The $5 million in annual hidden operational costs that legacy systems impose on insurers isn't just a technology problem, it's a fundamental misallocation of underwriting capital.
When 72% of insurers rely on Excel spreadsheets to manage critical workflows, they've essentially transformed their organizations into IT consulting firms that happen to write insurance policies on the side. The new research from RSM US LLP reveals something more troubling than expensive technology: carriers are paying premium dollars for substandard operations while their competitors pull ahead.
The math is stark. Nearly 900 hours of lost productivity from system downtime translates to $450,000 annually. Manual intervention in policy workflows costs another $475,000 to $1.1 million. But these figures only capture the visible bleeding. The invisible cost lies in what carriers cannot do while their teams spend days wrestling with broken integrations instead of analyzing risk.
Rob Lewis from INTX Insurance Software hit the core issue: insurers have been attributing margin erosion to underwriting performance when technology architecture is the actual culprit. This misdiagnosis leads to the wrong solutions. Carriers tighten underwriting guidelines or raise rates when they should be replacing the systems that make profitable business unprofitable to process.
Consider the workflow reality. More than 50% of policy processes require manual intervention. Quoting, issuance, and claims processing, the three revenue-generating activities that should run like clockwork, instead demand constant human babysitting. Every manual step introduces delay, error risk, and resource drag.
The downstream effects compound rapidly. Data latency from manual processes prevents real-time pricing adjustments. Implementation cycles exceeding 18 months mean carriers miss entire market opportunities. System integrators become permanent fixtures, billing monthly fees to make core software perform basic functions.
Legacy systems don't just cost money, they actively prevent revenue generation. When new product launches require months of configuration and testing, carriers watch market windows close while they debug integration problems. The research shows implementation costs approaching $1 million per system, with most carriers operating two to three systems simultaneously.
This creates a perverse incentive structure. The higher the implementation costs and longer the timelines, the more reluctant carriers become to modernize. They end up trapped in a technology debt cycle, paying escalating maintenance costs for diminishing performance.
The strategic implication is clear: carriers operating on modern infrastructure can move faster, price more accurately, and allocate human capital to risk assessment instead of data entry. The technology gap is becoming a competitive moat.
Carriers need to reframe legacy system costs as underwriting expenses, not IT expenses. Every dollar spent on manual workarounds is a dollar not invested in risk modeling, market expansion, or talent acquisition. The $5 million annual cost isn't just operational waste, it's strategic opportunity cost.
The solution requires treating technology infrastructure as core underwriting capability, not back-office overhead. Carriers that make this shift will find themselves writing more business with better margins while their competitors continue funding internal IT departments.
*This article was inspired by and builds on: Legacy Insurance Systems Cost Nearly $5M Annually in Hidden Operational Costs: Report, Carrier Management. Read the original for full details.*
*Source: Carrier Management | Tags: carriers, insurtech, strategy*