The Elegant Claims Experience
This fall, Crawford & Company launched Turvi, a separate insurtech to offer software-as-a-service to improve the property and casualty (P&C) claims system.
The new business will supply AI and automation technologies for faster claims processing, expedited estimating, and an overall better experience for customers, Crawford says. In this interview, Turvi CEO Ken Tolson talks about how the technology meets both new and old challenges.
It starts with the customer, it really does. Whatever we do, we must ask: Is this technology a benefit to the stakeholders, primarily the end decision-maker, which is the customer? Can we drive a higher customer SAT [satisfaction] score with this technology? We always develop and create and innovate from that perspective. From there, it’s how can we make the process better, more accurate. Faster, as always, tends to be better; to move money more quickly and more accurately into the hands it needs to be handed to. That’s where our focus is.
We already built a rather comprehensive communication platform off several technologies that orchestrate the handoff between the supply chain that’s touching the claim, but also keeps the policyholder informed of claim status updates throughout the process. We’re working right now on a tool for a particularly interesting client of ours that has challenged us with providing a 22-language translation platform leveraging an AI tool. And I will tell you, it’s been a really interesting challenge, testing claim intake through German and Portuguese and now Mandarin Chinese, French, and Spanish…. When I talk about big problems, that’s a big problem which is now I think much closer to being solvable thanks to the advances in some of the generative AI capabilities. That’s where our focus has been.
The key is you’re never going to automate or defer to technology 100% of every claim outcome. There will always be a human in the loop for those cases that you can’t automate. What’s really great about our approach to investing in AI, is our intent is to use it as a force multiplier or a productivity enhancer, or an accuracy engine for our workforce and for the insurance ecosystem, not just our own workforce. The key is keeping that human in the loop. When a claim gets to a complexity level or a situation we’ve not seen, that we can’t solve through straight-through processing or automation, then we have an off-ramp that is elegant, that hands it off to the right individual that can really assist that policyholder.
If you fail digitally, your CSAT [customer satisfaction] score actually drops more, so it’s really critical that you recover and that you have off-ramps to processes that can keep the claim moving forward, not delay it, not cause frustration. That’s critical.
Well, I think it goes back to the focus on the customer itself. The challenge in the broker space on the commercial side, where we’ve attacked the triaging challenge, is that you have more stakeholders [than in personal lines]. The commercial world typically has a much more complex stakeholder landscape. It’s really just about understanding the dimensions of that landscape and making sure that you’re sensitive that you may have multiple locations involved on a property claim [rather than single homes]. Same thing with commercial fleet-type claims. You’ve got lots of locations and lots of complexity. You just need to be responsive to that additional data dimension in that process because those dimensions are people.
But, also, they value some of the same pressures around speed and accuracy. In the business world, in the commercial world, it’s about speed and getting paid…. It’s about getting their business back to business as quickly as possible. So, speed is probably maybe a little more important than even in the personal line space—speed and moving money.
Turvi was established as a completely separate operating segment of the company and that’s in response to a number of client expectations. We service the entire industry. We look at the entire supply chain around the P&C industry and that includes competitors of Crawford & Company as well. So, there has to be a level of distance in terms of even the data environments we manage.
We’re a completely separate data environment in the four primary Tier 1 countries that we operate [in]. We operate out of U.S. and Canada and Australia and the U.K. right now. We have cloud tenants set up in each of these markets today to distribute these applications and also to be able to allow our partners to extend into those markets as well through these products. Now our expectation is to continue to expand the investment arm. Today we are 100% funded through the capital expansion from Crawford & Company, but we expect to seek other investment to diversify that on a global basis.
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