Data and Analytics Asia Q+A: Oliver Rust, Nielsen

oliver-rust-nielsen

Postonline interviews Oliver Rust, head of global financial services, Nielsen.

What is your role at Nielsen?
I am the global senior vice president, financial services at Nielsen based in Hong Kong. I have traveled extensively in my career and have a deep understanding of the insurance market for both business to consumer and business to business.

Is the Asia-Pacific lagging behind Europe and the US in sophistication around data and analytics?
Overall the Asia-Pacific region is less mature then its counterparts in Europe & the US, and is lagging behind in terms of the level of granularity of data. In addition, there is a lack of talent and infrastructure, in particular for experienced analytical roles.

On the plus side there are few legacy systems allowing the region to take advantage of this and leap ahead. Asia-Pacific is leading the way on mobile and location data; both can play a critical role in helping to reach insurers.

Briefly, where should the insurance sector invest in data and analytics in Asia?
Digital represents a big opportunity, allowing organisations to reach the large sectors of the population that don't have insurance coverage given the broad geographical coverage. This is a great distribution channel for those who can't gain access to agents or bank's branch network.

The music industry has embraced the digital platforms and has reaped significant benefits which the financial services industry including insurance can benefit from as well.

The companies that are able to leverage and integrate the in-house information about their customers together into a CRM system and tie this not only with an understanding of the behaviours and lifestyles of the consumers and the ability to link this with their product holding across the industry will come out ahead of the competition.

To achieve this, a different mind-set will be required, combined with greater flexibility and analytical capabilities.

This change won't happen overnight but the need to understand the consumer more, and predict the journey they make to purchase it ,is a key element of the success that companies will have.

The intention is to move away from selling transaction type sales without tracking consumer preferences. Precision marketing for consumers and businesses can be improved.

Do you foresee a digital-only future for financial services?
We have yet to see this anywhere in the world for a number of reasons. For example, human interactions for claims, the need for advice and so on, however we have seen progress made in making digital a larger percentage of the business as consumers become more experienced and knowledgeable.

Whatever happens though, the service element won't disappear.

Oliver Rust, pictured, will be speaking at the Insurance Data & Analytics Asia conference on 14 October in Hong Kong. For more details see www.dataanalyticsasia.com

Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.

To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@postonline.co.uk or view our subscription options here: http://subscriptions.postonline.co.uk/subscribe

You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@postonline.co.uk to find out more.

Q&A: Cameron Shearer, Superscript

Frances Stebbing speaks to Cameron Shearer, CEO of Superscript, about what new entrants in the insurtech space need to do to stay ahead, and how the company’s technology has contributed to driving profitable growth for the year ahead.

Q&A: Roi Amir, Sprout AI

Frances Stebbing speaks to Roi Amir, CEO of Sprout AI about how insurers can rebuild policy holders trust in artificial intelligence and why insurers need to bring customers along for the digital transformation journey.

Using AI to monitor claim health

Wayne Calderbank, group data and performance director at Claims Consortium Group, says artificial intelligence is enabling the monitoring of sentiment within the claims journey and ensuring potential problems can be identified and addressed.

What the future holds for AI regulation

Striking the right balance between regulatory intervention and industry autonomy is crucial to realising the full benefits of artificial intelligence while ensuring ethical, accountable, and inclusive practices within the insurance sector, argues Nutan Rajguru, Verisk UK's head of analytics.

You need to sign in to use this feature. If you don’t have an Insurance Post account, please register for a trial.

Sign in
You are currently on corporate access.

To use this feature you will need an individual account. If you have one already please sign in.

Sign in.

Alternatively you can request an individual account here