This article is part of Carrier Management’s series on the Future of Insurance.

David W. Miles, Co-Founder and Managing Partner, ManchesterStory Group, has his sights on transformed business processes that eliminate cobbled-together workflows internally and reduce friction for customers and claimants as he looks to invest in the industry’s future. IoT datasets further positioning insurers as providers of loss prevention services are also on his radar screen.

David W. Miles, Co-Founder and Managing Partner, ManchesterStory Group
Dave Miles is a Co-Founder and Managing Partner of ManchesterStory Group, a venture capital firm making early stage investments in companies in InsurTech, FinTech and HealthTech.
ManchesterStory is backed by a consortium of leading insurance industry players and invests across the United States.
Miles has been an investment professional and entrepreneur for the last 30 years, most of that time as owner of Miles Capital Inc., a $4.8 billion insurance-focused asset management firm. In addition to his investment experience, he brings leadership and operating experience to the firm and to its partner companies. His career experience includes leadership roles in insurance, corporate and personal trust, banking, and the mutual fund industry.

Q: What major changes do you see on the horizon for the property/casualty insurance industry in the next 10 years? What will insurance companies, insurance leaders, the industry and its workforce look like in the next decade? What risks will they insure?

Miles (ManchesterStory): Through the years, insurers have pieced together workflows and processes as necessary, typically without a lot of thought given to how other departments, processes or customers may be affected. While this “whatever works” approach does typically achieve short-term results, it affords little insight into how such one-off tasks and workarounds for critical processes may affect long-term goals or effectiveness.

The most impactful changes on the horizon today are those focused on transformation of business practices and which are designed to bring a dramatic reduction in the friction around buying and utilizing insurance coverage—direct digital applications, touchless claims and flexible payment solutions will become ubiquitous, for example. These types of changes not only can provide operational efficiencies and associated financial gains for insurers but also a more streamlined, positive customer experience as well.

P/C insurance will increasingly be bundled at the time of purchase or financial commitment, or be integrated into products as part of the customer solution, leading to new distribution models and partners for carriers.

Distributed ledgers will be used for security and efficiency across multiple insurance applications, including proof of insurance, fraud reduction and claims payments.

The data and algorithms used for underwriting will become much “smarter,” based on a significantly broader set of indicators that provide much greater insight into specific customer risk factors. Falling IoT costs and a growing dataset will position insurers to champion loss prevention and risk mitigation for a much broader customer base under a “prevention as a service” umbrella.

Falling IoT costs and a growing dataset will position insurers to champion loss prevention and risk mitigation for a much broader customer base under a ‘prevention as a service’ umbrella.”
In a decade, insurance companies will increasingly be populated by “digital natives,” which will be essential to crafting the type of user experiences that most of us have come to expect, and some experiences we haven’t even thought of yet. Insurers will invest in data scientists, machine learning experts, IoT architects, blockchain engineers and SMEs [subject matter experts] with experience in deep learning and virtual reality. Repetitive, manual tasks will continue to be automated or phased out altogether as digital transformation becomes more prevalent throughout the insurance industry.

In addition to continued growth in the sale of cyber insurance, falling insurance costs will increase demand for insurance coverage of nearly every kind—though we expect fewer individual standalone policy sales.

Q: How will insurance products and services be distributed?

Miles (ManchesterStory): On the distribution front, technological advances will lead first to digital underwriting and binding, moving over time to insurance as a service bundled into the solution at the time of purchase, and all leading to myriad new distribution channels.

Read more Future Insights by person

  1. Mike Albert, Co-Founder, Ask Kodiak
  2. Tim Attia, CEO and Co-Founder, Slice Labs, Inc.
  3. Arun Balakrishnan, CEO, Xceedance
  4. Ilya Bodner, CEO, Bold Penguin
  5. Bobby Bowden, Executive Vice President, Chief Distribution and Marketing Officer, Allied World
  6. Andy Breen, Senior Vice President, Digital, Argo Group
  7. Adam Cassady, CEO, Tyche Risk
  8. Chris Cheatham, CEO, RiskGenius
  9. Trent Cooksley, Head of Open Innovation, Markel Corporation
  10. Mike Foley, CEO, Zurich North America
  11. Guy Goldstein, Co-Founder and CEO, Next Insurance
  12. Mike Greene, CEO & Co-Founder, Hi Marley
  13. Brian Hemesath, Managing Director, Global Insurance Accelerator
  14. Russell Johnston, CEO, QBE North America
  15. Dr. Henna Karna, Managing Director and Chief Data Officer, XL Catlin
  16. Tony Kuczinski, President and CEO of Munich Re, US
  17. Rashmi Melgiri, Co-Founder, CoverWallet
  18. David W. Miles, Co-Founder and Managing Partner, ManchesterStory Group
  19. Pranav Pasricha, CEO, Intellect SEEC
  20. Mike Pritula, President, RMS
  21. Kathleen Reardon, CEO, Hamilton Re
  22. Jeff Richardson, Senior Vice President, OneBeacon Insurance Group
  23. Vikram Sidhu, Partner, Clyde & Co
  24. Christopher Swift, CEO, The Hartford
  25. Rebecca Wheeling Purcell, Schedule It
  26. Keith Wolfe, President US P/C—Regional and National, Swiss Re


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