For Auto Insurers, is Retention Taking a Back Seat?
filed in Contributing Authors, Customer Experience, Loyalty Models, Social Media, Thought Leadership, Tom Rapsas on Jun.15, 2009
Until very recently I worked on the acquisition side of an auto insurance account, where these days it’s all about the price—with virtually every auto insurer claiming they can save you $400 or $500 (which makes you wonder, if everyone can save you money, which companies are ripping people off?).
But perhaps the most eye-opening aspect of auto insurance marketing is the lack of respect paid to retention. After all, if you believe the accepted adage that for every $10 spent to acquire a new customer it takes only $1 to retain an existing customer—why are auto insurers plowing so many millions into acquisition and spending next to nothing on retention?
It’s especially important to have a retention strategy these days because of the changing relationship between auto insurance buyer and seller. Once upon a time, most drivers had insurance agents who they had a one-to-one relationship with—but now, with independent agents becoming a shrinking breed, and with the rise of direct-to-consumer providers like Geico, 21st Century and Esurance, times have changed. Most customers have no interaction with their insurance company, unless they have an accident or are mailing in their premium check.
Seems to me it’s time for auto insurers to take a fresh new approach to retaining customers, one that begins building a relationship well before the auto policy is about to expire and the customer can be swayed by the latest “you can save hundreds” TV commercial.
Thought one: Adding a message on a bill insert, while a no-brainer, will do absolutely zilch to build a relationship with best customers. What’s needed is a more robust approach that includes a regular stream of print and/or e-mail communications with relevant information drivers can use like:
- Invitations to online or offline tutorials on choosing the coverage right for me and my family
- Info on safety recalls and maintenance tips for my particular vehicle
- Safety advice for teenage and senior drivers on my policy
- Reminders of why my insurer is the right choice and what it offers that the competitors don’t
Thought two: Start engaging via social networking tools. With people so often confused by their auto policy details (collision? comprehensive? low or high deductible?), it seems like there’s an opening for an auto insurance provider to become the online source for honest, helpful information. So who will step up?
While some auto insurers are moving in the right direction by gravitating toward the communications opportunities offered by Web 2.0, many of the executions are weak at best and some companies have chosen to do nothing at all.
A few quick observations:
- Market leader Geico barely exists in the Web 2.0 world unless you want to count a blog for the Miss Geico offshore racing boat—and a few “Screw Geico” entries from unhappy customers out in the blogosphere. Kash, the bug-eyed stack of money that stars in Geico’s goofy TV commercials, does have a Twitter account—but has just a single tweet over the last 4-months. (Kash may be the quiet type, but one tweet?)
- Esurance icon Erin, animated hero of the company’s television commercials, has her own blog on the company Web site—but after a fast start in 2005, it seems like Erin may be all blogged out—she has a woeful total of three blog entries in 2009. (Is she busy on a TV shoot? Have her write from the set!)
- Then, there’s Allstate. Very active with Twitter, they appear to be doing a bang-up job of responding quickly to customer comments and concerns. They also appear to be the only insurer to set up an online community which can be found at goodhandscommunity.org. The community gets an A for effort, but the execution?
In my next post, I’ll give it a full review … to be continued.
Tom Rapsas is an independent Creative Director, Writer and Strategist. He can be reached at tomrapsas@gmail.com.








June 15th, 2009 on 11:45 pm
Loyalty to an insurer of any kind implies “trust you with my life…trust you with my child’s life.”
I am a USAA-evangelist. Why? Service begets trust.
Over the last 20 years, I’ve come to entrust USAA implicitly with my family, my home, my car, my jewelry. Service. No matter who I call, when I call, or what number I call into USAA, the person who picks up the phone can help me, can connect me to more help, and I NEVER feel like I’m talking to someone who is unfamiliar with my accounts.
Loyalty to auto-insurers? USAA wrote the book. I started as a 15 year old driver – YIKES! – insured with USAA — my father was in the Navy, so that was my foot in the door. I’ve never had another insurer, and now USAA is also my bank (even though I work for a different bank), and I also have my investments through USAA. When it came time to insure my home, USAA does that, at every angle, as well as property. I’ve used their financial planning services, and will be purchasing life insurance in the near future from them, as well. Not the low cost provider, but a premium I am happy to pay because I know without a doubt the service I receive is bar none.
Its not about points — this kind of loyalty is not begotten by points, trips, watches, or freebies. I’m not caught up in some points earn velocity momentum that smooths over bad experiences. It’s not even because of the annual dividend I receive simply because I’m a customer/member.
I love USAA simply because they know me. They make it easy to work with them. USAA is unlike any other company I have ever encountered.
They have data on their side. In graduate school, I was able to woo one of their database execs to speak to our class. Sophistication in their analysis and data structure? WOW! This is exemplified in the fact I have never received a piece of mail from USAA that hasn’t led me to act. No junk mail because their messaging is 100% relevant due to their advanced data capabilities and applications.
While it started with my Jeep Cherokee insurance back in college, my relationship with USAA is now so much more far-reaching and deeply rooted – I can’t imagine working with any other institution for insurance (or banking, or investments, or planning.)
June 16th, 2009 on 9:25 am
I’m not a customer, but it appears that Nationwide has a chance to build loyalty through stickiness. Their new iPhone app, which includes tools for filing an accident claim more or less on the spot, seems relevant and helpful, and positions the company as both forward-thinking and customer-centric. Sounds like a good use of the technology.
June 16th, 2009 on 11:14 am
Well, I’m sure my view is not a popular one, but from where I sit, insurers don’t market. They have no need. Their scheme is to play on fear within our society. “Should the worst occur, you will have financial solvency…”; if nothing else. My view, is that in our society we ‘own,’ we ‘have,’ we ‘acquire,’ more and more ‘things’ which we then have need to ‘protect’ from loss. God forbid, that we should only have ourselves, our personal integrity, to keep us secure.
The insurance industry is just that, its wealth is ‘generated’ and is a self-fulfilling prophecy.
My philosophy, and the lesson I attempt to teach my children, if no one else, is that ‘things’ just don’t matter that much, but people do. Your money, or the money you leave, should the ‘worst’ case scenario present itself, shouldn’t be your legacy.
June 17th, 2009 on 10:19 am
Hi Stephanie!, Hello Ron,
I think you both raise excellent examples of auto insurers who are taking real steps to differentiate themselves from the competition. (I will definitely be checking out USAA.) I limited by initial research to the “big guys” and as a rule I found they come up short when it comes to connecting and engaging with customers. For smaller competitors, I think this is good news–it gives them a real opening when the day comes (and it will come) when the customer is not only concerned about who has the lowest price, but starts looking at who can also offer the best service, relevant information and honest advice.