Skip to main content
Category

Announcement

 The Data Challenge – U.S. Property & Casualty Industry 

By Announcement, Blog




Data is a cornerstone of the property and casualty (P&C) insurance industry, driving informed decision-making and operational efficiency. It enables insurers to assess risk accurately, price policies competitively, and predict future trends. By leveraging data, companies can enhance claims management, improve customer experiences, and develop innovative products tailored to evolving market needs. In an industry built on mitigating uncertainty, data provides the insights necessary to remain agile, reduce losses, and foster trust with policyholders. 



 What Is the Problem? 

 Industries establish universal standards for many things, including data, to increase efficiency in utilization, reporting, and sharing. However, within the U.S. P&C insurance industry, there are few widely adopted common data standards. This lack of standardization causes insurers and others to spend billions of dollars each year translating data into formats for regulatory reporting, catastrophe models, and a myriad of other transactions. The time and cost involved increases resistance for insurers to cooperate with regulators attempting to obtain data to inform constructive legislation and regulation. 

With rising catastrophes and growing populations in high-risk areas, access to aggregate data is crucial not only to the insurance industry, but to the U.S. economy, which requires affordable and accessible insurance to function. 



 Why Does the U.S. Property & Casualty Market Have This Unique Problem with Data Standards? 

 The U.S. P&C insurance industry is regulated at the state level rather than by the Federal Government. There is overwhelming support among both regulators and insurers for state regulation, and it has been effective in many ways. However, with 50+ regulators and close to 4,000 insurance companies, it is almost impossible to gain a consensus on the need for data standards, much less the standards themselves. 

The Association for Cooperative Operations Research and Development (ACORD) has attempted unsuccessfully to create and foster industry adoption of its data standards, both as a not-for-profit and now as a for-profit company. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), the primary body creating national consistency across states, has also worked on the issue for years to no avail. 


Why Does It Matter? 


The cost and difficulty of converting data to different formats increase the resistance of insurers to share data, especially with regulators. More importantly, converting data between architectures—like translating something from one language to another—can result in loss of clarity and accuracy. When insurers move from one Policy Administration System (PAS) to another, which happens frequently but is still hindered by the high costs of conversion, a key barrier is transforming policy data between different architectures. 


Who Cares? 

Insurers 

Insurers acknowledge the problem, but no insurance association or vendor has successfully taken the lead to build a consensus on a solution. Many insurance executives may not fully realize the costs of lacking data standards, and those who do often feel powerless to address it. For carriers, the solution should create financial savings, enhance efficiencies, and increase the ability to leverage data in more creative ways. 

Regulators 

Insurer resistance to sharing data due to the associated cost and complication, combined with the lack of a data standard, makes it extremely difficult to create standards of performance from aggregated data that can inform constructive and consistent regulation. Consider that most of the Southeastern states required companies to file a data call for Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton losses. While the intent of each data call was the same, each one had a different format and slightly different requirements, increasing the costs and complexity of insurer compliance. Regulators ultimately represent consumers who are required to purchase insurance, as well as their state economies that require a healthy insurance market. 

Third-Party Vendors to the Insurance Industry 

Many vendors in the insurance industry recognize the challenges posed by the wide variety of data formats and terminology. They often invest significant resources assisting customers with data formatting and interpretation. As a result, quite a few vendors see this as a critical issue and are open to collaborating on a unified solution. Standardizing data would also make it easier for vendors to integrate with and transition between different companies, streamlining operations. However, some vendors may still view exclusive ownership of data models and architecture as a strategic business advantage. 

What Might Work?

ACORD’s lack of success in creating a data standard proved that 1) there is no industry support for a not-for-profit organization that exists only to establish data standards, and 2) very few companies will pay for the use of a data standard. 

The American Association of Insurance Services (AAIS) maintains proprietary data standards for stat reporting and data contribution for product development, like other Rating and Advisory Organizations do. However, as the only national not-for-profit Rating and Advisory Organization, its business model does not require it to protect that data architecture, which is simply a by-product of its business model. AAIS proposes to make its data model architecture “open source” so that others in the insurance industry can adopt it, in part or fully, at no cost. 

How Will AAIS Make it Work?


AAIS was established as a not-for-profit organization with the goal of fostering collaboration among its insurance company Members. This collaboration enables insurers to develop better and more cost-effective solutions that benefit the entire industry—solutions that individual companies could not achieve on their own. In 2021, AAIS created a not-for-profit subsidiary under the Linux Foundation for insurance industry collaboration on data standards and reporting. The Linux Foundation is dedicated to creating and maintaining not-for-profit open-source industry standards with a proven governance framework that allows transparency and participation while ensuring that collaborative work product does not become compromised or proprietary. As a Linux Foundation project, openIDL (Open Insurance Data Link) is an existing platform that is governed by its time-tested governance model. 


What Is AAIS’s Proposal? 

AAIS will update its stat data model architectures, harmonizing them with existing open-source standards, such as OASISLMF and OMG, as well as others willing to contribute their data structures. 

AAIS will donate its data model architecture to openIDL and the Linux Foundation as an open-source model architecture, available at no cost to anyone that would like to use it. 

The maintenance and updating of the data model architecture would be owned and developed within the Linux Foundation through openIDL, with participation and support of interested parties in the insurance industry. 


How Would the Industry Support and Participate In This Process? 


Membership in openIDL follows the proven governance model used by countless industries. Any industry participant may become a member of openIDL and potentially serve on its board. Not-for-profit firms and regulators can join for free. Full memberships are calculated using a formula 
based on the number of employees, capping out at about $250,000 per year with a guaranteed board seat. A lower cost membership is available, priced from $10,000 to $50,000 per year, based on enterprise size, creating a class from which additional board members may be selected. Board members collectively govern the organization, and members have the right to participate in the development and maintenance of data standards. 


How Would This Get Started? 


The openIDL organization was originally developed as a data-sharing platform, created by AAIS and donated to the Linux Foundation, which required a standard data model architecture. While openIDL will continue to support its platform, its focus will shift to data standards. openIDL has funds to continue operations for approximately 12 months, but as AAIS shifts from the openIDL platform to focus on data, it will need to replace a few primary members to continue to fund and build consensus for open-source data standards. There is active interest from insurance regulators, insurance not-for-profits, industry third-party vendors, and some large insurers; efforts are underway to create critical mass. 


If You Build It, Will They Come? 


Good question! Adoption may be slow in the beginning, but over time, open standards often follow a predictable adoption course. In the initial stage, the adoption of open standards is expected to act as a baseline framework, serving as an intermediary for mapping data before converting it to another standard, like a universal translator. Incremental adoption is anticipated, such as in the case of the aforementioned catastrophe data call by multiple states, where the data standard provides a foundation for them to issue a standardized data call. Over time, creators of new policy administration systems will start integrating elements of the data model architecture, gradually driving broader adoption. 


Why Should I Care About This? 


The insurance industry plays a vital role in our economy and nation. While improving data flow may pose short-term challenges (each organization would define those challenges differently), the long-term benefits far outweigh the costs. As data becomes increasingly critical for accurate insurance processes, the industry must adopt data standards to manage larger volumes efficiently. Supporting this mission strengthens the industry’s future and upholds our collective responsibility to ensure its continued success. 


Contact Information 

For more information, please contact the following individuals. 

openIDL 

Josh Hershman, Executive Director – jhershman@openIDL.org 

Lanaya Nelson, Ecosystem Manager  – lnelson@openIDL.org 

AAIS 

Werner Kruck, President & CEO  – wernerk@AAISonline.com 


Linux Foundation’s openIDL Welcomes reThought Flood and Cloverleaf Analytics to Help Lead the Charge on Insurance Data Standardization

By Announcement, Blog

News provided by

The Linux Foundation 

Jan 28, 2025, 09:00 ET

SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Open Insurance Data Link (openIDL), a forward-thinking consortium focused on establishing critical data standards and leveraging blockchain technology to revolutionize data exchange across the insurance industry, is pleased to welcome new members reThought Flood and Cloverleaf Analytics. As members of openIDL, reThought Flood, an MGA leader in data-driven insurance solutions, and Cloverleaf Analytics, a pioneer in advanced insurance data analytics, will help openIDL lead the charge in insurance data standardization.

As active members of openIDL, reThought Flood and Cloverleaf Analytics will play a pivotal role in the newly launched open Insurance Data Standards (openIDS) Working Group, spearheading the development and adoption of open, non-proprietary, and universally accepted data standards. These efforts represent a critical first step toward building a transparent, and collaborative, data standard that can serve as a foundation for the industry’s future.

“We are pleased to welcome reThought Flood and Cloverleaf Analytics to the openIDL community,” said Josh Hershman, Executive Director of openIDL. “With their support and leadership, we hope to address the fragmented regulatory framework of the U.S. P&C insurance industry, which spans 56 jurisdictions and thousands of insurers, yet has made reaching a consensus on data standards elusive.”

The partnership underscores a transformative step toward addressing one of the industry’s most pressing challenges: the lack of widely adopted data standards in the U.S. property and casualty (P&C) sector. This absence of standardization costs insurers billions annually in translating data for regulatory reporting, catastrophe modeling, and operational tasks. These inefficiencies not only burden insurers but also hinder their ability to collaborate effectively with regulators and other stakeholders, obstructing efforts to create meaningful, informed policies. By adopting comprehensive data standards, the industry can enhance efficiency, reduce costs, and foster constructive collaboration between insurers, regulators, and other stakeholders.

“The value of participating in the openIDL and fostering open standards with openIDS is in building together what no one entity could build alone,” said Werner Kruck, CEO of the American Association of Insurance Services (AAIS). “By welcoming new members into the OpenIDL community, we open new avenues of collaboration to help shape the next generation of insurance data standards and governance. Through AAIS’ membership in openIDL, we look forward to working with the OpenIDL community to break down barriers and drive the adoption of transformative insurance data standards that will benefit the entire ecosystem.”

To learn more about openIDL, including how to participate in the community and become a member, please visit openidl.org.

Supporting Quotes

“reThought is very pleased to become a part of openIDL, a game-changing open source initiative of benefit to the entire insurance industry. As an MGA with significant reporting requirements to capacity partners, a truly open data standard would allow organizations to increase both the efficiency and the effectiveness of shared data and reports. Imagine a world where we all “speak the same data language”, it would be monumental.”
Cory Isaacson – Founder and CEO, reThought Flood

“When I founded Cloverleaf in 2015, it was with a vision that the only way our industry would excel at digital transformation, was if data insights were delivered in a unified common language. We look forward to marrying our vision with openIDL as we strive towards a future where all insurers and regulators can access secure, meaningful data insights as seamlessly as turning on a light switch.”
Robert Clark – Founder and CEO, Cloverleaf Analytics

“Cloverleaf is honored to collaborate with some of the nation’s leading insurers, regulators, and technology companies in joining the openIDL to guide the industry into an age of greater efficiency, data transparency and security, compliance, and growth. Just as insurers rely on robust data to make informed underwriting decisions, the openIDL will serve as the foundation for the entire insurance industry’s data-driven future, ensuring trust and reliability as we move towards more AI-driven business models.”
Michael Schwabrow – EVP of Sales and Marketing, Cloverleaf Analytic

About openIDL
openIDL was founded by (AAIS) in 2021 as a Linux Foundation project. Building a Cohesive, Smarter, More Secure Insurance Industry. The project and its various initiatives were created for insurance industry collaboration on data standards and reporting. The Linux Foundation is the largest global open source software development non-proprietary platform focused on enabling industry-wide and cross-industry collaboration by means of the LF’s proven open governance model and framework.  Generating and maintaining Industry Open Standards utilizing the framework of transparency, participation, and a strong governance model ensures that collaborative work and products do not become compromised and/or proprietary. openidl.org

About reThought Flood
Founded in 2017, reThought Flood is a technology-centric Managing General Agent focused on US flood risk. reThought offers commercial and residential flood insurance on behalf of A.M. Best “A” rated carriers, and has formed strategic relationships with insurers, reinsurers, and other capacity providers to help them profitably innovate in the flood risk arena. reThought’s game-changing technology helps solve vexing industry problems underwriting flood risk, which requires advanced precision and a true understanding of the hazard. reThought has developed a state-of-the-art proprietary underwriting methodology and risk assessment technology which reflects the reality that with flood risk, inches matter.  www.rethoughtflood.com

About Cloverleaf Analytics
Cloverleaf Analytics is the leader in insurance intelligence solutions, having evolved from Business Intelligence (BI) into providing advanced tools using Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning (ML), Natural Language Processing (NLP), Speech to Insights, and other emerging technologies to empower carriers to achieve unparalleled growth. Cloverleaf enables carriers in diverse lines of business to create modern products that help insurers remain competitive against new market entrants while redefining what consumers and businesses understand as the meaning of insurance value.  cloverleafanalytics.com

Media Contact 
Lanaya Nelson
openIDL
Phone: (860) 874-3491
Email: lnelson@openid.org

SOURCE The Linux Foundation

Press Release: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/linux-foundations-openidl-welcomes-rethought-flood-and-cloverleaf-analytics-to-help-lead-the-charge-on-insurance-data-standardization-302361997.html?tc=eml_cleartime