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Building partnerships that transform insurance operations

Explore how leading insurers are using strategic partnerships to drive innovation, manage complexity, and enhance operational efficiency.

Insurance

The strategic partnership landscape in insurance is undergoing a fundamental shift. What once was primarily a cost arbitrage play has evolved into something far more strategic. Today’s insurers are seeking partners who can help them innovate faster, manage complexity more effectively, and build capabilities that would be difficult or impossible to develop in-house.

A recent KPMG LLP survey of insurance industry executives affirms this shift. While 83% said they’ve maintained steady outsourcing levels over the past 12 months, 64% plan to somewhat increase outsourcing within the next year. This measured approach reflects a maturation in how insurers think about partnerships—moving beyond tactical cost reduction toward strategic capability building.

Balancing strategic priorities in partner selection

The question of where to partner has become more nuanced than simply choosing nearshore versus offshore. In the KPMG survey, 79% of insurance leaders said they now balance both approaches based on specific project needs—a pragmatic recognition that different initiatives require different solutions.

What drives location decisions? The top factors reveal how partnerships have evolved beyond cost considerations. Regulatory compliance ranks first at 72%, followed by risk management (62%) and cost optimization (54%). This hierarchy suggests that partnerships that save money but create regulatory exposure or operational risk ultimately destroy value rather than create it.

Insurers are quite focused on selecting the right partners and the right locations. We’re finding that [they’re] looking for long-term alignments with their partners—not ‘flashier’ partnerships that might work for the short term.

Anam Khan

Partner, KPMG in Bermuda

The emphasis on long-term strategic alignment marks a departure from previous approaches. Insurers understand that changing partners frequently creates its own costs and risks. Consequently, they’re willing to invest more deeply in fewer, more strategic relationships that can evolve as their needs change.

From cost arbitrage to strategic capability

The evolution from tactical outsourcing to strategic partnerships has accelerated with recent technological advances—particularly in AI and automation. Partners who bring not just cost efficiency but also innovation capability are increasingly valued.

Insurance companies are asking, how do you find a partner who can help you not only be more agile in the moment, but also innovate? Delivering the desired outcomes includes assessing the best path to execution. Leveraging the capabilities of strategic partners in the right moments can help organizations arrive where they want to go - on time and with a focus on innovation and continuous improvement, while maintaining capacity for other opportunities.

Sean Vicente

US Sector Leader, Insurance, KPMG LLP

This shift is evident in which functions insurers are willing to entrust to partners. Finance-as-a-service concepts are gaining traction, with partners managing everything from reconciliations to reporting and tax. These aren’t peripheral activities. 

Rather, they’re mission-critical functions that historically stayed in-house. Insurers’ willingness to partner in these areas reflects both confidence in partnership models and recognition that specialized partners can often execute more effectively.

Yet even as outsourcing expands into strategic areas, insurers remain concerned about retaining intellectual property. When partnerships help build something new, insurers want to ensure that IP remains within their organization. This creates a balancing act: outsource enough to gain speed and expertise while structuring relationships to retain ownership of what’s created.

Geographic patterns in this evolution are revealing. While most insurers plan steady partnerships in North America (64%), Latin America (53%), and Europe (66%), 44% are increasing partnerships in Asia—reflecting both talent availability and the importance of serving the world’s fastest-growing insurance markets.

Keys to partnership success

What’s the key to successful partnerships? Based on extensive work with insurers, several factors emerge consistently.

Before selecting partners, successful insurers define what they’re trying to achieve. Are they seeking to reduce costs in non-core activities? Are they trying to access capabilities they lack? Are they looking to accelerate innovation? Different objectives require different partnership structures and partner profiles.

Once established, successful partnerships require ongoing governance and performance measurement. Service level agreements matter, but so do regular strategic reviews that assess whether the partnership is delivering on its objectives and whether those objectives remain relevant. The ability to evolve the partnership as needs change separates long-term success from short-term gains followed by disappointment.

Building a learning culture for successful implementation

The successful implementation of generative AI in the insurance industry requires a shift in organizational culture towards learning and adaptation. Building a learning culture that supports employee upskilling and adaptation is crucial. Organizations should foster an environment that encourages continuous learning and provides employees with the necessary training to work alongside AI technologies effectively. This includes not only technical skills but also soft skills such as critical thinking, problem-solving, and emotional intelligence.

As insurance organizations grapple with the adoption of generative AI, they face the dual challenges of assessing its business value and managing its impact on the workforce. Determining where to apply these expensive tools requires a methodical approach, with a focus on high-value use cases and clear customer demand. Some companies are forming AI client councils to generate ideas, prioritize focus areas, and ensure proper governance in a regulated industry.

Early adopters have seen challenges in testing and effectively using generative AI tools, but as they progress along the learning curve, pockets of success are emerging. However, enterprise-scale adoption and value realization remain rare. Most insurers continue taking a cautious, targeted approach rather than a broad "spray and pray" deployment. By striking the right balance between business value and human impact, insurance organizations can harness the power of generative AI to enhance productivity and free up workers for higher-value contributions.

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Meet our team

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Sean Vicente
US Sector Leader, Insurance, KPMG LLP
Image of Anam Khan
Anam Khan
Partner, KPMG Bermuda
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Anam Khan

Partner, KPMG Bermuda

Anam joined the Management Consulting practice of KPMG in Bermuda as a senior manager in 2018. She is a qualified actuary and has nine years’ of experience in the insurance sector. Most recently, Anam worked in the London office of the Boston Consulting Group specialising in post-merger integration and general insurance growth strategy. Prior to that she worked in PwC’s actuarial practice specialising in risk and capital, implications of Solvency II and insurance M&A.

Experience

  • Designed GI specialty strategy for a Top 5 London Market insurer. Developed strategic initiatives to increase revenues by 20%, based on external market analyses and internal capabilities assessments.
  • Led the P&C Retail strategy design for a GI insurer. Reduced cost ratio by 4pp by outsourcing policy and claims administration.
  • Managed the central transformation office of a large life insurance and asset management group as part of post-merger integration. Worked with function heads (CRO, CFO, COO) to develop a new target operating model. 
  • Set up cost savings programme for a UK insurer as part of 5-year IPO preparation plan. Developed cost savings initiatives to reduce running costs by 30%. Established financial tracking system to track savings.
  • Performed market and competitive analyses for a life insurer looking to enter the GI market via acquisition.
  • Developed the post-merger “Day 1” risk and controls framework to gain regulatory approval for a European merger.
  • Performed internal model reviews and drafted key sections of the regulatory application for 4 out of UK’s 19 IMAP applications in wave 1.
  • Re-designed and automated the year-end reporting processes of the finance function of a large P&C insurer operating in London and Bermuda.

Education and qualifications

  • Innovation and Entrepreneurship Certificate from Harvard University (in progress till 2020)
  • BSc Actuarial Science with First Class Honours from the London School of Economics

Accreditation

  • Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries UK

 

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