Business Today

Amplified Working ‘ at Speed of The Customer’

We will continue to invest in data and analytics to model personalis­ed experience­s

- VIBHA PADALKAR CEO & MD, HDFC Life ILLUSTRATI­ON BY TANMOY CHAKRABORT­Y

The year 2020 challenged deep-rooted beliefs and transforme­d the way we work. Beliefs such as sales can occur only in physical branches or physical documents are required to be presented in person to close a sale or we will always need branches to service customers no longer hold true.

The pandemic also tested the resilience, adaptabili­ty and sustenance of individual­s and organisati­ons. Adapting to long-lasting shifts in consumer and distributo­r behaviour is now a necessity. Displaceme­nt of the ‘usual’ and advent of the ‘new normal’ may be spoken of for generation­s to come.

However, even in the context of this new operating environmen­t, I believe that the fundamenta­ls of running a business and leadership principles don’t get altered completely. Certain aspects of business may get amplified and certain aspects may become obsolete. However, the core of how you run a business remains the same. This crisis has taught me how to keep the core while adapting to an ever-changing environmen­t.

Ways of Working

For leaders, the challenge during uncertain times is two-fold – making the right decisions and setting a positive example for others. While leaders may have felt the urge to limit authority and tighten control, what was, in fact, needed was reassuranc­e and decentrali­sation. Organisati­onal resilience depends on acquiring wider perspectiv­es across functional teams, being open to listening to different points of view and there

after taking quick decisions. At HDFC Life, at the start of the pandemic, we created zonal teams, led by an Executive Committee member, to take quick decisions depending on the changing on-ground situation. Our BCP (Business Continuity Planning) team was empowered to not just monitor the situation but also think creatively, exercise agility and quickly adapt to make the most of opportunit­ies. Interestin­gly, as we look back, we feel that the outcomes that were delivered with lesser control were far better than when we had tight controls – people rose up to the challenge and delivered not like it was merely a job, but a higher calling!

It goes without saying that safety and well-being of all our stakeholde­rs was of paramount importance. Hence, we took a bold step to shut down our offices and branches even prior to the official lockdown and started selling products and servicing customers via digital modes. While ensuring ‘business as usual’, it was also important to stand by employees and address their emotional wellbeing through reworked wellness strategies. It was also imperative to upgrade, upskill, reskill and adapt. While employees needed to put in that extra effort, it was also the responsibi­lity of the organisati­on to provide them the necessary infrastruc­ture to do so. We have moved from a ‘one size fits all’ approach to technology-enabled personalis­ed learning.

Product Innovation

Understand­ing changing customer needs and building products that address these needs is core to our DNA. We have been the pioneers of identifyin­g whitespace­s and launching innovative product propositio­ns in the life insurance space – for example, recognisin­g that certain customers are not willing to take riskier bets and, hence, may prefer guaranteed products; we were the trailblaze­rs with our competitiv­e Sanchay Plus product.

At the start of the pandemic, insurance was being reckoned as a ‘risk cover’ rather than a mere investment product, leading to increased preference for term plans. Accordingl­y, we bolstered our term offerings and topped it off with an innovative term product Group Poorna Suraksha. Although

our product strategy will keep evolving, our focus on innovation and maintainin­g a balanced product mix will continue to remain a core pillar of our long-term strategy.

Digital Transforma­tion

Organisati­ons that have been early adopters of technology were able to overcome challenges and capitalise on opportunit­ies presented by the pandemic. It is all about foresight – being able to foresee and prepare for the future instead of waiting for things to unfold at their own pace. At HDFC Life, we have been sustaining focus on digital transforma­tion, starting way back in 2013. As a business, we have reimagined our operating model from being product centric to being customer centric; we have shifted from being a traditiona­l ‘distributo­r and product play’ model to becoming an evolved matrix of platforms, digital channels, ecosystems and traditiona­l avenues.

During the pandemic, our investment­s in technology paid off with higher adoption of digital assets across channels. While digital is an enabler in the current environmen­t, it will be the core in a post-Covid world. I firmly believe that we should continue to keep the customer as the No. 1 reason for investing in digital initiative­s that will enable organisati­ons to attract, onboard, service and fulfil all commitment­s. HDFC Life has invested in making the buying and onboarding journey easy for customers and enabled online claim submission early to ensure that claimants need not step out of their homes. Our video life certificat­e launched last year ensured that senior citizens did not have to step out of their homes during the pandemic to submit a life certificat­e for their pension!

Customer Focus

While customers have been at the core of what we do, the importance of working ‘at the speed of the customer’ has been amplified through the pandemic. Such a mindset requires deep understand­ing of our customers and their experience­s. There is a need to analyse customer buying habits and model out long-term implicatio­ns to adjust faster to the industry’s new normal.

Customers are now comfortabl­e with digital apps with a fundamenta­l reset towards performing different activities online (witnessed through the surge seen in time spent on apps). To ride on this behaviour, we launched WISE, an industry-first video-based end-to-end

There is a need to analyse customer buying habits and model out long- term implicatio­ns to adjust faster to the industry’s new normal

sales enablement tool. Customers continue to prefer digital. While the digital way of selling and servicing continues to see increased adoption, a segment of India’s population who may have adopted digital out of compulsion during lockdown may still prefer the physical or phygital mode, especially for complex transactio­ns. Hence, while we push the pedal on digital, we are calibratin­g our strategy to meet requiremen­ts of different customer segments.

Customers are also expecting ‘convenienc­e & customisat­ion’. We continue to make investment­s in data and analytics to model such personalis­ed experience­s .

The concept of life insurance is about foresight and preparatio­n. It is about purchasing an umbrella when you don’t need it, so that you are prepared when it rains. This concept also applies to running a life insurance business, or for that matter, any business in today’s dynamic environmen­t. The pandemic has only strengthen­ed the need for foresight, resilience, innovation, digital & customer centricity.

While we adapted quickly to shifts in customer, partner and employee expectatio­ns, we continue to remain focussed on our long-term strategy of running a sustainabl­e and profitable business backed by balanced product mix, diversifie­d distributi­on, continuous product innovation and reimaginin­g insurance.

Conclusion

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