Communication & Insurance: Before, During & After Disaster

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Communication & Insurance: Before, During & After Disaster National Hurricane Conference Orlando, FL March 29, 2018 Lynne McChristian, Communications Consultant Insurance Information Institute 110 William Street New York, NY 10038 Tel: 212.346.5540 Cell: 917.494.5945 stevenw@iii.org www.iii.org

What do Consumers Know About Insurance? More important? What they don t know

Homeowners Understand the Key Provisions in A Policy Most consumers understand these perils are covered: Fire Theft Wind Hail Burst Pipes 3

Consumer Understanding of Liability Coverage Most policyholders know homeowners insurance provides liability protection. 4

Consumers are Fuzzy on the Details They understand the basics, yet many are unaware of some additional coverages included in their policy. For example, 79% know homeowners insurance covers possessions stolen from their home, but don t always know those items are covered if they are stolen from them outside the home. 5

Confusion about water damage vs flood damage A water heater burst feels like a flood, but it s not. Insurance Information Institute, 2016 Consumer Insurance Survey, Homeowners Insurance: Understanding, Attitudes, and Shopping Practices, February 2017, p. 2. 6

At Peak (2007), Only 5% of Occupied Residences Had an NFIP Flood Insurance Policy In Force 6% 5% 4% 5.1% 4.3% 3% 2% 1% 0% 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Since 2007 the number of occupied residences has grown by 7.25% but the number of flood policies in force fell by 10.25%. Sources: https://www.fema.gov/total-policies-force-calendar-year ; https://www.census.gov/housing/hvs/data/histtabs.html Insurance Information Institute. 7

Homeowners and Renters Insurance A 2016 Insurance Information Institute poll found that 93% of homeowners had homeowners insurance. And 41% renters had renters insurance. But only 12% had a flood insurance policy, despite the fact that flooding is the most common natural disaster in the U.S. 8

What Insurers Learned from the Hurricanes of 2017 Flood damage is the least understood peril, and yet it is the most common one. False sense of security in some high-risk areas, and overstated risks in other areas. It s not all about homes. Personal autos and business interruption coverage had larger-than-expected losses. Trend is for consecutive disasters and increased losses. There is a protection gap: Insured vs uninsured losses. Proactively addressing risks isn t an option; it s an imperative. Partnerships, communication, preparedness mindset. 9

Business are Not Prepared for a Disaster A Nationwide Insurance report shows a 26% increase in the average severity of commercial catastrophe claims. Most small-business owners (68%) do not have a written disaster recovery plan even though about half (49%) said it would take their business at least three months to recover from a natural disaster. hose findings stem from Nationwide s second annual Small Business Indicator, which was conducted online by Harris Poll on behalf of Nationwide from June 10-23 among 502 U.S. small-business owners with fewer than 300 employees. 10

Critical Need for Small Business Owners to Understand their Options Too often, they ask about coverage.after a disaster! 11

Home-based Businesses at Risk Most of the 11 Million Home-based Businesses Do Not Have Proper Coverage A survey, conducted by International Communications Research, reveals that one in 10 U.S. households operates some type of full or part-time home-based business. However, nearly 60% do not have insurance coverage. Nearly 40% of home-based business owners say they thought they were protected by some other type of coverage, while almost 30% say their businesses are too small to insure. Additionally, home-based businesses without insurance are slightly more likely (11%) to have experienced a financial loss than are those that do have insurance (9%). 12

Communicating When a Storm is Imminent

Responsiveness to Hurricane Messages It depends Yale project on climate change communication, Marlon, et al, 2015 14

You Are if You Think You Are 15

Hurricane Response 16

Anchoring Observations The brain gets stuck on a timeframe and misleading information. Most people consider a 1-in-100-in-a-year chance event quite unlikely, and many are unwilling to insure against it, even if it could cause a devastating loss. However, the chance of such an event happening over a 30-year period is 1-in-4. Perspective: From Aug. 2015-Aug. 2016, there were eight 500- year flood events, according to the National Weather Service. (Houston in 2017). In the five years prior, there were six 1,000 year flood events.* Source: *http://www.jbarisk.com/5lessons David Rolpeik, How Risky Is It Really?: Why Our Fears Don t Always Match the Facts (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2010), p. 40, citing Kahneman and Tversky. 17

Messaging that Works Something for Everyone Present approach: Simple, instructive messages, which appeals to about 40-45% of the population. So, 55-60% are not as responsive. A Better Approach: Multiple types of messages so important information is accessible to people of all kinds of personality types and cognitive dispositions 18

Considering Individual Differences People are attentive to hurricane forecasts, get similar information, but react differently Predictions how likely a hurricane is to occur, and how bad it would be Priorities personal safety, guarding one s possessions, staying with pets, or even watching the storm Preparedness Belief as to whether evacuating or staying was safer Willingness to evacuate THE CHALLENGE: How can we more effectively deliver (and design) critical information, especially if different people react differently to the same information (and need incentives to act)? FSU Behavioral Research by Dr. Sarah Baisley and Dr. Lorilee Medders 19

Personal Circumstances Matter Life Safety and Property Protection Decisions Depend Upon: Financial situation Access to transportation Dependents (children, elderly relatives, pets, other) Age Religion Language WHO MATTERS MOST in delivering messages? Experts and credible peers 20

Approaches as Different As Individuals Apps Blogs Checklists Consumer Articles Infographics Media Interviews Social Engagement Videos 21

I.I.I. Website The I.I.I. homepage is updated regularly with content relevant to consumers. 22

IBHS Great Resources for a Small Business 23

NAIC Resources for the Industry and Consumers 24

10 Rules of Successful Communication 1. Simplicity: Use small words. Simple, plain language is more easily understandable. 2. Brevity: Use short sentences. Consider how ad slogans of 2-3 words pack punch. 3. Credibility is as important as philosophy. The words you use become you. 4. Consistency matters. Repetition, repetition. 5. Novelty: Offer something new. Can your message generate an I didn t know that response? 25

10 Rules of Successful Communication (cont.) 6. Sound & Texture Matter. Snap, Crackle, Pop 7. Speak Aspirationally. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. 8. Visualize. Paint a picture. 9. Ask a Question. Can you hear me now? 10. Provide Context & Explain Relevance. Give the why before the therefore and so that. Source: Words That Work, by Dr. Frank Luntz 26

I.I.I. Poll: Favorability Percent of Public Rating Industry as Very or Mostly Favorable, 2016 60% 50% 40% 30% 54% 54% 51% 51% 44% 38% 38% 34% 29% 20% 10% 0% Auto and home insurance Banking Life insurance Electric utility companies Health insurance Oil and gas companies Mutual funds Financial services companies Pharmaceutical companies Auto/Home Insurers Tie with Banks as Highest Rated of Industries Surveyed Source: Insurance Information Institute Pulse survey, November 2016. 27

What Should We Be Communicating?

Need to Educate Business Owners About all their options so they can make sound financial decisions! 40 Percent Don t Open After a Disaster Another 25% Fail Within a Year! Property insurance Liability insurance Business interruption insurance And, Professional liability, Employee practices liability, Workers comp, Health and disability, Flood and sewer backup, Cyber risk insurance, Terrorism insurance 29

Need to Clear Up Confusion About Coverage Explain water damage vs flood coverage. Talk coverage AND limitations of flood coverage. No additional living expense. No coverage for basements. Also need to clearly explain coverage for mudslides, landslides and back-up of sewers and drains, as well as law and ordinance coverage. 30

Details Conduct a home inventory Explain deductibles AND hurricane deductibles Actual Cash Value vs. Replacement Cost Value Comprehensive auto insurance Optional coverage Flood, building ordinance & law, inflation guard, sewer backup, sinkhole Flood insurance limitations 30-day waiting period No coverage for basements No Additional Living Expenses Limits in coverage to $250,000 for home, $100,000 for contents No coverage for tree damage, unless it hits an insured object 31

Surround Sound Approach to Consumer Communications Consumers Consumers Industry Policymakers Media Relevant Experts Relevant Experts Industry Media Policymakers 32

The Property Insurance Protection Gap: Definition and Measurement

The Global Protection Gap, the difference between Economic Losses and Insured Losses generated by catastrophes, is growing $Billions, in 2016 dollars In terms of 10-year rolling averages, between 1991 and 2016, insured losses grew by 4.6% per year but economic losses by 5.6% per year. 34

US Insured Flood Losses, $Billions The Drop in Flood Coverage Isn t Due to Lower Insured Flood Claims Payments In 2016 there were 4 separate multi-billiondollar inland flood events the highest number in a single year since 1980. Source: SwissRe Institute: Sigma No 2/2017 Natural catastrophes and man-made disasters in 2016: a year of widespread damages ; Insurance Information Institute. 35

The $10 Billion Flood Protection Gap: What Can We Do? Risk awareness Simple insurance products (flood endorsement policies) Continue to improve risk assessment tools Public/private partnerships that support financial resilience Source: SwissRe/III webinar, April 27, 2017. 36

Helping consumers make good decisions Helping them understand: The types of losses/claims that they might sustain The likelihood/probability of those various kinds of losses/claims what we call frequency The potential severity of those losses 37

Thank you