Insurance Nightmares Part 1

It was a warm Friday mid-morning as Tom and Mary packed their bags and patiently waited for the taxi that would take them to Wilson airport to catch a flight to the Masai Mara for their weekend getaway. Their trusted domestic manager Juma cheerily waved them goodbye after carefully placing their luggage in the back of the taxi. After a memorable weekend, Tom and Mary returned to Nairobi on Monday evening, finding the house in total darkness. “That’s strange,” Mary said as Juma would usually be in the house making dinner. Their car, which had been left parked in the little alcove next to the front door of the gated community town house, sat at an odd angle with the front door partly open. Tom approached the car carefully, brows furrowed in curiosity at what appeared to be strange circumstances. He gasped out “Oh my God,” before running to the front of the car in visible shock. The car had clearly been in an accident with massive damage to the front bonnet and bumper. Mary opened the door to the house, hoping to find Juma who was the only one who could explain what had happened. Juma was nowhere to be seen. With no Juma to explain and  no car to speak of, the couple hoped that the story would unravel in due course while praying feverishly that there were no injuries that accompanied the badly damaged vehicle.

Insurance is defined as  an arrangement by which a company or the state undertakes to provide a guarantee of compensation for specified loss, damage, illness, or death in return for payment of a specified premium. Insurance is one of the most maligned and misunderstood products that we have. It is like a visit to the dentist for a root canal procedure: It has to be done and you desperately wish you didn’t have to, but the consequences for not doing it are debilitating. But why is this product have such a poor penetration rate in Kenya? According the latest statistics from the Insurance Regulatory Authority’s 2019 annual report, the insurance penetration in Kenya declined from 2.43% in 2018 to 2.34% in 2019. The decline has been as steady as the numbers of physical letters you receive in the post office box (assuming you even have one) from a blink-and-you-miss-it high of 2.75% in 2015 to 2.71% in 2016 and 2.68% in 2017. It would take more than ten opinion pieces to try and unpack what’s going on in the Kenyan insurance industry, but it turns out that we are actually in the top three insurance markets in Africa.

The South Africans by far and away signed up to a different Whatsapp group and, perhaps due to their extremely developed and high value manufacturing and service industry, take up 69% of the written premium market share, followed by Morocco at 6.8%, with Kenya trailing on the podium at third place with 3.3% of Africa’s written premium but ahead of economic giant Nigeria who is fourth place at 2.4%.

What do these numbers potentially indicate? First off, Africans clearly don’t like insurance, don’t understand it and the sun rises and sets every day on our blessed continent without us natives seeing the need to take it up. Our declining penetration rates in Kenya alone is a worrying indication that something is not well understood or working from a customer perspective. And yet, here is the paradox, the same IRA report shows that service providers in that segment are increasing, for instance five insurance brokers, sixteen insurance investigators and 1,859 more insurance agents were registered in 2019. The growth in insurance investigator numbers I can understand as Kenyan insurance fraud is at James Bond Live and Let Die levels. But the higher growth of insurance agents juxtaposed to the declining penetration numbers indicates that either the industry as a whole has completely lost any impetus to innovate or, if such innovation is happening, it’s only visible to a burgeoning agent class.

Did Mary and Tom get a return on their comprehensive insurance investment once the dust settled and was Juma ever found? Come back here next week to find out how Mary plus a few million other unwilling insurance policy holders are gagged and hog tied to their insurance companies in indignant resignation which possibly explains why the rate continues to decline year on year.

 

Insurance Industry Sips A Bitter Lemonade

“Everyone has a plan, until they get punched in the mouth,” Mike Tyson – world famous boxer.

The internet was lit up last month when insurance history was shaken to its roots by a nondescript New York based startup called Lemonade. The urban legend is quoted thus:

“At seven seconds past 5:47pm on December 23, 2016, Brandon Pham, a Lemonade customer, hit ‘Submit’ on a claim for a $979 Canada Goose Langford Parka. By ten seconds past the minute, A.I. Jim, Lemonade’s claims bot, had reviewed the claim, cross-referenced it with the policy, ran 18 anti-fraud algorithms on it, approved the claim, sent wiring instructions to the bank, and informed Brandon the claim was closed.”

In Kenyan-speak, Brandon lost his fairly expensive winter jacket valued at about Kshs 98,000 two days before Christmas. He submitted a claim on his phone using his insurance company’s app. Within 3 seconds, a robot had reviewed and approved the claim, sent EFT instructions to his bank and closed the whole unpleasant maneno. Brandon breathlessly gave his side of the story thus:

“I signed up for Lemonade because it was no frills, the most affordable option, and took no more than two minutes on my couch. I try to avoid making claims but the process with Lemonade was so simple. I already assumed there was no way that I’d recover my losses: other insurers either pile paperwork or deduct tons of charges that I don’t understand. But this time was different. I signed an honesty pledge, answered a few questions, and Lemonade reimbursed me in a matter of seconds! Their service is amazing and I am so happy that I signed up!”

I see my insurance industry friends rolling their eyes as they read this. I would too if I worked for an industry that had more gobbledygook than an advanced fluid mechanics class in Swedish. “We provide WIBA cover with a minimal excess payable”. How in the name of logic does that sentence make sense to the ordinary man on the Rongai matatu? And no matter how many times you speak to insurance industry managers and tell them to communicate simpler to customers, you’re more likely to get an underwritten, indemnified ode to jargon.

Lemonade is a young company, set up less than two years ago and funded with $13 million (About Kshs 1.3 billion) of seed capital. Its premise is peer-to-peer insurance (P2P) aiming at reducing costs by cutting out the middle fat made up of brokers and agents and issuing policies directly to clients. It donates unclaimed money to good causes. Yes: it gives away what the ordinary insurer on the Syokimau train would deem as profit. According to Paul Sawyer writing on the Venture Beat blog, clients select a cause that they care about through the app that they use to sign up. Clients who select similar causes are bundled into peer groups. Premiums from this group cover any claims by individuals and any money left over is sent to the common cause. Lemonade makes money by taking a 20 percent flat fee from monthly policy payments. The whole premise of the Lemonade model is understanding human behavior so they hired the renowned behavioural economist Dan Ariely as the company’s Chief Behavioral Officer. “Since we don’t pocket unclaimed money, we can be trusted to pay claims fast and hassle free,” says Ariely. “As for our customers, knowing fraud harms a cause they believe in, rather than an insurance company they don’t, brings out their better nature too. Everyone wins.” The policy that Brandon had cost him $5 (Kshs 500) per month and, according to the Lemonade website, was 5.6 times less than what a similar policy from a legacy insurer cost. Unlike many other insurance start-ups, which have focused on distribution, Lemonade has become a fully-fledged insurance company. It takes on the risk from the policies it writes, but also has reinsurance deals at Lloyd’s and with Berkshire Hathaway.

Look, we are not there. Yet. But Kenya is on the global map of fintech innovation and has demonstrated a population that is inarguably made up of large-scale early adopters across a wide spectrum of age groups. Shifting to insure-tech, particularly in matters that are pertinent to Kenyans and inexorably linked such as road transportation and health is simply a matter of when, not if. The number of road accidents caused by the public transport industry be it via matatu or bodaboda transport lends itself to short term, bite sized policies that are cheap and fit well into our “kadogo” economic model. One insurance company has already began to pilot this. However the problem in the Kenyan insurance industry today is the middleman legacy system made up of brokers and agents that create a fairly healthy cost layer that tags onto the fractious margins. Add to that the high level of frauds as well as increasing regulation and you see an industry that has to die and be cremated before any practical innovative solutions can ever emerge that make sustainable financial sense to Victorian age balance sheets.

Before 1954, the athletic world did not believe that a man could run a mile in under 4 minutes. However, on 6th May of that year, Roger Bannister broke that psychological barrier by running a mile in 3:59:4. I call it a psychological barrier because within a year of Bannister’s achievement, 24 other people had followed suit in running the sub-four minute mile. What Lemonade has done is to break the psychological barrier where a claim is paid out without filling in reams and reams of paper, and answering all manner of questions short of what color underwear one was wearing when the event leading up to the claim occurred. I don’t think legacy insurers will fall over themselves to copy this new model. But new insuretechs can and will. The barriers to entry for insuretech are fairly low. And that would be a resounding blow to the old school insurers. To be precise, it would be a punch in the mouth for even the best laid strategic plans.