Insurance

Financial Services

Insurance

We help insurers modernize underwriting, claims processing, distribution optimization, and fraud detection while maintaining actuarial governance and regulatory compliance across regional insurance markets.

CHALLENGES WE SEE

What holds Insurance back

01

Manual claims processing creates bottlenecks, taking weeks to settle straightforward claims and frustrating customers expecting instant service.

02

Fraudulent claims cost insurers billions annually, but traditional detection methods miss sophisticated schemes and flag legitimate claims incorrectly.

03

Underwriting relies on outdated risk models and manual data entry, leading to mispriced policies and lost competitive opportunities.

04

Customer churn increases as policyholders receive generic coverage options instead of personalized recommendations matching their actual risk profiles.

05

Regulatory compliance requires constant policy updates across multiple jurisdictions, straining legal teams and risking costly penalties for oversights.

06

Loss ratio predictions lack accuracy without real-time data integration, causing reserve miscalculations and unexpected financial exposure.

HOW WE CAN HELP

Solutions for Insurance

PROOF

Success stories

THE LANDSCAPE

AI in Insurance

Insurance companies provide risk protection through life, property, casualty, and specialty coverage for individuals and businesses. The global insurance market exceeds $6 trillion annually, with carriers facing intense pressure to modernize legacy systems and meet evolving customer expectations for digital-first experiences.

AI automates underwriting decisions, detects fraudulent claims, personalizes policy recommendations, and predicts loss ratios. Insurers using AI reduce claims processing time by 70%, improve fraud detection accuracy by 85%, and increase policy conversion rates by 40%. Machine learning models analyze telematics data, medical records, satellite imagery, and IoT sensor feeds to price risk more accurately and identify emerging threats in real-time.

DEEP DIVE

Key technologies include natural language processing for claims intake, computer vision for damage assessment, predictive analytics for risk modeling, and chatbots for customer service. Leading platforms like Guidewire, Duck Creek, and Majesco integrate AI capabilities into core insurance operations.

INSIGHTS

Latest thinking

Research: Financial Services

Data-driven research and reports relevant to this industry

View All Research

Southeast Asia's 70+ million small and medium businesses stand at an inflection point in artificial intelligence adoption. The Pertama Partners SEA mid-market AI Adoption Index 2026 — a composite meas

Artificial intelligence is reshaping competitive dynamics across Asia at an unprecedented pace. Asia-Pacific AI spending is projected to reach USD 175 billion by 2028, growing at a 33.6% compound annu

Forrester

Forrester's analysis of AI adoption maturity across Asia Pacific markets including Singapore, Australia, India, Japan, and Southeast Asia. Examines industry-specific adoption rates, barriers to AI imp

Google, Temasek, Bain & Company

Annual flagship report on Southeast Asia's digital economy, tracking the region's $260B+ internet economy. 2024 edition focuses on AI's role in accelerating growth across e-commerce, travel, food deli

Our team has trained executives at globally-recognized brands

SAPUnileverHoneywellCenter for Creative LeadershipEY

YOUR PATH FORWARD

From Readiness to Results

Every AI transformation is different, but the journey follows a proven sequence. Start where you are. Scale when you're ready.

1

ASSESS · 2-3 days

AI Readiness Audit

Understand exactly where you stand and where the biggest opportunities are. We map your AI maturity across strategy, data, technology, and culture, then hand you a prioritized action plan.

Get your AI Maturity Scorecard

Choose your path

2A

TRAIN · 1 day minimum

Training Cohort

Upskill your leadership and teams so AI adoption sticks. Hands-on programs tailored to your industry, with measurable proficiency gains.

Explore training programs
2B

PROVE · 30 days

30-Day Pilot

Deploy a working AI solution on a real business problem and measure actual results. Low risk, high signal. The fastest way to build internal conviction.

Launch a pilot
or
3

SCALE · 1-6 months

Implementation Engagement

Roll out what works across the organization with governance, change management, and measurable ROI. We embed with your team so capability transfers, not just deliverables.

Design your rollout
4

ITERATE & ACCELERATE · Ongoing

Reassess & Redeploy

AI moves fast. Regular reassessment ensures you stay ahead, not behind. We help you iterate, optimize, and capture new opportunities as the technology landscape shifts.

Plan your next phase

AI for Insurance: Common Questions

The good news is you don't need to rip and replace your entire tech stack to start benefiting from AI. We recommend beginning with API-based AI solutions that sit on top of your existing systems rather than requiring full integration. For example, you can deploy an AI-powered document processing layer that extracts data from claim forms, medical records, or policy applications and feeds structured data into your legacy systems through existing interfaces. Start with high-volume, low-complexity use cases that deliver quick wins. Many insurers begin with FNOL (First Notice of Loss) automation, where AI chatbots and NLP systems capture initial claim details, reducing call center volume by 40-50% within months. Another smart entry point is fraud detection overlays that score claims without disrupting your current adjudication workflow. These targeted implementations typically cost $50K-$300K and can demonstrate ROI in 6-12 months, building internal buy-in for larger initiatives. Platforms like Guidewire, Duck Creek, and Majesco now offer AI modules specifically designed for gradual adoption. They provide pre-built connectors for common legacy systems and allow you to modernize incrementally. We've seen carriers successfully run hybrid environments for 3-5 years while progressively migrating workflows to AI-enhanced processes. The key is choosing partners with insurance domain expertise who understand your regulatory constraints and can navigate the complexity of actuarial, underwriting, and claims data.

The ROI varies significantly based on your starting point and implementation scope, but we're seeing consistent patterns across the industry. For claims processing, insurers typically achieve 50-70% reduction in processing time for auto and property claims, with some straight-through processing rates exceeding 80% for low-complexity cases. This translates to $15-$40 in cost savings per claim depending on line of business. A mid-sized carrier processing 500,000 claims annually can save $7.5-$20 million while simultaneously improving customer satisfaction scores by 25-30 points. In underwriting, AI delivers value through both efficiency and better risk selection. Automated underwriting can reduce decision time from days to minutes for term life and personal lines, increasing conversion rates by 30-40% by capturing applicants before they shop competitors. More importantly, predictive models that incorporate alternative data sources—telematics, social determinants of health, satellite imagery—improve loss ratio predictions by 15-25%. For a $500 million book of business, even a 2-point improvement in combined ratio represents $10 million in annual underwriting profit. Fraud detection often delivers the fastest payback. AI systems that analyze claims patterns, cross-reference databases, and flag suspicious activities improve detection accuracy by 80-90% while reducing false positives. Given that fraud costs US insurers $80 billion annually, even capturing an additional 5-10% of fraudulent claims can justify significant AI investment. We typically see fraud detection ROI within 12-18 months, with claims automation and underwriting transformation following at 18-36 months depending on complexity.

Computer vision for damage assessment has matured significantly in the past three years and now achieves 85-95% accuracy for common scenarios like auto collision damage, hail damage to roofs, and water damage in property claims. The technology works by analyzing photos submitted via mobile apps, comparing damage patterns against millions of labeled images, and estimating repair costs based on historical claims data. For straightforward cases—like a dented fender or missing shingles—AI can generate estimates within 5% of what an experienced adjuster would assess. The key to adjuster acceptance is positioning AI as augmentation rather than replacement. The most successful implementations create a tiered workflow: AI handles simple assessments autonomously, flags medium-complexity cases with preliminary estimates that adjusters can refine in minutes instead of hours, and routes complex or high-value claims to senior adjusters for full manual review. This approach lets adjusters focus their expertise where it matters most while AI handles routine work. We've found that when adjusters see AI eliminating their paperwork and allowing them to close 30-40% more claims, resistance drops dramatically. Carriers like Lemonade, Nationwide, and Travelers have deployed photo-based claims assessment with strong results. Lemonade famously settled a simple theft claim in 3 seconds using AI. For property damage, companies are now combining policyholder photos with drone imagery and satellite data for comprehensive assessments without requiring adjuster site visits. The pandemic accelerated adoption as touchless claims became essential. The technology isn't perfect—it struggles with unusual damage types, older vehicles, or poor-quality photos—but for the 60-70% of claims that are relatively straightforward, it's already transforming cycle times and customer experience.

Regulatory compliance and model explainability top the list of AI risks in insurance. Unlike other industries, insurance is heavily regulated at the state level, with strict requirements around rate filing, underwriting criteria, and prohibited discriminatory factors. AI models that consider hundreds of variables can inadvertently create proxies for protected classes like race, religion, or national origin—even when those attributes aren't explicitly included. For example, ZIP code combined with homeownership status might correlate with race, creating fair lending concerns. Regulators increasingly demand transparency into how AI models make decisions, which is challenging with complex neural networks. Data quality and bias present another major risk. Insurance AI models are only as good as their training data, and historical data often reflects past biases or outdated risk patterns. If your historical claims data shows certain neighborhoods have higher losses due to discriminatory settlement practices rather than actual risk, your AI will perpetuate those inequities. We strongly recommend comprehensive bias testing, diverse training datasets, and ongoing monitoring for disparate impact. The NAIC's Model Bulletin on Artificial Intelligence provides guidance, and several states including Colorado now require algorithmic impact assessments for insurance AI. Model drift and unexpected failures also create operational risk. AI models trained on pre-pandemic data struggled during COVID-19 as driving patterns, mortality rates, and business interruption risks changed dramatically. You need robust model monitoring, challenger models, and circuit breakers that flag when AI recommendations deviate from expected ranges. Privacy is another concern—using telematics, health data, and IoT sensors requires clear customer consent and strong data governance. We recommend starting with use cases that have clearer regulatory pathways (like fraud detection and claims automation) before moving into more sensitive areas like pricing and underwriting decisions based on alternative data.

AI-driven personalized pricing is real and already transforming how progressive insurers price risk, though it's more nuanced than simple individualization. Traditional actuarial models group customers into broad segments based on 10-20 rating factors—age, location, coverage amount, claim history. AI models can analyze hundreds or thousands of variables and identify subtle risk patterns that traditional models miss. For auto insurance, this means incorporating telematics data on acceleration, braking, cornering, time-of-day driving, and route selection to price based on actual behavior rather than demographic proxies. Safe drivers in traditionally high-risk groups can save 20-40% compared to standard rates. In life and health insurance, AI enables more granular risk assessment using prescription history, medical device data, genetic markers (where legally permitted), and social determinants of health. For example, someone with well-controlled diabetes who exercises regularly and adheres to medication schedules presents very different mortality risk than historical data suggests. Usage-based insurance models—where premiums adjust based on actual exposure rather than estimated annual mileage—only became practical with AI analyzing real-time data feeds. Commercial insurers are using AI to price cyber risk based on companies' actual security postures rather than industry averages. The challenge is balancing personalization with regulatory requirements, customer acceptance, and adverse selection risk. Most states limit how frequently you can adjust premiums and require rate filing justifications. Customers may resist sharing detailed behavioral data despite potential savings. And if only your riskiest customers opt into monitoring programs, the economics break down. The most successful approaches start with voluntary programs offering meaningful discounts (15-30%) for data sharing, use AI to identify and reward genuinely lower-risk behaviors, and maintain traditional options for customers who prefer privacy. Hyper-personalization isn't hype, but it requires sophisticated data science, careful regulatory navigation, and transparent customer communication to succeed.

Ready to transform your Insurance organization?

Let's discuss how we can help you achieve your AI transformation goals.