Life modeling and reporting teams are facing unprecedented challenges, including uncontrolled costs and ever-tightening deadlines, as well as resistance to change and inconsistent reporting practices. Complicating this is the need for complex calculations, ever-evolving projects, heavy technology reliance and concerns with model optimization and maintenance. Has your actuarial team reached a place where change isn’t only desirable but urgent?
In first of a series of five articles on life modeling and technology, we will explore the challenges facing life insurers. The articles will examine how life modeling and reporting teams can properly understand what is and what isn’t working well, the implications of that for the business and suggest ways to frame your situation to finance leaders to help you get the resources you need to deliver long-term improvements.
Some of the common reporting challenges that you need to consider when developing your business case include:
Your costs are out of control. Every year, your actuarial team works hard to complete the reporting in time and all the while, reporting demands deepen in their complexity. Errors start creeping in and the overtime bill is crippling your budget, right when you need to increase your spend on hardware to keep up with increasing reporting sophistication. If this is the case, the message to your CFO may be: We’re spending ever-more time and money just to stay still. We need to redeploy this spend smartly to make process and technology improvements that get us ahead of the growing complexity of the business’ modeling and reporting needs.
You’re delivering reporting, but only just in time…just about. There’s so much to get done within the reporting cycle: preparation, calculations, review, rework, reporting and dealing with those last-minute 'what-if?' questions. It’s a stretch to get everything done each time, but your team does, just about. However, errors have started to creep in, and your team is having to redo some tasks. They’re at risk of burnout.
While this ‘seat of the pants’ state of affairs accommodates the needs of your stakeholders, eventually, you’re going to start identifying errors too close to deadlines. Or auditors may ask last-minute questions and put the way actuarial reporting gets done under increasing scrutiny, creating additional workloads. The message to your CFO on this might be: Positive process changes, backed by the right resources, can shield our actuarial function from the people risks of burnout and the business from the risks of ‘just in time’ reporting errors.
You’re fighting to keep pace with changing regulation and constantly deprioritizing value-generating projects. Every few years, there seems to be a new set of regulations, with refinements in between. And just as you’re barely keeping up with the compulsory changes, your management is looking to uncover more insights and greater value from your data assets. While your stakeholders may be asking simple questions, they don’t fully appreciate the scale of calculations to deliver the answers they seek, meaning it’s an uphill struggle to deliver even the most rudimentary responses. If this is your situation, your message to the CFO may be: The current status quo is pushing value-added work from the core to the margins. We want to deliver the insight business leaders need to generate more value, but we need resources to change our processes and the right technology solutions to make this happen.
You’re wrestling reporting inconsistencies. As various reporting projects have evolved, with managers or external processes requesting more information, your reporting complexity has increased.
Maybe you’re no longer even sure who still needs which reports or for what purposes, and why they’re not consistent across all projects. And maybe it’s not possible to bring the reports into a single consistent framework because other systems have evolved to depend on them as they are. Worse, maybe you have separate teams with different approaches, approximations and reports, all of which you have to consolidate. The message to the CFO in this type of scenario may be: Reporting inconsistencies have grown in response to business needs, but we need to simplify, automate and consolidate these if we want to prevent errors and actuarial resources being diverted to smoothing over the cracks, instead of adding real business value.
First, we need to acknowledge that these calculations are complex and business-critical. We are here because people have done their best — often with limited resources — to keep pace with changing needs. But in doing so, by being agile and reactive, problematic working patterns have crept in, which now need to be rooted out. Some of the most common of these are:
The takeaway from this is that it’s important to take a critical view of what you’re working with. Instead of asking whether a model meets your current needs, you should ask whether this is what you would build if you were to start from scratch today.
Success in the short term is to start a virtuous circle, where small investments result in larger savings, which in turn fund larger investments for even greater gains. By showing your willingness to think in these terms, you can better align with the concerns of finance leaders and work collaboratively to access the resources you need for more fundamental process change.
Positive change may be highly desirable, but it isn’t inevitable. So, if you identify with any of the challenges in this insight, it may be time to disrupt the status quo. In the next of our articles in this series, we’ll explore a comprehensive strategy to enhance your life businesses, by focusing on long-term objectives and the right approach to model development and technology.
To find out how we can support your actuarial team drive financial transformation, including modeling, automation and process improvements, please contact your WTW consultant or email ICT@wtwco.com or visit RiskAgility Financial Modeler.