| Cracking
the Code
By Elizabeth Judd
While banks are posting some success
marketing life insurance to the affluent, penetrating
the mass market has proven more elusive.
When Comerica Inc. began exploring selling
life insurance through its branch system roughly 10 years
ago, the Detroit-based banking company entertained the
idea of becoming a mass-market provider of life policies.
But it finally scrapped those ambitions after years of
effort and today focuses almost exclusively on a completely
different customer segment — affluent and business
clients concerned with estate planning, tax and business-continuity
issues.
Andrea Martin, president of Comerica
Insurance Group in Detroit, says the bank learned through
"trial and error" that its time was best spent on higher-margin
products and the more affluent customers who can afford
them. "If we were trying to sell a mountain of $200 term
life policies, we'd be spinning our wheels all day long,"
she says.
The experience at Comerica, an early
entrant into the life insurance arena, now is being played
out more broadly across the industry as institutions take
stock of strategies set in motion after the passage of
the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 2000, which made it generally
easier for banks to enter the insurance business.
Going into it, banking institutions
saw an opportunity to leverage their expensive branch
distribution systems. And the cross-sell potential seemed
obvious, given that many of the events and transactions
that would prompt an individual to consider buying life
insurance — everything from applying for a mortgage
to opening a retirement account — are conducted
within banks, which ideally enjoy a "trusted advisor"
status among customers.
However, new entrants quickly were
confronted by the challenge of generating the high sales
volumes needed to succeed with low-margin products aimed
at the mass market. "We used to discuss the idea of the
under-insured middle market, and the notion was that banks
could fill the gap through their branches and call centers.
That never materialized the way it was envisioned," says
James Campbell, a senior vice president at Reagan Consulting,
Inc., an insurance and financial-services advisor based
in Atlanta.
Instead, a number of institutions have
found that the so-called "mass affluent" customer segment,
or households with a net worth of between $100,000 and
$500,000, offers the best opportunity to sell the most
profitable insurance products. They have further discovered
that it's not the branch distribution system per se that
provides a competitive advantage, but rather the access
to customer relationships established in the course of
other banking activities.
The upshot is that for many banks,
the first order of business with life insurance is to
strengthen beachheads in the upper end of the market,
specifically by cultivating referrals and assembling staff
skilled in needs-based sales. "Viewing life insurance
from the perspective of market demand, larger institutions
have emphasized the mass affluent segment because those
are the customers most likely to buy," says Belva Wallace,
president of Bank of America Corp.'s insurance services
group in Charlotte, N.C.
A further implication is that players
should proceed carefully in the mass-market segment for
life insurance. Along with targeting the customers most
receptive to simpler offers, providers will have to build
out sales, marketing and delivery capabilities in order
to generate the sharply higher volumes needed to financially
justify the exercise.
"Banks and life insurance should be
a natural fit in theory, but banks haven't been that good
at making the fit work in practice," cautions Michael
White, chief executive of Michael White Associates, a
Radnor, Penn.-based bank insurance consultant.
Mass-Affluent
Market
The overall opportunity for banking
institutions in life insurance seems enormous. Nearly
half of all Americans and a fourth of U.S. households
have no life insurance coverage at all, according to consultant
White. The total value of unmet needs was pegged at $5
trillion several years ago, he says, "and the number of
uninsured people and households has only grown since then."
Furthermore, at least 80% of insured
Americans are dramatically underinsured, according to
White. Life insurance consultants recommend a minimum
of $230,000 per household, yet the median amount of life
insurance coverage for all American adults is just $30,000.
Only 16% have total life insurance coverage of $150,000
or more.
The edge for banks is that they have
established relationships with throngs of customers who
probably have life insurance needs. "It makes sense for
banks to sell life insurance because there's less pressure
on the customer. You don't have that agent coming into
your house," says Joel Boncek, a vice president at New
Haven Savings Bank in New Haven, Conn., which has been
selling "savings bank life insurance" since 1979. "There's
a difference when the prospect already knows and trusts
the banker."
The catch, however, is that many customers
have limited resources and receptivity. There are countless
mass-market customers who at the very least need term
life insurance, a form of coverage that provides benefits
in the event of death or disability but has no investment
value. Yet these prospects often skip insurance in favor
of other consumption needs.
And term-life products have sharply
lower margins, limiting the payoff from the deployment
of relationship-intensive resources to this customer/product
nexus. There's also plenty of competition. Simple term-life
policies can now be purchased by phone or through popular
insurance Web sites such as InsWeb, which offers comparison
quotes and tools for do-it-yourselfers.
Little wonder, then, that major institutions
have shifted their attention to the mass-affluent customer
segment. Consultant Carmen Effron recently helped conduct
a study for the American Council of Life Insurers on what
constitutes a successful life insurance sales program
for banks. She believes that the emerging affluent presents
a particularly appealing opportunity, estimating that
one in ten American households belongs in this group,
which she defines as households having a net worth of
$100,000 to $500,000. This market, she maintains, could
be well served by banks with targeted life insurance programs.
Effron, who runs her own bank-insurance
consulting firm in Westport, Conn., notes that banks "don't
have to redefine their processes" for their private client
and trust businesses, and they've therefore been most
adept at selling into these segments.
Life insurance can meet the complicated
needs of upscale customers. For one thing, it provides
a mechanism for creating sufficient liquidity to pay estate
taxes. And it's often woven into business partnerships:
life insurance proceeds can be used to buy out a spouse
should one partner die. "There's no other product that
creates the instantaneous liquidity of life insurance,"
says Holton.
Enter the
Specialists
One requirement is a nucleus of staff
skilled in consultative selling of the more sophisticated
life insurance products. The advantage of dedicated salespeople,
or specialists, is that they typically have a far better
understanding of the range of life insurance products
than a branch rep who might have received supplementary
training but isn't steeped in insurance. Experience has
always mattered in selling life insurance. Dedicated salespeople
can add value to the transaction beyond what a customer
could get at a branch, on the Internet or at a call center.
Wachovia Corp., for example, has roughly
30 dedicated life insurance professionals serving its
wealth management teams, which are stationed throughout
its East Coast territory. A single agent may serve two
or three cities or a few separate teams within a single
city like Charlotte. David Holton, head of Wachovia Insurance
Services, which is based in Winston-Salem, N.C., says
life insurance revenues at Wachovia have grown by double
digits year over year, although he declines to provide
specific numbers.
New Haven Savings Bank likewise has
shifted toward a dedicated agent approach. The 31-branch
thrift, which has roughly $2.4 billion in assets, now
has three insurance specialists employed full time, as
well as about 45 branch employees who sell life policies
when the opportunity arises. Despite their modest numbers,
the specialists now account for about 55% of life policy
sales at the company, with the branches selling the remaining
45%, Boncek says.
At BofA, financial advisors with specific
training in life insurance make the life sales. Of the
banking giant's 1,050 financial advisors in the wealth
management arena, Wallace says, 95% are licensed to sell
life insurance.
Another key ingredient is a robust
referral system that keeps the pipeline loaded for the
specialists, which means incentives need to be aligned
properly. At Wachovia, employees are partially compensated
according to their team's ability to cross-sell the full
services of the bank. "This encourages everybody to try
to solve the full range of client problems in the best
way," Holton says.
At Comerica, Martin attributes some
of the recent improvement in life sales to a "connectivity"
initiative launched in 2002, which rewards employees for
cross-selling. She also credits the steady progress made
by Comerica's four Michigan life agents in gaining the
confidence of their bank peers. "They've slowly converted,
one by one, the people that they work with into believers
that they've got a valuable product for their banking
clients," explains Martin. "The bankers needed to trust
the insurance agents."
Keys to
the Mass Market
While many institutions necessarily
have gravitated toward near-term opportunities in the
mass-affluent segment, the goal of penetrating the mass
market for life insurance remains important. "Many competitors
have reached a similar point of wanting to crack the code"
on the mass market, says BofA's Wallace.
In the early going, one mass-market
requirement that has become clear is the need for large
numbers of licensed bankers who can generate the higher
sales volumes needed for the success of lower-margin products.
A 2003 study of bank life insurance
sales by Kenneth Kehrer Associates and LIMRA International showed that although licensed bankers individually compare
quite poorly with the sales performance of other types
of agents, their collective contribution can be quite
respectable. Large numbers of bankers can be recruited
into this process, and their commission rate is lower
than for more highly trained representatives. Moreover,
there are indications that licensed bankers can visibly
elevate their performance as they gain experience.
The Kehrer-LIMRA study also found that
simplifying life insurance products and the process of
acquiring them is of great help to mass-market customers
and the bank representatives who serve them.
These factors, combined with the need
for tailored marketing and broad-but-efficient platform
distribution, imply that a separate, complementary strategy
will be needed to unlock the mass market for bank life
insurance sales. This is one more priority that will have
to be woven into the daily lives of branch staff and will
blossom only with time.
And while an institution hypothetically
could deploy up to five different types of distribution
methods concurrently, great care must be taken so that
various channels — such as advanced agents, outside
agents and brokers, retail agents, licensed bankers and
financial consultants — don't conflict with each
other and confuse customers.
Putting all of this together, it probably
will take longer than many people thought for banks to
grow life insurance sales, yet the odds for long-term
success are rising as the requirements for specific market
segments become clearer.
In the meantime, this particular revenue
stream likely won't be a significant factor in overall
banking performance. Martin points out that if all of
Comerica's insurance sales were combined and the total
rounded up, this business line would comprise less than
1% of the bank's revenues for a single year — and
this is after a decade of effort. Clearly, banks have
their work cut out for them if they are ever to make a
growth proposition out of life insurance sales.
Ms.
Judd is a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
back
to top |