The Health June/July 2020 | Page 13

| Cover | Insight Story | | june-july, 2020 | The Health 13 Early digitalisation pays off for AXA AFFIN Adapting to the work from home concept has proven to be seamless as it went digital in 2018 By Khirtini K Kumaran When the Movement Control Order (MCO) was implemented in March, many companies were in a whirl trying to adapt to the lockdown. Most of them were having a hard time getting their staff to change to the Work From Home (WFH) concept, which has since become the new normal. But not for AXA AFFIN Life Insurance Berhad. That’s because two and a half years ago, the company had embraced digitalisation and introduced and adapted an agile working environment. By going agile in 2018, AXA AFFIN added options of WFH and flexible working hours. Its CEO Rohit Chandrasekharan Nambiar said the early transition to being agile had prepared it to adapt its operations and business to the MCO period with less hassle. But, obviously weren’t prepared for such a prolonged period. “We are used to the agile environment. Everyone owns a laptop, and there are also softphones to facilitate those who WFH. You can reach me at my desk phone and equally on my mobile. I carry my office wherever I go,” he told The Health. As for staff productivity for those who WFH, he said it very much depended on the individual. Some were more productive due to the time saved from travelling to and from home while others did less work in a home environment. AXA AFFIN was the first insurer in Malaysia to fully embrace the strategy of going digital and as such, is a pioneer in integrating automation and digitalisation into its business. It has been able to build a robust online presence and platform to distribute its products and services. “We are No 1 in digital life and health insurance in Malaysia,” Rohit said. AXA AFFIN recently organised a Covid-19 crowdfunding campaign and collected close to RM70,000 from the public, employees and agents. This is an achievement for the company, considering that it is ranked the seventh biggest life insurer in the country. It was incidentally, the fastest growing life insurer in Q1 2020 achieving a growth rate of 158 per cent. AXA AFFIN offers consumers the option to purchase directly from the company, either through a phone call or digitally via the website by providing customers with comfortable digital experience. A consumer can buy a health insurance product online from the company in less than ten minutes. “We have made it exceptionally simple, and everything is digital,” Rohit explained. Customers would only need to answer three underwriting questions and if need be, can contact the company via chatbot or make a call. Its medical card is available on an app, and the claims and policies are available for download at the customer portal. While AXA AFFIN’s digital business has been growing actively, it has not been at the expense of its traditional agency business. “For a long time, many people have “We are No 1 in digital life and health insurance in Malaysia. We have made it exceptionally simple, and everything is digital.” treated digital as a threat to the agency. I’m of the view that digital is the biggest complementary asset that an agent can have today.” In the first year, the digital business was launched, 27 per cent of new agent business came from the digital leads provided by the company. “Our digital business grew over 100 per cent while our agency business also grew about 20 per cent last year,” Rohit revealed, adding it was a win-win situation for both sides. According to him, AXA AFFIN’s vision was to become the preferred health and protection insurer for millennials in Malaysia. To reach out to Malaysian millennials, the company tapped into mobile language. It offered health and life insurance products priced just the cost of a postpaid and prepaid mobile recharge. Numbers showed that 90 per cent of customers who bought insurance from the company last year were millennials. Making customers healthier Prioritising the customers, AXA AFFIN was working to move away from being just a payer to that of a partner. “Typically, in health insurance, it is always about paying a claim. However, as a health insurer, we must go beyond just paying out claims,” said Rohit. As such, it introduced two programmes last year. The Fitter Me programme offered customers a 24 per cent discount on their premium the following month if they did an average 10,000 walking steps daily. If they walked 6,000 steps, they would get a 12 per cent discount. The Better Me programme, on the other hand, required customers to undergo a ninemonth health transformation programme. It included a psychologist, nutritionist and a health coach. If clients hit all the goals after nine months, AXA AFFIN would remove the loading fee and put them back to the regular premium. “These are an example of us working with customers, making them healthier rather than just providing money when they are not healthy.” On the current Covid-19 pandemic, Rohit acknowledged it had brought more awareness towards insurance. According to him, three reasons triggered people to buy insurance. The first was a change in lifestyle habits, the second was encountering an incident around them such as a close friend or family member’s illness or health and thirdly, a national occurrence such as a catastrophe or pandemic. On the pandemic, AXA AFFIN recently organised a Covid-19 crowdfunding campaign and collected close to RM70,000 from the public, employees and agents. The fund would be used to procure personal protective equipment (PPE) and given to hospitals. Apart from that, the AXA Group was also providing funding directly to selected hospital ICUs in over 60 countries, including four hospitals in Malaysia. Commenting on the prospects for the Malaysian life insurance market, Rohit said the penetration rate was just 55 per cent currently and thus has room for growth. Malaysia also had a strong demand due to the availability of local talent, having relatively cheaper costs than say Singapore or Hong Kong and even geographical connectivity. “If there is an insurtech or fintech or someone who has Southeast Asia ambitions, they could use Malaysia as a starting point and later scale up to other places.” — The Health