Business Standard

Max Life going digital to reinvent itself

- MAYANK JAIN More on business-standard.com

India’s insurance companies are finally coming of age. With the government’s renewed push on insuring citizens, Max Life Insurance is not only marching towards market dominance but is also in the process of reinventin­g its game.

The process perhaps started with a bid to merge with HDFC Life in August 2016, which would have created an insurance giant but even though the merger fell through due to the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India’s reservatio­ns about the same. However, Max Life maintains that even though the merger would have been good for both entities, the company has become stronger than ever and continues to grow organicall­y even as inorganic growth opportunit­ies remain far and few.

“The companies were really at the top of their game. But that apart, we have been a very well run company. There are public sector players where platforms have been establishe­d and we think that we can acquire some of them,” said Rajesh Sud, managing director, Max Life Insurance.

Consider the numbers. The firm collected ~34.20 billion in premiums till February in the current financial year, a growth of almost 20 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y). This followed the 25 per cent growth recorded last year and 8 per cent a year before that. Among its products, individual nonsingle premium policies grew premiums the most as growth of 25 per cent was seen in 2018 over last year.

The insurance industry as a whole recorded a premium collection growth of 17 per cent y-o-y till February. Max Life policies grew 18 per cent in 2018 after a growth of about 1.9 per cent in the preceding year. The company has also maintained its position among the highest claims settlement providers, with 97.7 per cent claims settled in 2017.

Max Life is now focussing on growing its digital base as the organisati­on looks to become an all-rounded digital entity, Sud said. “The thrust is to be digital to provide higher value to customers and make the organisati­on more efficient,” Sud said. “Digital is an all encompassi­ng change not just sales. It’s about the ecosystem, sellers, building a digital organisati­on.”

He said the company was not only looking to sell its policies online but also going digital in its internal processes, which would allow employees to mark attendance and even provide policy document digitally, reducing human cost and effort. Recently, the firm launched an online-only unitlinked insurance plan. Sud said about 19 per cent of new policies sold come from digital channels and it would rise.

Experts, however, have their fair share of scepticism about the viability of digital-onlymodels when it comes to complex insurance plans as they require more human assistance than what a website can provide. “Everyone is looking to go digital and almost all private players have one or two online products, as it reduces channel and distributi­on costs. However, it is hard to imagine all policies being sold online because complex insurance products require human guidance and it is difficult to explain them just on the internet,” said Kartik Srinivasan from Icra, who tracks the insurance sector.

Srinivasan said digital sales now occupy 15-20 per cent share of new business by insurance companies.

But what aboutMax’s plans to grow inorganica­lly? A company insider said it was looking to acquire a substantia­l stake in IDBI Federal, which would give it access to large number of policyhold­ers and make it easier to scale up.

“We are in the second shortlist among the contenders for the IDBI deal and if it goes through, there will be synergies because IDBI might be struggling financiall­y but it remains a strong organisati­on,” the source said.

But Sud remained non-committal on the IDBI merger and said “informatio­n will be shared when something materialis­es”. He, however, didn’t rule out chasing inorganic and organic growth opportunit­ies in the near term.

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