offers an insurance cloud service (ICS) platform that caters to the gig economy. Today, Slice has offices in New York City, Cleveland, Ottawa and London. The company has raised around $40.5mn across all its funding rounds, according to Crunchbase.
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71
07 Trov ¯ Headquartered in the San Francisco Bay Area, Trōv is an on-demand insurance platform that allows consumers to insure single items for any period of time they need entirely from their mobile phone. On its company website, the firm claims to be “reinventing insurance for the mobile generation by making it simple, flexible and transparent”. Claiming the 7th spot on the ranking, Trōv is available in Australia and the UK, and began its US roll-out in 2018.
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T O P 10
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06 Neos Specialising in home insurance, Neos was founded in 2016 and now has gained the 6th spot on the Post Insurtech 100 ranking. As well as home insurance and 24/7 assistance, the UK-based firm offers smart technology such as smart sensors and indoor security cameras so that consumers can protect their home. Multinational insurer, Aviva, agreed to acquire a majority stake in the firm last year.
APRIL 2019
73
05 Shift Technology Shift Technology has made a name itself by providing AI-native solutions for the global insurance industry. The Parisian firm offers a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) that uses data science to detect networks of fraudsters in insurance. With a team of around 90 developers, data scientists and project managers, Shift Technology is headquartered in Paris, France. Its sister offices are located in Singapore, London, Madrid, Zurich and Hong Kong.
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T O P 10
74
04 Lemonade Gaining the 4th spot on the Post Insurtech ranking, Lemonade claims to be the “world’s first open source insurance policy”. Headquartered in New York City, USA, Lemonade offers homeowners and renters insurance powered by artificial intelligence and behavioural economics. In 2016, the firm claimed to set a world record for the fastest claim handled in three seconds. Lemonade is a certified B-Corp — a for-profit business dedicated to making a positive impact on society, workers, the community and the environment — and so it takes a flat fee.
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75
03 Oscar Health Aiming to be a health insurance company centred around the patient, Oscar Health has over 700 employees serving around 350,000 individual members and small businesses. The American firm offers insurance services in nine US States: New York, New Jersey, California, Texas, Ohio, Tennessee, Arizona, Michigan, and Florida. Gaining the 3rd spot on the ranking, Oscar Health points out how it has “the highest mobile engagement of any insurer” with 43% of its members’ first visits to the doctor being routed through its technology and customer service teams.
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T O P 10
02 Acko General Insurance With investors including Amazon, SAIF Partners, Accel Partners and Catamaran 76
Ventures, Acko General Insurance is a digital insurance firm based in India. The company raised a total of $42mn in funding and earned the 2nd spot on the Post Insurtech 100 ranking. The Mumbai-based startup was founded in 2017 by Varun Dua.
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T O P 10
01 ZhongAn Touting itself as “China’s first complete online insurance company”, ZhongAn has 78
claimed the top spot on the Post Insurtech leaderboard. The company’s CEO is Jin “Jeffrey Chen” but it was initially co-founded by some of the country’s most renowned business magnates including Alibaba’s Jack Ma, Tencent’s Pony Ma and Ping An Insurance’s Mingzhe Ma. In 2017, the Chinese insurer raised $1.5bn in its IPO in what the Financial Times described as “the world’s first insurtech public offering.”
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EVENTS & A S S O C I AT I O N S
The biggest events and conferences around the EDITED BY OLIVIA MINNOCK world for fintech leaders
03–04 APRIL 2019
80
10–11 APRIL 2019
IP Expo Manchester
Dublin Tech Summit
[ MANCHESTER, UK ]
[ DUBLIN, IRELAND ]
Cybersecurity is a vital issue for fintech
Dublin Tech Summit is one of the larg-
leaders especially, and this event is the
est technology conferences in Europe,
UK’s biggest IT and cybersecurity event
promising a plethora of influential tech
outside of London. 2019 will mark the
leaders. 2019’s cohort include Werner
fifth iteration of the event which is made
Vogels, CTO of Amazon.com, Douglas
up of professionals in cloud, infrastruc-
Terrier, CTO of NASA, and Mihai Alisie,
ture and cybersecurity. This year, it
co-founder of Ethereum. Attending
hopes to include more topics surround-
companies and partners at the Tech
ing data analytics, AI, software
Summit include Airbnb, Amazon,
development, IoT and Blockchain. With
Microsoft, Google, SAP and Facebook.
sponsors including Cisco and Sophos,
The event takes place at the Conven-
speakers at the event will range from
tion Centre in Dublin’s Docklands area,
Dr Nicola Millard, Head of Customer
just 20 minutes from the city’s interna-
Insights & Futures at BT, to Chris Testa-
tional airport. This event explores
O’Neill, Data Scientist at Microsoft.
technology transformation and the impact of digital disruption across many industries and as such offers valuable perspective for the fintech leader.
APRIL 2019
21–22 MAY 2019
03–05 JUNE 2019
ICT Spring Europe
Money 20/20 Europe
[ LUXEMBOURG ]
[ AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS ]
This year, ICT Spring Europe promises
Boasting over 6,000 attendees and
to focus on three key topics: digitalisa-
2,000 companies from around 82 differ-
tion, space and of course fintech. As
ent countries, over the course of the
such, attendees can expect to hear
three-day event more than 490 speakers
about AI, insurtech, venture capital,
are set to deliver around 80 hours of
IoT, telecommunications and satellites.
insightful content. Money 20/20 dubs
The two-day conference is made up of
itself as “where the payments, fintech
over 5,000 key decision makers across
and financial services industries come
various business sectors. ICT Spring is
together”. Attendees are promised origi-
held at the European Convention Cen-
nal content on both a regional and global
tre, minutes from Luxembourg airport,
scale, product launches, networking
and the event programme is packed
opportunities and access to exciting
with seminars and presentations. In
startups and innovators. 2018’s Europe
2018, notable speakers were Xavier
event featured prominent speakers
Bettel, Prime Minister of Luxembourg;
including Ralph Hamers, CEO of
Susan Coleman, a Managing Director
ING Group; Andy Maguire, Group
at PwC; and John Thornhill, Innovation
COO of HSBC; and Steve Wozniak,
Editor at the Financial Times.
co-founder of Apple.
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EVENTS & A S S O C I AT I O N S
The biggest events and conferences around the EDITED BY OLIVIA MINNOCK world for fintech leaders
19–20 JUNE 2019
82
05–06 SEPTEMBER 2019
Blockchain Expo Europe
AI in Finance Summit
[ AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS ]
[ NEW YORK ]
Blockchain Expo is a series of confer-
Oganised by global summit creator
ences which take place in Europe and
ReWork, the AI in Finance Summit is
North America. A total of four co-located
co-located with the AI in Insurance
events throughout the year welcome
Summit and Women in AI Dinner. The
over 36,000 attendees, over 1000
previous iteration of the two-day event
speakers and over 1000 exhibitors.
included a host of practical work-
The Europe Expo takes place at
shops and informative presentations.
RAI Amsterdam with 10,000 guests
Confirmed speakers for 2019’s event
expected. Notable speakers on the
includes Joan Gelpi, SVP and Head of
agenda come from Maersk, Gucci,
Data Science at AIG; Manuela Veloso,
Volkswagen, Shell and IBM as the con-
Head of AI Research at JPMorgan
ference looks at the many uses of this
Chase & Co; and Charles Girve, Lead
disruptive technology. Topics to be
Data Scientist at Deutsche Bank. With
discussed over the two-day event
hours’ worth of networking opportuni-
include cryptofinance, blockchain for
ties, event is recommended for data
enterprise, cybersecurity and supply
scientists and engineers, financial
chain management.
regulators, C-level executives, venture capitalists and more, so there truly is set to be something for everyone.
APRIL 2019
23–25 SEPTEMBER
OCTOBER 2019
InsureTech Connect
Finovate Asia
[ MGM GRAND, LAS VEGAS ]
[ TBC ]
Billed as the world’s largest gathering
Following on from the success of 2018’s
of insurance leaders and innovators,
event in Hong Kong as part of the city-
InsureTech Connect (ITC) is highly
state’s Fintech Week, advance tickets
recommended for industry execs,
are already on sale for 2019 which
entrepreneurs and investors within,
promises 600+ attendees, 20+ firms
and impacted by, the insurance industry.
offering demonstrations and 80+ expert
This is the place to make global
speakers for a mix of speeches and
connections and understand what
panels. Finovate Asia advertises the
some of the world’s biggest players
opportunity for attendees to “meet
are doing to remain competitive in
the fintechs, platform players, financial
an increasingly digital landscape.
institutions, regulators and investors
2018 hosted a range of experienced
who are redefining the future of finan-
speakers including Dan Glaser, CEO
cial services”. Notable speakers in 2018
& President at Marsh & McLennan;
attended from Danske Bank, AXA Lab,
Inga Beale, CEO of Lloyd’s; and Tracie
Accenture, Bank of America and Alipay.
Grella, Global Head of Cyber at AIG. With this in mind, the 2019 event is set to be a must-visit.
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FINNING INTERNATIONAL 84
A digitally–led cybersecurity transformation WRIT TEN BY
CATHERINE S TURM AN PRODUCED BY
JA K E MEGE ARY
APRIL 2019
85
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F I N N I N G I N T E R N AT I O N A L
Finning International has transformed its cybersecurity efforts, built strong partnerships and created a culture built on collaboration — Chief Information Security Officer Suzie Smibert tells us more
I
ndustry 4.0 is changing the game for the traditional industrial sector. New technologies and innovations have seen original
equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and suppliers turn towards new solutions to ensure greater efficiency, improve safety, meet compliance requirements and guarantee substantial savings. However, such advances come with additional risks that can threaten 86
the security of consumer and machine data, with breaches found to be the most costly in the United States and Canada by the Ponemon Institute. With firm routes in Canada, Finning International now amasses an impressive global footprint, spanning three geographies. Employing more than 13,000 people worldwide, the business has accrued a world class network of product support services across British Columbia, Yukon, Alberta, Saskatchewan, the Northwest Territories and a portion of Nunavut, as well as the United Kingdom, Ireland and South America. Its formidable reputation in industrial markets, such as mining, construction and agriculture, has enabled the company to become a key figure in working with customers to achieve the lowest equipment owning and operating costs while maximizing uptime across their operations. APRIL 2019
87
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F I N N I N G I N T E R N AT I O N A L
88
“ We’re seeing a lot more digitization, connected assets and abilities to enhance performance solutions” — Suzie Smibert, Chief Information Security Officer
However, to counteract the growing threat of cybercrime across Finning’s international footprint and remain ahead of the curve, Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) Suzie Smibert has looked to place security at the forefront of every employee’s mind. Demonstrating effective leadership as Finning looks towards its long-term vision and digital strategy, Smibert has been key in transforming its image of a sole reseller and service provider to that of an innovative, technology led company. “My background is primarily in information security, which knows no sector boundaries. Finning was an interesting company to me when it was presented as an employment option as it was an industry I had never been part of previously. It’s an organization with impressive reach with of the potential to transform how heavy machinery is used on a global scale,” says Smibert. “One of the things that gets me the most excited about this company is that we are not afraid of thinking outside of the box, creating technology, thinking of how can we optimize our customers’ fleets and how we can provide customers with the best equipment,” she adds. “When you are a CISO, oftentimes you
APRIL 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘FINNING PERFORMANCE SOLUTIONS’ 89 have your recipe that you use in one
its operations, which will filter into
organization, move on to the next and
its long-term aim to promote digital
use the same recipe with slight modifi-
innovation and engage further with its
cations for that specific business. As
diverse customer base.
Finning represented an industry I’d never
“In information security there is a lot
worked in, I didn’t know if my recipe
of convergence happening. Currently
would work. So, it was more exciting
there are an unsustainable number of
not to just ‘rinse and repeat’, but push
products and tools on the market which
myself towards something new.”
make it difficult to manage budgets,
With damage related to cybercrime
complexity and maintain the skills to
projected to hit US$6trn annually by
manage, in some cases as many as 50
2021, it has been essential for a leading
platforms at a company. I’m also seeing
company such as Finning to take
tools that are providing the right amount
a closer look at updating its systems,
of security, but could be better utilized
remove redundancies and streamline
and leveraged, whether inside of outside w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
F I N N I N G I N T E R N AT I O N A L
90 of the security portfolio, across multiple
around how data is used, whether the
stress factors,” explains Smibert.
right level of consent has been granted,
“At Finning, our customers are evolving.
and whether the correct contractual
We are seeing a lot more digitization,
agreements are in place, all to guaran-
connected assets and abilities to
tee consumer trust and transparency.
enhance performance solutions for
“Security, compliance and regulation
how our customers manage fleets and
can be a necessary evil. It can take
utilize our equipment,” she adds. “An
time to explain and demonstrate that
example of this is, instead of just having
having security controls to protect our
a driver unit, now we can optimize how
customer data, employees’ data, meet
the machine is functioning by leverag-
privacy regulations wherever we are
ing data.” The monetization of data is
operating,” she reflects.
being seen across every industry, yet
“Internally, it takes a lot of relationship
Smibert is driven, and rightly so, to ensure
building amongst teams to help them
that the business remains pedantic
realize that we’re not going to slow
APRIL 2019
them down or prevent a product from
Protection Regulation (GDPR) across
being launched. We’re going to make
its European operations has seen
sure a product is not recalled because
Finning join the UK government’s Cyber
it was secured at the engineering stage
Essentials scheme which supports
and conception stage, as opposed to
businesses in protecting themselves
when it goes live. Reassurance that our
against common cyber threats. However,
role is not a showstopper to business,
most importantly, it works to ensure that
but is a enabler and can help us win
the business adheres to what Smibert
more business by demonstrating to our
coins as “the most stringent” framework,
customers that we are serious about
where the business has mapped each
their data, their privacy, and are taking
control it needs to follow, and has
control that is above the industry
selected the hardest to achieve, applying
standard. Having these controls in
this to its operations not just in Europe,
place is an incentive for our customers
but worldwide.
to consider us as a provider rather than going elsewhere.”
“We figure that if we set the bar high and require ourselves to meet the most stringent requirements everywhere, and
ROBUST SECURITY
by transforming our behavior, thought
The establishment of the General Data
process and policies, we will be able to
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Suzie Smibert Suzie is a security practitioner with more than 18 years of experience and is currently Finning International Chief Information Security Officer. Working with the leadership team, Suzie provides leadership, vision, strategy and experience for all things security. She and her team are responsible for managing information security risks, protecting information and technology resources globally for Finning.
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91
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CONTACT US
“ Our role is not a showstopper to business, but is an enabler and can help us win more business” — Suzie Smibert, Chief Information Security Officer
talent” predominately from Calgary, she has been leading the transformation of Finning’s security and enterprise architecture services and embedded next generation multi-tool sets, allowing the business to improve its response, detection and management capabilities. “We have security individuals assigned to squads in the DevOps team. While they don’t sit in DevOps, they do report into the management team and exist as a service provider to that group, and continue to report into my organization. “We do security as code. A lot of our tasks
tell our users the same story wherever
and requests are automated, when they
they work in the world,” states Smibert.
are deemed low risk, it goes straight
“I travel to our operating regions frequent-
into code.”
ly, and many of my coworkers are also nomads, working from every one of our
PROMOTING COLLABORATION
facilities, different regions, different
As the business continually evaluates
countries. We can’t expect them to know
emerging products and technologies
which behavior to adopt wherever they
which could drive greater value, Smibert
travel. If we tell them one set of behaviors,
explains that the business undertakes
one set of policies to meet, it makes our
whole-market evaluations in advance
job easier in the back end, and makes it
of a product’s shelf life in order to remain
much easier on our workforce.”
resilient, and looks not only to long-
By harmonizing, centralizing and
standing players in the market, but also
simplifying Finning’s digital infrastruc-
to innovative startups that can bring
ture, Smibert has looked to promote
something unique to the table. “Many big
cross-collaboration and rework in-region
companies only work with organizations
management teams. Hiring “tremendous
that are tried and tested. At Finning, we w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
93
F I N N I N G I N T E R N AT I O N A L
EXPERIENCEMATTERS
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CONTACT US
APRIL 2019
LEARN MORE
95
take well-calculated risks and work with
the business to embed next-generation
startups, or we consider open source
antiviruses across all of its digital
products after careful evaluation so that
environments, and gain chip intelligence,
we can get the best return on invest-
security protection and detection at all
ment and efficiency in our protection
of its endpoints. Not only that, it has also
and detection capabilities,� she says.
helped Finning practice better internal
Partnering with established players,
collaboration with broader technology
as well as pioneering startups, is
teams, identify applications or software
something to which Finning remains
that are no longer used and manage
thoroughly committed, in order to drive
its license with more efficiency.
further growth across the business
“We were able to not impact the end
and strengthen its security operations.
user, give them the visibility and tools
Collaborating with cybersecurity leader
they needed, but in the back end, save
CrowdStrike, for example, has allowed
a significant amount of money not only w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
F I N N I N G I N T E R N AT I O N A L
with our security portfolio, but our data science team, employee productivity services team and networking teams. It’s been quite powerful for us. CrowdStrike’s main play is security, but we’re using it outside of what it’s normally known for.”
WELCOMING DIVERSE TALENT Additionally, observing technology as an enabler and not a sole tool in the creation of a thriving collaborative culture, Smibert has worked alongside the communications team and change management group as the business continues on 96
its transformation journey, providing exceptional support to employees as well as ample opportunities for personal and professional development. “As part of our awareness program, we’ve enlisted a psychiatrist to help us define how our people learn and how they retain information. Instead of having an article on our webpage every couple of months, we have videos, face-to-face, gamification, and a variety of approaches to reach and engage our employees. Not everybody learns in the same way, so with change management and psychology, we’ve transformed our communication to craft a message in a way that is not too techy, rather it is APRIL 2019
C O M PA N Y FACT S
• Finning has accrued a world-class network of product support services across Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland and South America. • Embedding next generation multi-tool sets has seen the business to improve its response, detection and management capabilities. • Finning looks not only to longstanding players, but towards start-ups that can bring something unique to the table. • Collaborating with CrowdStrike has allowed Finning to gain chip intelligence, security protection and detection across its endpoints.
approachable and relatable,” she explains. At Finning, Smibert is keen to stress that its employees are its strongest assets, and so upskilling its workforce will not only benefit employees but will also protect the organization, leading the business to avoid common cultural pitfalls across its various geographies. “We are in different countries in South America, and for someone that’s not going very frequently, they might think a Chilean and an Argentinian think the same and both speak Spanish, so everything should then be the same. In reality, it’s not,” she
states. “There are subtleties, even if they both speak the same language, operate and retain data. Our communications groups were fantastic in helping us avoid addressing employees or w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
97
F I N N I N G I N T E R N AT I O N A L
1933
Year founded
12,000+
Approximate number of employees
98
teams in a way that would not resonate
Across each of its operating regions,
with them. When you think of aware-
the business has sought to inspire the
ness and how you can really reach
innovators of tomorrow by supporting
and influence your employees, it gives
the growth in STEM-based roles.
you massive return on investment.�
Partnering with leading STEM outreach organization, Actua in Canada, Finning
LONG-TERM OPPORTUNITIES
provides financial support, volunteering
With such a global footprint, Finning
and hands-on opportunities to those
remains committed to contributing to
interested in areas such as program-
a number of charitable causes, but one
ming and coding.
key focus has been behind the delivery
“Finning wants to see more influx of
of science, technology, engineering
inclusive and diverse talent in the field
and mathematics (STEM) education.
of STEM, so we partnered with Actua,
APRIL 2019
99
which is a camp for students and young children, hosting engagement events
and the field of STEM.” Looking at further opportunities, the
on university campuses. I volunteer to
business has also recently acquired
help students understand the world
100% of 4Refuel Canada and 4Refuel
of technology and the world of cyber
US. As a leading mobile on-site refueling
security. In the past year, we did exercis-
company supporting customers across
es involving coding machines, allowing
the construction, transportation, power
them exposure to technology,” says
generation and oil and gas sectors, it will
Smibert. “Some of my coworkers have
provide a multitude of advantages for
invited students to come into a branch
Finning, as more than 95% of 4Refuel’s
to see the heavy equipment and what
profitability is generated in Canada.
a power systems engineer might do, so
“By having 4Refuel join us to serve
that they get attracted into the culture
customers across the different geograw w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
F I N N I N G I N T E R N AT I O N A L
phies where our customers operate, we’re going to reduce their potential downtime because they will have access to fuel to keep their operation going, as opposed to having to wait for delivery, or having a site that might not have all of the fuel capacity that they need. This is definitely one element where this acquisition will help us ensure our customers are up and running as much as they want, allowing them to be more nimble and at the end of the day, profitable,” says Smibert. “Additionally, having 4Refuel will 100
allow us to expand in some of our customer fleets where we might not have a service contract, primarily non-Caterpillar equipment. This will give us visibility in terms of the other assets that are used by our customers,
and how they’re utilizing the other equipment. It is our hope that by
“ I volunteer to help students understand the world of tech– nology and the world of cyber security” — Suzie Smibert, Chief Information Security Officer APRIL 2019
providing holistic service that customers will think of us as the first place to buy their next piece of equipment.” Finning’s continued drive to fully expand its product and service offerings across Canada will see the business work towards a goal of acquiring 100% connected assets to deliver further support, and allow its data science and analytics teams identify business
101
opportunities to partner with its
ourselves in uncomfortable positions
vendors and customers and create
to achieve greater good, and do better
long-term opportunities.
for our customers, is something I’ve not
“Our next aim is to connect everything
seen elsewhere. It’s an inspiring part
and create new technologies that are
of our culture and a big part of what
going to transform and empower our
keeps me engaged in working here.”
customers and their partners to build and power a better world,” adds Smibert. In many places, once you have your initial transformation things slow down. The leadership at Finning hasbeen tremendous, and the willingness to put w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
LOGO HERE
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The secret behind Berkshire Hathaway GUARD Insurance Companies’ growth WRIT TEN BY
L AUR A MULL AN PRODUCED BY
ANDY TURNER
APRIL 2019
103
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B E R K S H I R E H AT H A W AY G U A R D I N S U R A N C E C O M PA N I E S
Competition may be rife in the insurance sector but Berkshire Hathaway GUARD Insurance Companies is proving it has the right strategy for success
P
erhaps no greater question faces companies today than: ‘How do I scale my business?’ Nowadays,
business headlines are inundated with stories touting the best tips and tricks for growth but surely, more than anything, it’s better to follow in the footsteps of a company which 104
has done it before? Insurers searching for the best tried-and-tested methods to scale their business need look no further than Berkshire Hathaway GUARD Insurance Companies, a fast-growing trailblazer in the US insurance market.
PREPARING THE FOUNDATIONS FOR GROWTH Since its founding in 1983, GUARD companies have gone from strength to strength and today, now known as Berkshire Hathaway Guard Insurance Companies, the business stands as a prominent subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway – underwriting through its insurance companies: WestGUARD, AmGUARD, EastGUARD, NorGUARD and AZGUARD. The group provides commercial (and, most APRIL 2019
105
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B E R K S H I R E H AT H A W AY G U A R D I N S U R A N C E C O M PA N I E S
“ We’re growing every year by 20-25% which shows that this is not a steady state company” — Sy Foguel, CEO and President, Berkshire Hathaway GUARD
was Executive Vice President. “At the time the company was writing around US$200mn of Workers Compensation premium in a dozen states,” he recalls. “Our vision from day one was to use the company as a platform to become a one stop shop for the insurance needs distributed by our agents. We started to introduce additional lines of coverage and built all the infrastructure.” Later in 2012, the organization changed hands again and became a wholly-owned subsidiary of National
106
recently, personal lines) insurance
Indemnity Company, which is part of
coverage and services to businesses
the Berkshire Hathaway Group. “Today,
of all types in the US. In fact, in 2017,
we are a $1.6bn company,” Foguel
the group issued over 250,000 policies
adds.
to businesses across the country.
COO Carl Witkowski, who has been
However, this success wasn’t achieved
with the company in different roles
because of luck or ‘just good timing’:
since 1989, adds that before gaining
throughout its history Berkshire
the backing of Berkshire Hathaway,
Hathaway GUARD has worked hard to
GUARD first had to forge its own path
redefine and reshape its strategy,
in the insurance market. “We were a
aligning the organization to achieve
small regional company and there
meteoric growth.
were two key things we had to offer:
The CEO, Sy Foguel, joined the
superior service and efficiency,” he
company in 2007 when the group was
observes. “Our retail agents are a key
acquired by Clal Insurance Enterprise
part of our DNA – they’ve been our
Holdings Ltd., an international insur-
distribution force.” Like any small
ance group of which he
operation, efficiency has always been a
APRIL 2019
107 well-versed mantra at GUARD. “We
company,” Witkowski recalls. “I was
needed to be efficient to survive as a
brought in to hone its processes,
company and so our expense ratios
create efficiencies and develop a
needed to be managed,” he continues.
managerial infrastructure.” As part of
“When we were later acquired, it was a
this process, the enterprise re-plat-
great example of when preparation
formed directly onto a browser-based
meets opportunity.” Critically, as the
modern architecture and went
insurer has continued on its upward
increasingly paperless – readying itself
trajectory, it has taken care to retain
for a digitally-savvy future. “We
this same start-up philosophy and
probably had one of the first browser-
mentality.
based client systems in the United States,” adds Witkowski. “We also
SPEARHEADING DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
insurance companies, with both
“In 1989 GUARD was a small two-state
accomplishments partially enabled by
became one of the first paperless
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B E R K S H I R E H AT H A W AY G U A R D I N S U R A N C E C O M PA N I E S
108 our R&D approach to technology
“Whether it’s for claims processing or
yielding over a dozen patents.” With a
policy selection and pricing, we always
wealth of experience in insurance,
manage data down to the scintilla level.
Witkowski has witnessed firsthand how
This means we can provide our
the sector is moving from the paper-
analysts and actuarial staff the data
based work of the past towards a new
they need to make good, real-time
age powered by technology and data.
decisions,” he explains.
Many businesses contend that data
Digital transformation can put a
is the ‘new oil’ and the same sentiment
strain on any business’ wallet but at
rings true at Berkshire Hathaway
Berkshire Hathaway GUARD, the
GUARD. With reams of data at the
enterprise has shrewdly taken a build,
insurer’s fingertips, Foguel, who is an
rather than buy, approach. “A lot of
actuary by profession, believes that
resources, time and effort are con-
this appreciation of data gives the
sumed when companies decide to
organization a significant edge.
replace their policy administration
APRIL 2019
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Sy Foguel As Chief Executive Officer and President, Sy Foguel leads the strategic planning and positioning of the organization, helping to promote initiatives that make realization of both short- and long-term goals possible. His involvement with the company has been marked by numerous accomplishments. While at Clal Insurance of Israel, he was the individual who first recognized the potential of a small, regional monoline carrier (i.e., GUARD in 2006) and was instrumental in the acquisition of this organization in 2007, which ultimately resulted in him being named Chief Executive Officer and President of GUARD. Since 2007, the company’s annual premiums have more than tripled (despite very challenging economic times) while maintaining a combined ratio well below industry peers and diversifying into new lines of property and casualty coverage. In 2012, he then helped orchestrate the profitable sale of GUARD to Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (specifically National Indemnity Company) and has continued in his role as CEO/President — rebranding the group as Berkshire Hathaway GUARD Insurance Companies and becoming a nationwide carrier Prior to his current tenure, Foguel had accumulated diverse international, executive-level insurance industry experience, including roles as CEO of IDI Bituch Yashir of Israel, Executive Vice President of Clal Insurance of Israel, and Senior Vice President of Arch Insurance in the United States as well as being in charge of other international insurance ventures such as a Lloyd’s Syndicate and a Romanian entity. Sy is an honors graduate of the Computer Engineering and Mathematics Faculties at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, is a certified actuary in both the US and Israel, and is a member of several actuarial societies in both countries (ACAS, FILAA).
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B E R K S H I R E H AT H A W AY G U A R D I N S U R A N C E C O M PA N I E S
E X ECU T I VE P RO FI LE
Carl Witkowski
110
Chief Operating Officer Carl Witkowski joined the organization in 1996 after working for nearly a decade as a consultant. Throughout his tenure, he has spearheaded numerous initiatives such as transforming the organization to 100% paperless processing in the early 2000’s and leading the re-platforming of our proprietary systems to a browser-based environment. Similarly, Witkowski’s prior leadership experience in the health care field has enabled him to serve a key role in formulating and shaping managed care strategies that have allowed Berkshire Hathaway GUARD to excel in delivering superior claims service that provides quality care to injured workers while containing costs. As current President of GUARDCo, he ensures standards of excellence and best practices are achieved. As part of his current duties, he leads Berkshire Hathaway GUARD’s information and technology group and is also “curator” of the company’s “human capital” and culture. In 2001 (the only year the company participated), GUARD was named the second Best Large Place to Work in Pennsylvania. All operational units currently fall under Witkowski’s leadership, including Claims processing, Small and Intermediate Business Unit underwriting, and Customer Service and Support functions. Witkowski has extensive past management, executive, and leadership experiences. He exited his two-decade career in behavioral health as Clinical Director of one of Pennsylvania’s most diverse behavioral health organizations. He was also engaged in private practice (providing both clinical counseling and management consulting), was a graduate faculty member of Marywood University for 12 years, and is a frequent presenter on information technology and human capital topics at national conferences.
APRIL 2019
“Our retail agents are a key part of our DNA – they’ve been our distribution force” — Carl Witkowski, Chief Operating Officer and Executive Vice President at Berkshire Hathaway GUARD
111
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B E R K S H I R E H AT H A W AY G U A R D I N S U R A N C E C O M PA N I E S
system, portals, claims system, or spend their time integrating multiple third-party systems” observes
1983
Year founded
Witkowski. “It distracts the business and slows it down. Because of this, we don’t replace any systems. Instead, we evolve our systems. Therefore, we don’t waste the resources and we don’t throw away that investment. However, we still must make the system very easy for an agent to use, as we don’t work directly with consumers.” 112
LEADERSHIP AND COLLABORATION: A PERFECT MIX
500+
Approximate number of employees
HQ
Wilkes-Barre Pennsylvania
Technology may be a fundamental cog in any business growth strategy but
sions quickly. We’re also flexible
when it comes to true success, it’s
enough to implement them on a very
ultimately down to the people. Aban-
quick timeline.” The insurer has taken
doning hierarchies in favor of a culture
this positive work culture one step
that “rewards individual performance
further using technology: by creating a
and celebrates team accomplishment”,
robust agency portal and leading call
Foguel points out how “everyone treats
center, the firm has strived to create a
this company as though they have
close-knit culture between the
ownership in it – there’s respect for
company and its agents.
one another”. “There are never more than three or
In all aspects, it seems agility is interwoven into the company’s DNA.
four degrees of separation in the
This not only applies to technology:
company,” he notes. “Our greatest
indeed, Berkshire Hathaway GUARD
success is our ability to make deci-
has worked diligently to offer bigger
APRIL 2019
113
and better product propositions to its
avoidance system and fleet manage-
customers. “GUARD itself is not a new
ment systems (FMS) technology for its
company but in the last decade we’ve
commercial auto lines, and a project
acted like a fast growing startup,”
with Plank Re to use AI to further
enthuses Foguel. “We’re growing every
automate the workers’ compensation
year by 20-25% which shows that this
underwriting process.
is not a steady state company in any
Berkshire Hathaway GUARD is
form. We’re always innovating and we
truly a strong role model for how to
always have four or five projects on the
profitably scale quickly and steadily.
go.” In fact, just last year the firm
Businesses should keep an eye on the
announced various partnerships with
firm to see what they’ll do next.
IoT companies and AI applications, including a pilot with Safe Drive Systems (SDS), to create a collision w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
114
Digital transformation and innovation at Plymouth Rock WRIT TEN BY
OLIVIA MINNOCK PRODUCED BY
ANDY TURNER
APRIL 2019
115
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P LY M O U T H R O C K A S S U R A N C E
Tom Lyons, Chief Operations Officer of Plymouth Rock Assurance’s Direct Response Channel, discusses how an agile, creative approach has allowed the insurer to adapt its offering to a changing market
116
T
oday, customer service is all about choice and innovation and the increasingly competitive insurance sector is no
exception. Consumers want to communicate in the most convenient way for them, and they expect personalized service as well as products tailored to their specific needs. Across an increasingly demanding landscape, auto and home insurance carrier Plymouth Rock Assurance has stepped up to this challenge and adapted its offering to survive – and thrive. Tom Lyons, Chief Operations Officer of Plymouth Rock Assurance’s Direct Response Channel, has closely watched the changing industry over his 12 years at the company. He has observed key consumer habit changes and notes an important shift: consumers increasingly want the ease of doing business through a distribution channel of their choice. This is the very reason the Direct Response Channel for Plymouth Rock was born. APRIL 2019
117
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P LY M O U T H R O C K A S S U R A N C E
“ That’s the key to direct distribution: how do we make it easy for the consumer to buy the product, while still feeling well informed?” — Tom Lyons, Chief Operations Officer, Direct Response Channel, Plymouth Rock Assurance
“In New Jersey, property and casualty insurance market share has evolved from being independent and exclusive agent dominated to more direct dominated,” Lyons explains. For example, in 2003, New Jersey was 71% dominated by independent and exclusive agents. Today those same agents make up around 47% of the market. In comparison, the Direct market share in 2003 was 29% and now stands at 53%. Plymouth Rock has had to adapt to this transformation in the industry while continuing to invest in and support its independent and
118
Prudential exclusive agent networks. Traditionally, the insurer distributed its products solely through an agency model. In order to step up and compete with the evolution of direct writers, a key element of Plymouth Rock’s transformation was to build a direct capability that complemented and strengthened its agency distribution offering. “Within our geographic footprint, you’ll see that a lot of the big, national direct writers entered our markets and began gobbling up market share from the agency channels,” Lyons comments. “To combat that, we piloted building out a direct-to-consumer APRIL 2019
CLICK TO WATCH : ‘PLYMOUTH ROCK ASSURANCE 30 SECOND TV SPOT’ 119 response channel about 10 years ago
its agency channel, as opposed to
to see if we could make the economics
a competing business. “From the initial
of growing through direct distribution
launch of the Direct Response Channel
work. We also needed to help our
through today, our focus has been
agency channels compete in a digital
helping the Plymouth Rock Enterprise
marketplace.” While initially a pilot
compete in this evolving digital land-
venture, failure was not an option.
scape. We are continually on the hunt
Plymouth Rock needed to build an
for new marketing sources, partners,
economical and scalable direct
and technology to leverage for the
business to compete in the market-
benefit of our agents,” says Lyons.
place and to fuel growth. Over the past
Since being founded in 1982,
decade, it has transformed into
Plymouth Rock has expanded signifi-
a multi-channel distribution model.
cantly across the northeast US. Initially,
Plymouth Rock’s goal is for its Direct Response Channel to be a partner to
Plymouth Rock distributed its products in Massachusetts and eventually w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
P LY M O U T H R O C K A S S U R A N C E
120
moved into New Jersey in 1992. It also
have economies of scale in terms of
has been active with independent agents
their marketing and telesales acquisition
in Connecticut and New Hampshire for
dollars,” says Lyons. “In many cases,
more than 20 years. Currently, Plymouth
they have thousands of sales reps
Rock’s Direct Response Channel is
in their sales centers and very large
actively writing in New Jersey, Pennsylva-
national advertising budgets.
nia, Connecticut and New Hampshire.
To compete with that, we have to be
The company plans to enter New York
extremely targeted and selective about
in the latter part of 2019.
where and how we spend our marketing
As the market changes and develops,
dollars and how we sell our product.”
Plymouth Rock no longer just competes
In many ways, Plymouth Rock is
with local rivals. National and global
maintaining an entrepreneurial startup
companies also have become competi-
mentality as it grows. It is careful how
tors. “Our direct national competitors
it spends its money and the relationships
APRIL 2019
it forms, and it is adept at listening to
or tablet and buy the product online or
each colleague within the fast growing
over the telephone. However, they still
organization.
seek the comfort and confidence of
A significant advantage for Plymouth
knowing that there’s a licensed agent
Rock is its deep understanding of the
ensuring they make the right decisions.
market and how consumer needs and
That’s the key to direct distribution.
expectations continue to evolve. Lyons
How do we make it easy for the
is keenly aware of the shift to self-serve
consumer to buy the product, while still
in the market and what this means for
feeling well served and well informed?”
his organization. “Back in the old days
In order to provide the best possible
of insurance, it was routine for customers
experience for customers in a changing
to go to their local agent to buy insurance
landscape, Plymouth Rock has worked
products, face to face. Nowadays,
with innovative startups that might
many customers want to be able
otherwise be seen as disruptive
to transact right from their smartphone
competition. “We’ve worked with a lot
E XE CU T I VE PRO FI LE
Tom Lyons Tom Lyons is the Chief Operations Officer of the Direct Response Channel for the Plymouth Rock Management Company of New Jersey. He is responsible for all aspects of Plymouth Rock Assurance’s auto direct‐to‐consumer marketing and sales efforts, marketing analytics activities, and inbound and outbound Sales Center operations. He also oversees all aspects of Teachers’ Insurance Plan of NJ. Tom joined Plymouth Rock in 2007 as a Marketing Representative in the Prudential Agency Management Division. The following year, he became the first Supervisor of Plymouth Rock’s Direct Sales Center, eventually being promoted to the Director position. In this capacity, he built out and oversaw the growth of the inbound, outbound and telemarketing sales operations. tlyons@plymouthrock.com
w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
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“ What sets Plymouth Rock apart from our competitors is that we try to form really strategic partnerships with these companies: it’s not just one size fits all” — Tom Lyons, Chief Operations Officer, Direct Response Channel, Plymouth Rock Assurance
Lyons emphasizes. There’s a fine line to those arrangements, but several have worked out well for Plymouth Rock and its partners. “Transparency and collaboration is at the forefront of how we form these strategic partnerships to ensure win-win relationships,” says Lyons. As well as startups, Plymouth Rock maintains relationships with more established tech partners in order to leverage the latest technology for a truly superior customer experience. Working with Salesforce.com, a customer relationship management
of insurtech companies both from a
(CRM) system, gives the company a
technology and a distribution perspective,”
unified 360-degree view of both
says Lyons. “What sets Plymouth Rock
current and prospective customers.
apart from our competitors is that we
“We monitor the customer journey all
try to form tailored strategic partnerships
the way throughout their lifecycle with
with these companies. It’s not just one
us through every touch point,” Lyons
size fits all.” For example, the insurer
explains. “We understand if they like
has partnered with other alternative
to communicate with us via email, chat,
distribution partners, which it calls
text or phone, so we can tailor the
Super Agents, throughout the country.
customer experience specific to those
The company has integrated with these
individuals. In addition, partnerships
partners through LeadCloud, a leading
with IBM and Acxiom are instrumental
data integration partner. “Regional
for data management. We are pursuing
direct writers need to be scrappy
multichannel marketing, where we
and agile in how we form partnerships
execute a variety of different marketing
and how we integrate with them,”
channels to fit customers’ needs. w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
123
P LY M O U T H R O C K A S S U R A N C E
Some consumers would prefer we market to them through email and display advertising, whereas others prefer direct mail or social media advertising. It’s about tailoring our messaging and approach to fit the needs of the customer.” Another interesting area of partnership Plymouth Rock is beginning to explore is with financial institutions. “This is an area of expansion and growth,” says Lyons. “We’re finding that these financial institutions are able to round out their client base 124
by offering a Property and Casualty insurance product with us, and in doing so, improve their customer retention. The strategic partnerships we form are key to what Plymouth Rock does. Our partnerships are not about ‘you do this and we do that’ – they are creative and agile. Plymouth Rock is currently working with many financial institutions in this regard and is actively seeking out new partnerships to advance our respective businesses.” Internally, Plymouth Rock’s research and development team is always on the lookout for emerging technologies. Its agile, flexible approach allows new ventures and solutions to be piloted APRIL 2019
“ Regional direct writers need to be scrappy and agile in how we form partnerships” — Tom Lyons, Chief Operations Officer, Direct Response Channel, Plymouth Rock Assurance
quickly before successful initiatives are rolled out across the organization. Every innovation implemented is measured in relation to its impact on customer experience, which is closely monitored. “We do customer surveys and focus groups to understand what customers like and don’t like about being insured with us, and we often make changes based on that. Keeping our finger on the pulse of consumers and being responsive to their needs helps keep us competitive and at the cutting edge of innovation,” Lyons says. Another key element to finding the best solutions for its business and customers is Plymouth Rock’s culture of collaboration. It is not only external, but permeates the internal organization as well. “We have a culture where everybody in the organization, regardless of rank, feels empowered to give recommendations or suggestions,” Lyons says. For example, the popular Get Home Safe® benefit that’s unique to Plymouth Rock allows the company’s customers access to a free taxi ride home as a safer alternative to driving when necessary. This innovative service was suggested to the CEO by an employee in the lunchroom many w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
125
P LY M O U T H R O C K A S S U R A N C E
1982
Year founded
1,800+
Approximate number of employees
HQ
Woodbridge New Jersey 126
years ago. It has now been rolled out across the enterprise. “We have a culture of collaboration and transparency across our various business units,” Lyons says “These units empower an entrepreneurial spirit and an innovative approach to all of our business initiatives. And there is always collaboration to ensure the best practices of the various groups across Plymouth Rock.” Through this entrepreneurial spirit and a commitment to collaboration, the Plymouth Rock Direct Response APRIL 2019
“ Plymouth Rock was founded on the principle of putting service first. That is still part of our DNA.” — Tom Lyons, Chief Operations Officer, Direct Response Channel, Plymouth Rock Assurance
127
Channel has grown significantly.
principle that a higher standard of
“We plan to grow our business quite
customer service would make us stand
rapidly over the next several years
out in an already-crowded industry.
and feel our multi-channel approach
Treating our customers with courtesy,
to distribution should fuel growth in
valuing their time, and understanding
these new states for both our direct
and empathizing with their issues has
and independent agent channels,”
been crucial to our success. That is
Lyons explains. Throughout this
still part of our DNA. We respect the
journey, he is confident the organiza-
brand equity that Plymouth Rock
tion will not lose the unique touch that
has built since day one and honor our
led to this success in the first place,
cultural values.”
with customer service being at the forefront of everything it does. “Plymouth Rock was founded on the w w w.f i nte c hma ga z i n e. com
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