- How to think and plan strategically
- How to identify and manage stakeholder relationships
- How to design and implement performance measures to support achievement of organizational objectives
To have any chance at success, a Chief Claims Officer needs to clearly establish, with his/her CEO, exactly how the claims operation can contribute to achievement of the company’s strategic objectives, and how performance will be evaluated. Knowing and communicating those expectations is absolutely essential, since a claims leader who wants employees to perform at their best must do four things:
- Communicate performance expectations and confirm understanding
- Use measures of performance and success that are well-designed, explicit and understood
- Provide the resources and support they need to succeed
- Give appropriate guidance and feedback so they can produce the best results
Recently I invited a small group (50) of insurance Chief Claims Officers, CEOs and COOs to provide me with some feedback on claims performance categories by asking them to do the following:
Please rank the following claims performance categories in terms of their importance to you when evaluating the effectiveness of your claims operation.
- Claim loss cost management (average paid, leakage ratio, etc.)
- Claims expense management (allocated and unallocated)
- Claims productivity and throughput (closing ratio, cycle time, reopening ratio, aged pending)
- Customer satisfaction (premium paying customer)
- Agent/Broker satisfaction
- Internal stakeholder satisfaction (business units, underwriters, actuaries, etc.)
- Loss reserve adequacy, accuracy and timeliness
- Regulatory compliance (avoidance of fines, penalties, negative publicity and other unwelcome surprises)
- Employee engagement/satisfaction
- Claims fraud detection and mitigation
Performance Category | Combined Group Rank | CEO/COO Rank | Chief Claims Officer Rank |
Loss Cost Management |
1
|
2
|
1
|
Expense Management |
5
|
6
|
4
|
Productivity |
4
|
4
|
5
|
Customer Satisfaction |
3
|
3
|
3
|
Agent/Broker Satisfaction |
8
|
7
|
8
|
Internal Stakeholder Satisfaction |
10
|
10
|
10
|
Loss Reserve Adequacy, Accuracy and Timeliness |
2
|
1
|
2
|
Regulatory Compliance |
7
|
5
|
7
|
Employee Engagement |
6
|
8
|
6
|
Claims Fraud Detection and Mitigation |
9
|
9
|
9
|
But the individual responses told a different story. Loss reserve adequacy was ranked as most important by the CEO/COO group as a whole, for example, yet 30% of the respondents didn’t even rank that category in the top three. Employee engagement was ranked 8th by the group, yet 20% of the respondents ranked it in the top 2. The Chief Claims Officer group ranked loss cost management as most important, yet 30% of them didn’t believe it belonged in the top 3. One Chief Claims Officer said the most important performance category was employee engagement, as did one CEO/COO—let’s hope they work together! The individual rankings were all over the place, even for the internal stakeholder satisfaction category, which both groups ranked as least important, although 15% of the Chief Claims Officers had it in the top 5 (no one in the CEO/COO group did.)
What’s the takeaway? Thomas J. Leonard probably put it best: “Clarity affords focus.” If you are a Chief Claims Officer, have a conversation with your CEO/COO and make certain you are aligned on what success looks like and how it is measured in your claims operation. Use the performance category framework in the survey for your discussion, or develop your own, but don’t fall into the trap of assuming that all performance categories are equally important. They may all be important, but they are not equally important, so your job is to identify and deliver on those that matter the most to your organization. Get clarity, and then focus. After all, if your company’s strategy relies upon the claims customer experience as a competitive differentiator, your claims strategy should be designed and your resources deployed to deliver that first and foremost.
The claims performance category survey will be open through the middle of June, 2015. If you would like to participate in the survey, you can do so here.
Dean K. Harring, CPCU, CIC is a retired insurance executive who now enjoys his time as an advisor, board member, educator and animal portrait artist. He can be reached at dean.harring@gmail.com or through LinkedIn or Twitter or Harring Watercolors.
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