Bit of a change from work posts this morning.
Am on a bit of a health kick at the moment. The family and I are trying to eat a bit healthier at the moment, reducing processed foods and sugars whilst switching over to more fruit, roughage and cooking from scratch. In addition I'm ramping up the exercise level and have been for a few weeks now.
I regularly post about this on Twitter and Instagram and wondered if readers of the blog might give me the odd additional subscription or just a view !
I'd like to create something a bit more meaty that ties in health and fitness with entrepreneurship but need an awful lot more followers in order to justify spending the time on that as well as the 9-5.
Here's where you can find me :
@localventure1 and @fitover4T on Twitter plus pkn4395 on Instagram.
Look forward to seeing you there, remember #theonlyeasydaywasyesterday
Wednesday, 5 June 2019
Tuesday, 4 June 2019
Medical insurers and renewals
In the good old days one of the insurers I work with (as an independent whole of market healthcare intermediary) would send out the annual renewal terms to me as the broker. I would send it on to the client myself with notes as to the affordability, appropriateness of the cover and so forth. This was usually four to six weeks prior to the renewal date.
As you might imagine this gave me some control over timing and information and in the event of a larger than expected increase on a renewal I could offer the insurers rationale to my client and suggest options without the them having to panic.
Following the introduction of GDPR in 2018 more and more insurers are sending renewal documents direct to the client with the broker copy following either at the same time or even a little later on occasion. In practical terms this has increased my volume of panicky, upset calls and e-mails from clients by 100% (simply didn't have them before this began) and meant that in addition to sending out the renewal in the normal way, as I am required to do by our regulators, I have also had to add in an extra layer of admin to support and resolve clients concerns about their renewals.
The purpose of this post isn't to moan about insurers renewals - as annoying as this might be the insurers are simply trying to process client data properly - but rather to let you all know that it is not the broker who has made this change and in some ways it actually increases the pressure on insurers to reduce their renewal price - historically a calm reasoned e-mail from me in advance, explaining how an increase breaks down was often enough to secure the increase for the insurer at renewal (if I felt it was fair and reasonable to accept of course) but now, having upset the client by sending out the renewal to them first with just figures and no explanation at all even with my viewpoint later clients can be too annoyed to just accept what otherwise might be an appropriate renewal increase and demand a discount or even to move provider. So more pressure on the insurers renewal price to come down and thus lower revenue for their business.
In this respect, changes brought about by GDPR and to insurers renewal process are, I might suggest, a bit of an own goal ?
As you might imagine this gave me some control over timing and information and in the event of a larger than expected increase on a renewal I could offer the insurers rationale to my client and suggest options without the them having to panic.
Following the introduction of GDPR in 2018 more and more insurers are sending renewal documents direct to the client with the broker copy following either at the same time or even a little later on occasion. In practical terms this has increased my volume of panicky, upset calls and e-mails from clients by 100% (simply didn't have them before this began) and meant that in addition to sending out the renewal in the normal way, as I am required to do by our regulators, I have also had to add in an extra layer of admin to support and resolve clients concerns about their renewals.
The purpose of this post isn't to moan about insurers renewals - as annoying as this might be the insurers are simply trying to process client data properly - but rather to let you all know that it is not the broker who has made this change and in some ways it actually increases the pressure on insurers to reduce their renewal price - historically a calm reasoned e-mail from me in advance, explaining how an increase breaks down was often enough to secure the increase for the insurer at renewal (if I felt it was fair and reasonable to accept of course) but now, having upset the client by sending out the renewal to them first with just figures and no explanation at all even with my viewpoint later clients can be too annoyed to just accept what otherwise might be an appropriate renewal increase and demand a discount or even to move provider. So more pressure on the insurers renewal price to come down and thus lower revenue for their business.
In this respect, changes brought about by GDPR and to insurers renewal process are, I might suggest, a bit of an own goal ?
Monday, 3 June 2019
Summer time and medical insurance
Summer tends to be a quieter time for a lot of businesses as people drift away on holidays from the beginning of June right through to early September. Add in the long school summer holidays and sometimes it feels as if there is no one in some offices and workplaces.
It is a time of year though that I often warn clients about - do not ignore the your medical insurance renewals if they are due during this time period. I often get calls from clients and prospects in the middle of September saying they want to make a change in their plan or move insurer or indeed even set up new cover effective from 1st of June or July but because they've been away and forgotten (often despite numerous chases from me) they leave it too late.
Generally if we are setting up cover or reviewing an existing plan then quotes only last thirty days and the most we can ever backdate anything tends to be the same time period. Due to understandable underwriting commitments insurers will not allow exemptions and going away on your hols is no excuse I am afraid.
If you'd like help with your medical insurance renewal please just let me know :
It is a time of year though that I often warn clients about - do not ignore the your medical insurance renewals if they are due during this time period. I often get calls from clients and prospects in the middle of September saying they want to make a change in their plan or move insurer or indeed even set up new cover effective from 1st of June or July but because they've been away and forgotten (often despite numerous chases from me) they leave it too late.
Generally if we are setting up cover or reviewing an existing plan then quotes only last thirty days and the most we can ever backdate anything tends to be the same time period. Due to understandable underwriting commitments insurers will not allow exemptions and going away on your hols is no excuse I am afraid.
If you'd like help with your medical insurance renewal please just let me know :
Phil
Philip D Knight
Healthcare Consultant
M: 07792 075748
T: 0113 2505702
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