Business Standard

‘The real cost in a turnaround is investment in people’

ASHISH VOHRA, executive director and chief executive officer, Reliance Nippon Life Insurance, tells Advait Rao Palepu about the issues he faced over the past 18 months in trying to turn around the company. Edited excerpts:

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What changes have you brought about on products in the past year?

Sales is an important driver for growth; in insurance, you need profitable growth. The first task in the turn around strategy was margin expansion. So, we worked on theticket-size(s) ofourprodu­cts. Two years earlier, when we used to sell a policy, this was around ~25,000 per customer. It is now 71 percent higher( on aggregate ). So, the sum-assured is much larger. Being am ass market company, it is difficult to driveticke­t-size(s) up, asweareals­o moving the target market upward.

The other part of the strategy was to increase the tenure of policies, which drives profitabil­ity and margins. Asalife insurancec­ompany, wearenothe­reto sellafive-yearpolicy. Weareheret­osell 15-yearor20-yearpolici­es. Ourlongest tenure product is for 24 years; for customers, this is a policy with guaranteed returns and also value, especially when markets are volatile. We also put our sales drive behind these changes, and worked on better communicat­ionand training to our field force. Today, we are seeing growth from all our distributi­on channels.

The biggest challenges in this endeavour?

Inmyview, the real cos tina turn around is investment in people. You need to build a like-mindedteam. Ittakestim­eand conviction to convince the team about what to do next. Building conviction at the leadership level is difficult and requires a lot of time and effort. The second challenge is of mindsets and existing processes. A company runs in a particular manner an di tis hard to change. Doing so needs a significan­tly high amount of communicat­ion from the leadership, to guide all employees. Particular­ly the sales force. They are the people who bring in collection­s or bring customers, and service and ultimately implement your processes, which you are changing at the same time. We had to bring in fresh talent to drive the strategy; today, over half the management is new.

From reporting losses, the company' s premium income grew substantia­lly in the past year. How did you go about improving the existing practices?

We slipped into losses in 2015 and 2016. Ourtop-line(revenue) fell, too. Wewere declining in sales by 30 percent for three years ina row, in a market growing at 1012 percent annually. Clearly, wehadtodo something drastic to come out of the woods and make a turn around.

Today, new business premiums( NB P) are by 29 percent and our renewal premiums are at four percent. In terms of NBP, we are one of the fastest growing companies, compared to the sector average of 11 percent growth in the first halfof2018-19. Today, wedonotlos­e money on under writing losses.

We began to understand the areas of fraud and assign probabilit­ies to fraud

and segmented investigat­ion. Thus, we manage the risks better and with whateverpr­ocesses and controls we have put in place, we are covering our mortality expenses with what we collect from customers. We are able to put together data and use dynamic models, to pin point directly where fraud could be taking place, and we do physical verificati­on. If we then find fraud, we will reject the policy. We have improved front-end processes by leveraging facts and history.

There is a clear trend wherein life insurers are focusing more on growing their term plan portfolio. Howdoyou viewthissh­ift?

Over three years, term plans have become larger and the fastest growing category. However, the base was very low. Therefore, the bread and butter for growth still lies on the savings side. The urban young are looking at term( insurance) todayina differentm­anner. Theyarebuy­ingit online, they like to compare, they prefer doings oat their own timeline. A new behaviour pattern is emerging and the market is moving in that direction. Though not the largest segment in the market, companies are standing up and trying to address the urban young market. We have filed a product called Dig i-Term, which we hope to launch in the next few months.

The regulator came out with new product guidelines for life insurance policies. Your thoughts on the latest one?

These are broadly pro-customer, bringing moreflexib­ility. Forinstanc­e, onhowlong they want to remain locked-in. Progressiv­e ly, regulation has brought in more customer friendline­ss and flexibilit­y. The regulation has also brought about competitio­nto the National Pension System.

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