When I talk to insurance carriers, I often hear the following, “We
have a mobile app and adoption is disappointingâ€, or “We already have a
customer web portal, they don’t want a mobile appâ€. I understand every
carrier has unique policyholders, but we have found carriers with
successful mobile apps have done one important thing to drive adoption
and retention. They proactively use push notifications to engage with
their policyholders.
Carriers limit themselves when they choose mobile friendly web
pages for customer portals. These web pages may look good on a mobile
phone, but they cannot access the native features found in smart phones,
things like GPS, taking photos, video, and push notifications. The most
successful policyholder mobile apps include push notifications for high
conversion, value-added communications.
Mobile App Push Notifications
Insurers are finding that engaging policyholders with push
notifications through their phones, the medium people can’t live
without, is creating more loyalty and renewals. Value-added
communications like safety tips, storm warnings, renewal notices, claims
status reports, and others, are valued by policyholders and show that
their insurer cares about their wellbeing. Policyholders who feel their
insurer cares about them are less likely to shop around or leave for a
lower premium.
Mobile App Reduces Losses
When tornados were recently tearing through Kentucky and other
mid-western states, several insurers with push notification enabled
mobile apps were able to warn their policyholders to take shelter. These
insurers were able to use push notifications to reduce claims and
potentially save lives. Their policyholders have reacted to this with
higher NPS scores and increased retention.
Policyholder mobile apps are not a “build it and they will comeâ€
technology. Driving adoption and ROI require insurers to include
features that policyholders value, like compelling push notifications.
Those that do this will have a disruptive tool to win and retain
business. As an insurer, ask yourself if digital engagement is actively
or passively presented to policyholders. If it is passive, then now is
the time take action. Digital Policyholder Engagement
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