Why we’re excited about embedded insurance in 2021

Jessica Bartos
AlbionVC Publication
9 min readFeb 4, 2021
Photo by Ulises Baga on Unsplash

At Christmas 2020, online sales as a percent of total retail reached 32% in the UK, advancing almost the last decade’s worth of ecommerce penetration in just one year.

In 2020, ecommerce penetration of retail advanced by 11 percentage points, almost as much as had been achieved from 2010–2019 (14 percentage points) (Source: ONS)

More surprisingly, the crisis has shown us that consumers are willing and able to make even very high value or complex purchases online. For instance, Cazoo’s banner year proved that the notoriously offline car purchase can be done successfully online at scale.

A knock-on effect of society’s accelerated consumption of digital services will be a similar acceleration towards embedding insurance into digital offerings. Embedded insurance is the bundling of coverage or protections within the purchase of a product or service. The insurance product is not sold to the customer ad hoc but is instead provided as a native feature. In this post, I’ll explain why tech is so well positioned to offer insurance in this way and why embedded insurance creates a win-win-win outcome for tech, insurance and consumers alike.

To set out the problem: a system in which the insurance purchase is separate from the purchase of the product or service associated with the underlying risk is ineffective and inefficient. Insurance is an afterthought or rejected as an unappealing hassle, resulting in protection gaps, estimated to be c. $1.2 trillion globally. The size of this gap is growing, having doubled over the last 20 years due to urbanisation, digitisation, climate change and lack of innovation.

When consumers do buy insurance, the customer journey is poor and mostly offline. For instance, while 74% of consumers research their insurance online (expressing their intent to buy digitally), only 25% are able to complete their purchase online.

But embedding insurance in digital services can fix what’s wrong with insurance today. Embedded insurance offers insurance when the risk is top of mind for the buyer. And it brings insurers closer to the underlying risks. Tech players — whether ecommerce, SaaS or digital services — are well suited to embed insurance into their platforms because, in our online world, they control four critical pieces of the insurance puzzle: 1) customer journey, 2) data, 3) trust, and 4) communication

The biggest tech ecosystems, such as Amazon, Apple, Google and Alibaba, that bring together services, marketplaces and devices into one trusted experience, will be especially powerful in embedded insurance. But those who can play in embedded insurance is broader than just the largest tech giants. It could also encompass an array of digital-first disruptors in various verticals:

I’d argue that if your digital business has control of the customer, the data, the trust and the communications, you’re well-placed to embed insurance.

1. Customer Journey

First, as more of life happens online, tech players control the customer journey. They can serve an insurance offering to a buyer exactly when it is most relevant to them, increasing conversion rates compared to a separate purchase of insurance. Meeting the customers where they are should expand the amount of insurance that is purchased in the first place, closing protection gaps. Digital players can easily weave the insurance purchase into the customer workflow, reducing friction as compared to incumbent insurers’ failed attempts to build functioning, pleasant online purchase journeys.

For tech players, embedded insurance adds a high margin revenue stream. For example, one of the best penetrated embedded insurance categories is insurance into the rental car customer journey — selling extra insurance at the checkout counter. In car rentals, there is intense price competition leading to razor thin margins on the standalone car bookings. But the add-on insurance is extremely high margin. In these businesses, the insurance and other ancillary services often drive over 100% of the profits. For emerging digital businesses, especially those that want to stay competitive on the price of their core service, insurance could be a high margin revenue stream to add into their proposition.

For insurers, embedded is a far more effective way to get distribution than paying away commission and customer acquisition costs to price comparison websites, brokers or Google AdWords. In the UK, the price comparison websites are essentially gatekeepers for insurance distribution in personal lines with 92% of consumers using them as a first port of call. And for direct distribution, insurance keywords on Google are the most expensive of all industries. Partnering with tech may be a better way.

2. Data

Tech players’ second asset is their control of data. As offline services come online, vast amounts of data are collected. Digital services end up having the most data about risk. Depending on the type of service, the nature of the data collected and its relevance to insurance varies. Transaction history, device data (for instance, mobile data from smartphones, Apple Watch, Google’s Fitbit or fixed device data from Amazon Alexa, Ring or Google Nest), or through other types of customer profiling (such as browsing history or income and expenditure data) all have relevant insurance use cases.

Digital services are collecting data that enables new insurance models

By contrast, the status quo insurance purchase asks the customer to provide data about the risk in a separate process. In the first place, the data entry process creates friction in buying insurance. Further, this data often has limited fidelity to the truth as people forget information (what material is my roof made of? how much is that jewellery worth?), misunderstand what the insurer is asking (just what is a BS 3621 lock?) or do not report things correctly (have you really never smoked?). And importantly, the data is not updated in real time; it is based on static, historic demographics than actual risk behaviour in real time.

Digital platforms have much more data about the underlying insured risk than the insurers can get via their questionnaires. With embedded insurance, this data could be provided to insurers directly and with much greater accuracy than going via the customer. For insurers, big data can be used to improve underwriting, risk selection, risk monitoring and fraud prevention. Further, behavioural data can be gathered over time, creating potential for usage-based insurance products (a growing field estimated to be worth $25bn already) and new approaches to risk analytics in general. In the long term, we are believers in the power of data to drive innovative ways to think about insurance risk.

3. Trust

Third, digital services command high levels of consumer trust. Tech companies have created superior customer experiences and developed powerful brands, manifested in their sky-high NPS scores. Digital services have an average NPS of 75 vs an average of 30 across various lines of insurance.

Digital services have far higher NPS than insurance (Source: public information)

By contrast, insurance brands are weak and command little customer loyalty. For instance, in the UK, 73% of consumers are looking to switch their insurance provider.

Consumer willingness to entrust Big Tech with insurance has been rising even prior to the Covid-19 induced explosion of digital services. (Source: Edelman and The Geneva Association)

Embedded insurance presents an opportunity to arbitrage this trust gap between insurance and digital. Insurers can piggyback on the positive customer experiences and brands of digital platforms to get better distribution and differentiate. In turn, the tech players get to leverage their hard-earned brands into additional high margin revenue streams and a longer, deeper relationship with their users. As early as 2018, we started to see green shoots of consumer willingness to buy insurance from Big Tech, but we expect this trend to accelerate dramatically.

Finally, injecting more trust into the insurance customer journey, by wrapping it in well-loved brands, should generally encourage more people to buy coverage. At the moment, 2/3rds of consumers believe insurance is doing its utmost to avoid paying claims. Low trust undermines a customer’s intention to seek insurance at all — a loss for the ecosystem as a whole.

Poor communication causes the insurance industry to be poorly understood. Most people have had a negative experience with insurance. (Source: Edelman & The Geneva Association)

4. Communication

Finally, tech players are fluent in “millennial” and command high frequency, positive communication channels with their users.

Millennials and younger generations now make up over 50% of the US population. However, this generation is the least engaged with insurance. According to Gallup, Millennials are twice as likely as other generations buy insurance online and yet are the least satisfied with existing digital insurance options. This explains how new entrants like Lemonade reach multi-billion dollar market caps ($9bn at the moment, up almost 200% from its IPO price), not just on the basis of their written premium growth but due to the promise of unlocking the Millennial insurance consumer. Meanwhile, digital services speak to Millennial and Gen Z cohorts natively, building brands and experiences that naturally delight them.

A second advantage for tech vs insurers is the frequency and tone of their communication. Digital platforms often have multiple, positive touchpoints with the consumer through the life cycle, whether its recurring monthly purchases or daily health data tracking. By contrast, insurers typically only interact with their customers in annual renewals or in claims, usually through conducted through paper or phone. Often, a consumer’s interaction with their insurance is negative as it is centred around a claim or something that has gone “wrong.”

Again, embedded insurance offers a way to bridge these disparities. Insurers can leverage tech’s communication channels and style to boost engagement with their customer base and expand the market by adequately catering to younger generations. Frequent, positive communication channels between an insurer and the insured also unlocks the potential for more active risk management and prevention of claims. Via digital services, insurers could gather real-time data on incoming risks and warn customers in advance to take actions. For instance, when a storm is coming, insurers can send a reminder to park your car in the garage or check that your roof is in good shape.

And digital services win as well with by leveraging their existing assets to enhance their overall value proposition, keep customers tied to their ecosystem, and add profit streams.

What will 2021 bring for embedded insurance

With digital consumption unexpectedly accelerating, new and greater risk protection gaps are arising. Embedded insurance creates a win-win proposition for both tech players and insurers to better protect consumers and strengthen value propositions. Tech players’ control of the customer journey, their data, their trust, and the lines of communication make them best placed to bring insurance into the 21st century.

Insurers represent 10% of the Fortune 500 and industry net profits were over $100 billion in 2019 in the US alone. Yet there has been minimal innovation and a glacial pace of transition to a world of digital consumption. If insurers don’t innovate, someone will come after those profit pools. As Jeff Bezos famously said, “Your margin is my opportunity.” And insurance presents a world of opportunity — for those ready to embed it in our digital lives.

2021 will be the year when embedded insurance starts to come into its own. There is an emerging class of insurtechs tackling this challenge across a range of insurance lines, including Qover, CoverGenius, Kasko, Tapoly, AP Intego, Wrisk, bsurance, Cybersmart, Extend, Anorak Life, and Hepster, amongst others. With Stripe, every company can now offer online payments. With Klarna, every company can offer buy-now-pay-later. We’re excited to find the start-up that enables every company to offer insurance.

Please reach out to jbartos@albion.vc if you’re working on embedded insurance and approaching your Series A!

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Jessica Bartos
AlbionVC Publication

Venture capital @SalesforceVentures, investing in B2B software and fintech