The Hook: Is Insurance Tech Just Expensive Window Dressing?
When Guillaume Bonnissent pens a piece titled “IT boldly go,” the industry expects tales of seamless digital transformation. But beneath the veneer of progress in insurance technology, a more cynical reality festers. We are not witnessing a revolution; we are witnessing a massive, over-leveraged capital expenditure cycle disguised as innovation. The core question isn't whether IT can go bold, but whether the underlying business model can sustain the ambition.
The 'Meat': Analyzing the Digital Arms Race
The current fixation on digitizing every customer touchpoint—from AI underwriting to blockchain claims processing—is less about efficiency and more about signaling. Insurers are locked in a costly digital arms race, driven by venture capital mandates and fear of disruption. Bonnissent's diary likely celebrates incremental upgrades, but the unspoken truth is that these systems often create more complexity than they solve. Legacy infrastructure, the industry's true anchor, remains largely untouched, meaning new, shiny insurtech layers are simply bolted onto a rotting foundation.
Who wins? The consultants selling the transformation roadmaps and the vendors locking clients into ten-year software contracts. Who loses? The policyholder, footing the bill for these expensive, often redundant, technological upgrades through stagnant premium returns or rising costs. This isn't about better risk management; it's about maximizing immediate enterprise value before the next funding round.
The 'Why It Matters': The Illusion of Customer Centricity
True customer centricity in insurance requires radically simplifying products and reducing administrative overhead. Instead, we see hyper-personalization algorithms that serve primarily to segment risk for higher pricing tiers. The massive investment in digital transformation is creating a two-tiered system: sleek, app-based experiences for the low-risk, high-value customers, and increasingly opaque, automated rejection systems for everyone else. This technological stratification is far more significant than any single software deployment.
The industry’s reliance on massive data ingestion—often sourced without truly transparent consent—raises profound ethical questions that are conveniently ignored in the pursuit of predictive accuracy. For more on the regulatory landscape surrounding data privacy, see the evolving standards discussed by organizations like the International Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS).
Where Do We Go From Here? The Great Consolidation
My prediction is stark: The current pace of independent insurtech innovation is unsustainable. We are entering a phase of painful consolidation. The well-funded disruptors that cannot achieve profitability within the next 18 months will be absorbed by the very incumbent carriers they sought to replace. These incumbents will not integrate the technology for improvement; they will acquire it to kill the competition and strip the intellectual property for internal use, likely shelving the customer-facing elements that proved too costly to scale. The next major headline won't be about a new feature; it will be about a massive layoff following a major acquisition.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- The current insurance technology boom is primarily driven by vendor sales and VC signaling, not genuine consumer benefit.
- Legacy systems are being masked by new digital layers, increasing complexity rather than simplifying core operations.
- The true cost of this 'bold' IT strategy is being quietly passed onto the average policyholder.
- Expect a major wave of M&A activity as overvalued insurtechs are absorbed or fail within two years.