The number of households holding life insurance is at a 50-year low. Digital disruption has changed demand and how consumers interact with agents. To adapt, carriers must use more predictive analytics, increase digital offerings, and activate agents to give advice in a digitally enabled ecosystem.
Today, the life insurance industry is at a 50-year low,1 as many US consumers increasingly struggle to understand the full value of life insurance against competing financial priorities. Simultaneously, disruptors from other industries are entering the insurance sector, shaking up the traditional models across distribution, sales, products, and services and providing an immersive digital experience that traditional life insurance carriers have not yet been able to provide.2
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So, how did we get here and what can carriers do about it? Deloitte surveyed more than 1,600 middle-market consumers in the United States on both their attitudes toward life insurance and their path-to-purchase for life insurance products. New results from the most recent survey, combined with our longitudinal analysis from Deloitte’s 2012 and 2015 consumer preferences studies, has uncovered new insights that can help carriers better understand and engage a modern, more digitally savvy consumer.
Our analysis highlighted four key takeaways:
Facing this reality, the time for carriers to adjust to digital disruption in the path to purchase is now. Carriers should leverage more predictive analytics and marketing, increase digital capabilities, and better enable agents to provide holistic advice to meet consumers’ evolving expectations.
The life insurance industry is undergoing dramatic changes, from the expectations of its consumer base to the players who compete in the industry. This disruption coincides with the 50-year low in the number of US households holding a life insurance policy.3 While the overall US economy is generally on an upward trajectory, the life and annuities industry continues to trail GDP in growth.4 The industry is failing to adapt effectively to evolving consumer preferences, creating a need to redefine business as usual to be able to overcome the following key challenges.
Today, consumers’ expectations are shaped by the experiences they receive from leading digital companies. These types of experiences are characterized by a clearly defined customer value proposition and reinforced with a simple, easy, and elegant experience.5 Our research shows typical consumers:
With declining life insurance sales, the industry has turned to cutting costs.6 But another approach could prove more fruitful: Workflow automation breakthroughs and implementation can enable carriers to scale every customer touchpoint. Further, the financial services industry and their infrastructure security and compliance organizations are increasingly accepting of cloud capabilities, thus driving speed to market for myriad software-as-a-service platforms that would enable engagement with the rewired buyer.
Technological innovations have also reduced barriers to entry and have made the insurance industry more competitive than ever before. Incumbents face competition from external forces, such as from startups, as well as from emerging technological and pricing innovations within the industry.7 Competition for consumer dollars is now not only between carriers but also across industries as consumers evaluate insurance alongside ever-evolving financial priorities.
This changing landscape presents a clear opportunity for industry revitalization. Carriers should embrace digital disruption by developing the digital capabilities to more effectively engage digitally savvy consumers and compete with technologically driven competitors to spur much-needed growth.
Since 2010, Deloitte has been studying life insurance consumers to determine what separates buyers from nonbuyers. This study builds on Deloitte’s published works in 20128 and 20159 that analyzed consumer preferences and identified key trigger moments in the path to purchase.
In this 2018 iteration of the study, we leveraged longitudinal data and applied new psychographic variables, focusing specifically on what impacts consumer decisions for implicit and explicit interest, purchase, and retention. In surveying consumers, we sought to understand five key stages across the consumer life cycle:
We compiled data from a sample population of US consumers largely in the 25- to 54-year-old age range—the Generation X and Generation Y consumers many carriers are targeting. The population was split almost equally by gender (50.1 percent men and 49.9 percent women) with a median household income of approximately US$52,000. Survey respondents included a distribution between buyers and nonbuyers of life insurance, as well as buyers who retained their policies and those who let them lapse. Figure 1 offers details on the 1,600+ survey respondents.
Our analysis found that to effectively engage modern-day consumers and embrace digital disruption, carriers must aim to provide a complete omnichannel experience. This holistic experience should be complemented with the “share of eyeballs” carriers want from consumers (see figure 2). As we conducted our analysis across the consumer life cycle, four key themes emerged:
By addressing these key themes, carriers can improve their ability to create the frictionless omnichannel experience that consumers now expect while better addressing the needs of an increasingly complex consumer base.
Today, carriers’ marketing efforts are generally ineffective at encouraging consumers to consider buying life insurance policies. Generating awareness of life insurance products is the first step in engaging prospective buyers, yet survey respondents ranked seeing marketing advertisements and receiving marketing materials among the five least important events in prompting them to consider purchasing life insurance (see figure 3).
Instead, survey respondents indicated that certain life events, such as having children (62 percent), changes to overall financial situation (54 percent), becoming a homeowner (54 percent), interacting with a life insurance agent (54 percent), and marriage (53 percent), continue to be the most important events leading them to consider purchase as they were in the 2015 study.10 This consistently reactive nature of purchase suggests that most providers are doing an insufficient job demonstrating the importance of life insurance to consumers through marketing outreach.
Ineffective marketing efforts also have consequences throughout the consumer path to purchase. We found that when buyers moved past the initial purchase consideration to provider selection, only 7 percent of respondents cited marketing efforts as the way by which they connected with their current provider; in contrast, more than one-half of all buyers cited personal referrals. Interestingly, despite the availability and convenience of digital channels, only 9 percent found their current provider through an online inquiry (see figure 4).
Overall, carriers should invest more in marketing efforts to identify the most effective timing, content, and channel to engage each individual consumer and to inform them of the full value of a life insurance product. Beyond this, carriers should aim to generate a sense of urgency and need for life insurance products, so any purchase is proactive instead of reacting to forces beyond provider control. This will also help prevent consumers from falling back on personal relationships to inform provider selection.
Insurance carriers in the United States have long faced the challenge of competing for consumer wallet share with day-to-day financial priorities (see figure 5). Articulating the value of insurance versus other purchases such as vacations or paying bills has long been a critical focus of carriers, but we are seeing an interesting evolution in the past several years.
The majority of respondents who are either nonbuyers or lapsed buyers cited alternative financial priorities as the primary reason they did not purchase a policy or allowed their existing policy to lapse. Among the responses, we saw many of the same priorities from previous studies,11 such as paying monthly bills (cited by 69 percent of respondents), providing for my family (44 percent), and paying off car payments (28 percent).
At the same time, we see a shift in priorities: The biggest movers speak to consumers taking on more personal debt and a growing number of subscription services. For example, paying credit card debt and student loans marked two of the largest increases (referenced as top financial priorities by 38 percent and 17 percent of respondents, respectively). Payments for entertainment subscriptions represent a new entrant, with a rather substantial response rate (9 percent), outpacing going on vacation and several other “traditional” priorities.
This transition and movement of financial priorities necessitates more active differentiation of services, as well as innovative solutions to help make insurance more affordable. To address these shifts, insurance carriers could utilize the following tactics:
Our data revealed that there is a gap between consumers’ preferences for digital services and carriers’ digital capabilities throughout the buying life cycle. Twenty-three percent of buyers surveyed reported that they were willing to purchase life insurance via digital channels, but on average only 11 percent purchased digitally. The difference between these two values speaks to the incongruence between consumer preferences and carrier capabilities. Moreover, just under one-quarter of buyers expressed a willingness to purchase digitally; this does not mean that consumers are ready to dive headfirst into a fully digital experience, but there is a growing appetite for these capabilities. Product complexity continues to drive consumers to an agent for clarity, however, as many view life insurance as a complex product not easily understood without the help of an agent. When put all together, these insights underscore the importance for carriers to invest in creating a streamlined omnichannel experience for consumers across all touchpoints, including both agent and digital (see figure 6).
While product complexity presents a challenge for customers leveraging digital channels, carriers can still focus on digital channel development for simpler transactions. Survey respondents indicated a preference for digital-only engagement over direct agent contact for simple transactional touches such as making annual or monthly payments, and 90 percent of all respondents rated postpurchase account management via Web or mobile channels as very helpful or helpful. A dramatic drop in preference for analog channels, branch, and phone interactions between 2015 and 2018 only further demonstrates the importance of digital is increasing over time.
Overall, the preference for digital channels throughout the path to purchase, from research and evaluation to postpurchase management, was strongest among younger consumers. Differences between expressed attitudes and actual purchasing behaviors were greatest among this cohort, which suggests these digital natives would have preferred to purchase digitally but carriers may have lacked the capabilities to allow them to do so. As these consumers age into the primary purchasing group of life insurance products, carriers should expect an increased reliance upon, and preference for, digital channels.
While life insurance consumers traditionally relied on an agent throughout the buying life cycle, more and more consumers indicated they would prefer to interact with agents and carriers later in the purchasing cycle and for a shorter period of time. Today’s consumers prefer self-service capabilities for research and evaluation and digital self-management of existing policies: Forty-one percent of buyers surveyed preferred digital12 platforms during the research stage and 90 percent of buyers indicated a preference for self-management of existing policies through digital channels. Given this preference for self-service, the period of time in which an agent has the ability to influence purchasing decisions has been compressed.
However, there is a silver lining to this advice compression trend. Data indicates that consumers still value high-quality, timely, and comprehensive financial advice at the decision-making stage. Sixty-eight percent of buyers prefer to speak to an agent before purchase compared to 31 percent of nonbuyers. This indicates that as the role of the agent is compressed, high-impact agent advice remains critical to drive purchases. So despite this increasing emphasis on digital distribution channels, agent advice still provides a degree of clarity and fosters confidence in ways that independent research cannot.
Furthermore, the preference for self-directed research and evaluation paired with timely and comprehensive agent advice may also be leading to increasing retention rates. Buyer lapse rates dropped 18 percent from our last survey in 2015.13 The implication here is that as consumers are more diligent in evaluating their needs before they purchase a policy and when an agent supports their choice, that decision can be stickier than ever.
As advice compression continues, how carriers position agents in the buying cycle matters now more than ever. When consumers own the product evaluation and account management of their policy choices, an agent’s ability to offer targeted and informed outreach becomes even more important. Carriers should develop tools and services that provide consumers with easy methods to evaluate their services and a direct and efficient connection to agents to finalize purchase decisions. Further, the recent reductions in insurance lapses also reveal the importance of having quality digital interactions and personalized agent interactions at the front end of the buying cycle.
Digital disruption has arrived and the time to act is now. Our research has highlighted the various risks carriers may face if they cling to yesterday’s status quo practices. To effectively engage today’s consumer, carriers should:
Now more than ever, to be able to meet the needs and preferences of the modern consumer, insurance carriers will need to employ bold and innovative thinking. As carriers adapt their capabilities to how and when consumers want to engage most, a key first step would be to focus on bolstering their digital and analog capabilities. Approaches to consider are outlined in figure 7.