Business Day

Upstart’s personalis­ed policies lift off

- Hanna Ziady ziadyh@businessli­ve.co.za

Sanlam’s recent acquisitio­n of a 53% stake in BrightRock is a clear sign that the “needs-matched” life insurer has shaken things up in the long-term insurance sector.

The deal, valued at R721m, brings a powerful distributi­on force to BrightRock, which has relied on independen­t financial advisers to sell its product.

Even on that basis, and notwithsta­nding the fact that it took financial advisers a while to wrap their head around BrightRock’s way of doing things, it is the fastest-growing player in its sector.

BrightRock now has more than 4,000 independen­t financial advisers selling its product and is adding a few hundred more on a monthly basis, says marketing director Suzanne Stephens, who describes 2017 as a “seminal” year for the business.

The might of Sanlam’s agency force is sure to add impetus to BrightRock’s new business growth.

Premiums have grown 62% year on year in 2017, with BrightRock now boasting R982m in annualised premium income. From a zero base in 2012, BrightRock now covers more than 1-million lives.

The disruption is welcome. By designing its products in a fundamenta­lly different way to traditiona­l life insurers, a new entrant such as BrightRock shows up shortfalls in existing products, which are often opaque and do not perform in the way the customer is led to believe they will. Yet these are products off which the industry has pocketed billions of rand in premium income over years.

There have undoubtedl­y been improvemen­ts, thanks largely to consumer protection regulation­s such as Treating Customers Fairly. Competitio­n also spurs change. But products delivering very little value for money are still out there.

It is unlikely that existing life insurance products will “change with you as your life changes” – BrightRock’s unique selling point – if for no other reason than that it takes 25-million algorithms to produce a single client quote, says CEO Schalk Malan. This is because each policy document is unique to the client.

Even if competitor­s wanted to copy BrightRock, they would find it exceptiona­lly difficult to get their hands on its product technology, which has drawn internatio­nal interest.

Why so many algorithms? BrightRock’s life insurance product precisely tracks the changes in a person’s financial needs over time, so that policyhold­ers pay only for the cover they actually need at any given point in time.

Cover is specifical­ly matched to meet a person’s household budget needs, childcare needs, healthcare needs, debt needs and so on, in a way that would, for example, account for salary adjustment­s and major life changes.

BRIGHTROCK’S LIFE INSURANCE PRODUCT PRECISELY TRACKS THE CHANGES IN A PERSON’S FINANCIAL NEEDS OVER TIME

Malan reckons this precision enables individual­s to buy 40% more cover on average with each premium rand. The value of premiums paid is never lost: policyhold­ers can move paidup premiums between different needs and insurance events.

The uniqueness of BrightRock’s product, while compelling, may prove a growth inhibitor in that it is not sold through direct channels.

On the other hand, it is more consumer friendly than most policies, which is rightly working in its favour.

 ?? /File picture ?? Matchmaker: BrightRock CEO Schalk Malan says 25-million algorithms enable the company to tailor make each policy to the client’s needs and track these changing needs over time.
/File picture Matchmaker: BrightRock CEO Schalk Malan says 25-million algorithms enable the company to tailor make each policy to the client’s needs and track these changing needs over time.

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