Every Step Becomes a Twist of Fate

Watershed
by Emily Saliers
Thought I knew my mind like the back of my hand,
The gold and the rainbow, but nothing panned out as I planned.
And they say only milk and honey’s gonna make your soul satisfied!
Well I better learn how to swim
Cause the crossing is chilly and wide.
Twisted guardrail on the highway, broken glass on the cement
A ghost of someone’s tragedy
How recklessly my time has been spent.
And they say that it’s never too late, but you don’t get any younger!
Well I better learn how to starve the emptiness
And feed the hunger
Up on the watershed, standing at the fork in the road
You can stand there and agonize
Till your agony’s your heaviest load.
You’ll never fly as the crow flies, get used to a country mile.
When you’re learning to face the path at your pace
Every choice is worth your while.
Well there’s always retrospect to light a clearer path
Every five years or so I look back on my life
And I have a good laugh.
You start at the top, go full circle round
Catch a breeze, take a spill
But ending up where i started again makes me wanna stand still.
Stepping on a crack, breaking up and looking back
Every tree limb overhead just seems to sit and wait.
Until every step you take becomes a twist of fate.

 

Independent Underwriting Audits–Why so Few?

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This article has been cross-posted at the Society of Actuaries Marketing and Distribution Section website.

It’s the middle of August and I can state with 100 percent confidence that the 50-day record of triple degree temperatures in Oklahoma will be shattered. In the midst of this horrendous heat, I’ve been juggling three projects and doing some preliminary work for a fourth project that kicks off in October. If my timing is good and at least one of my current projects gets done by the end of September, I should have more time in October to do some of the pleasurable things I like to do besides work (like eat and sleep). So I’m juggling three projects, setting up a fourth, and Juliet Sandrowicz asks me to write an article for the Marketing and Distribution Section’s newsletter.

Of course I said yes.

And of course, life got busier. Two of the four current and future projects are audits. The work for the other two projects consists of technical underwriting and litigation support. I started to think about my topic and I thought underwriting audits would be a great topic. Writers write about what they know.

The topic of this article is independent underwriting audits. The question is why so few?

In a typical life insurance company the underwriting department does their own routine desk audits. Different companies have different procedures, but typically 25 to 50 cases per underwriter are audited by higher level, experienced underwriters on a routine basis, perhaps on a quarterly or semi-annual basis. Reinsurance companies conduct their own audits every two years or so of perhaps a hundred files. Despite the obvious lack of statistical validity, what’s wrong with this picture?

Audits done by internal staff and/or by reinsurance companies essentially will inform management of issues such as the following:

  • Adherence to internal underwriting guidelines and procedures;
  • Consistency;
  • Trend identification;
  • Identify concentrations of mortality risk by impairment, sales channel, underwriter, or plan of insurance;
  • Quality of underwriting decisions;
  • Quality of file documentation;
  • Adherence with or deviation from approved underwriting manuals;
  • Adherence with or deviation from generally accepted industry standards; and
  • Identify areas for group or individual training.

I’ll ask the question again–what’s wrong with this picture?

Audits performed by a company’s own underwriters or reinsurers are not independent. The readership for this article is a smart sophisticated audience. The value of an independently conducted objective underwriting audit should be readily apparent. Our industry can ill afford another Equity Funding scandal. But the question is why are there so few independent underwriting audits?

My upcoming audit engagement is with a NYSE listed company whose Internal Audit department conducts independent life underwriting audits in partnership with a life underwriting subject matter expert. The life underwriting expert changes in a regular two- or three-year rotation. Internal Audit reports only to the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors, not to internal management. The final audit findings are reported also to the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors.

After many years and many audits in the life insurance business it was quite refreshing to come across a company who applies stringent standards of risk management to the risk selection process.

I have ideas and suspicions on why so few independent life underwriting audits are performed. In a few months I’ll have one life company’s rationale for conducting independent life underwriting audits. Stay tuned.

John Locke – Lessons From a Expert

How I Sold a Million Books on Amazon in 5 Months

In case you missed the message, John Locke is a serial entrepreneur who loves to write. He also loves to earn a profit from his writing. He sees writing as a business and the selling of books as a marketing effort. And this is what he shares in this book.

John Locke Author: Secrets to Self-Publishing Success

I owned a life insurance company. I quit college with one week to go before graduation in order to sell insurance door-to-door on straight commission. By age 28 I was one of the top insurance sales people in the world.  By age 35 I bought my own life insurance company and appointed nearly 7,000 agents in 34 states.

A Newbie’s Guide to Publishing: Guest Post by John Locke

Preferred Use Case – What’s Yours?

Seth’s Blog: Articulating your preferred use case (what’s it for?)

Every organization starts with a (usually unarticulated) use case. The founders imagine the best use of their product or service, the situation that they’re organized around. It can involve answers to the following questions:

How does someone find out about what you do?
How much do they pay for it?
When they’re engaging with you in the very best way, what happens? What’s accomplished?
What do they do after they use it?
How often do they return?