Oliver Wyman Series: Steve Abel – Reinventing InsurTech to Yield a Competitive Edge
On this episode of the Scouting For Growth podcast, Sabine VdL talks to Steve Abel, Partner at Oliver Wyman. In this episode, they dive into the insurtech world & determine how to reinvent the InsurTech space by Leveraging Commoditized Tech for a Competitive Edge.
On this episode they discuss:
- The common mistakes InsurTech startups make when investing in technology components with not well-thought-out architectures.
- How InsurTech startups can leverage commoditized technology to focus on building unique value propositions.
- The strategies for effectively orchestrating & assembling tech components into a symbiotic whole for faster go-to-market.
- How InsurTech startups can focus on monetizing their algorithms rather than building the full tech stack.
- The changing concept of differentiation in the InsurTech sector & how startups can leverage this to their advantage.
Useful links:
Cyber security and Captive Insurance
Self-insured actuarial services
Capital modelling
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- There are a couple of errors that founders make. The first is that you need to hire technologists to build everything for you in an undifferentiated way. Most of what you’re bringing to the market is not the proprietary or unique. It’s a drag on money, speed & you may lose focus on what’s important to your business model. You don’t need to hire them; with the pace of change of tech, a year from now you’ll need different talent because the tech will be different, Rent tech talent at the beginning.
- Most innovation that occurring in the InsurTech space is from founders & companies that you may be innovating or own, you’re toe force of innovation in this sector. That’s important for your investors because they want a return on their investment. It’s important for the sector because the huge advancements in the distribution & carrier space, to your customers are because of you.
- Critically assess what technical talent is absolutely necessary to be core to your vision, it’s as important as thinking about your architecture & tooling in terms of what is generically available & what’s going to be part of your secret sauce.
- InsurTech’s burn through time & capital fast, how can you assemble your solution in a way that you can test a market as quickly as feasibly possible? A lot of founders lose time tripping up over boring, platform tech.
BEST MOMENTS
‘Modern tooling, especially cloud-based, already scales. The idea you need to buy a specialised infrastructure or server is no longer important as it once was.’
‘Getting something in you customer’s hands as fast as possible to find out what they’re going to find valuable & pay for.’
‘If you’re a founder with a great idea, everything that’s core to that great idea you need to own.’
‘In order to make money it’s important to understand how your product is going to be used & sold. These are not the same thing & that can be a very costly mistake.’
ABOUT THE GUEST
As a partner at Oliver Wyman, Steven helps clients solve complex problems & lead teams to deliver insights that you can trust. Steve acquired over 25 years of experience in consulting & executive roles, delivering value to organizations via smart technological deployment.
Steve’s specialties include program management, operations, shared services, enabling technologies, business process reengineering, finance leading practices, insurance products & data, actuarial platforms, machine learning, AI, cloud solutions, business & technical architecture.
Steve is passionate about helping clients achieve their strategic goals & optimize their performance, while fostering a culture of collaboration, innovation, & excellence.
ABOUT THE HOST
There are over 140,000 FinTech ventures out there, including FinTechs, InsurTechs, HealthTechs, and WealthTechs. And the number keeps on changing every month. One statistic remains the same: 25% of these ventures have received investment and support from the financing world. 75% of these businesses still seek financing support from institutional and corporate investors alongside value-creating commercial collaboration opportunities with Global Fortune 500.
Through this podcast series, I would like to demystify the world of corporate venturing, including how corporations collaborate with growth ventures, how venture capitalists and corporate venture capitalists make investment and collaboration choices in ventures and give tech founders and entrepreneurs, the strategies, tactics, tools, and techniques to build, grow and scale their business by understanding how those with financing power think. So, listen in, share and comment as you see fit.