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Life, Intelligent Life and...Insurance Companies

We've had a bad day dealing with insurance companies.  Another request from a Member firm to set up an agency with PruProtect left our administrator banging his head against the wall - as this was infinitely less painful than dealing with the insurer in question.  As I was putting the final touches to a rude letter to Scottish Provident regarding their mindless policy indexation review, I received a call from another Member firm which is being driven demented by Zurich.

 

Their experience is so inexplicable, so contrary to any notion of rationality, that for a brief moment it took my mind off our own immediate concern.  You'll love this one.

 

Members may know that, fairly recently, Zurich took the unilateral decision to stop setting up new agencies upon request.  Instead, they will only set up an agency upon receipt of business.  So far, so good.  Except...the insurer refuses to pay indemnified commissions to regulated firms which do not already have an agency.  Now, I know that indemnified commissions are not the be-all and end-all, but for newly setup IFA firms, they may sometimes be a useful source of revenues.  Given that our Members are regulated by an already authorised IFA firm which already holds master agencies with Zurich, can you identify a single strand of logic to the insurer's practice here?

 

Nope.  Thought not.  Back to Scottish Provident (now under new ownership!!!!).  Here's our final letter to the company.  You might get from this a sense of sheer desperation.  Trying to locate someone within the insurer who is capable of an informed, rational response is rather akin to SETI's monumental initiative to locate other intelligent life in the universe...

 


 

Scottish Provident
Manager - Customer Services
301 Vincent Street
Glasgow
G2 5HN


10/12/2009


Dear Sir or Madam.

Re. Client Ref. 

I am attaching for your attention copies of various items of correspondence received from your company in respect of the indexation / annual review of the above policy.

To say that we are reaching the very edge of the possibilities of intelligent enquiry would be an understatement. There is in fact nothing that resembles conscious, sentient activity underpinning your indexation service - and following two telephone enquiries and one letter, we are rapidly becoming persuaded by Professor Richard Dawkins belief that there is, genuinely, no intelligent principle underpinning life in the universe.

Firstly, there is the not entirely insignificant issue of the data - with any relevant estimate of RPI inflation still sitting in negative territory, how on earth can you justify an inflationary increase of +1.8%?

Secondly, there is the issue of your customer services staff who apparently are incapable of understanding the concept of negative or positive inflationary figures. Do they not read the newspapers? Do you deliberately recruit people who are allergic to sums?

And thirdly, there is the mind-numbing procedure of simply repeatedly sending out the same letter (A, B & D). Do you train your people to genuinely believe that if they repeat the same flaky information time and time again, it will somehow become accurate? Is this intended to be a form of self-hypnosis, where if the same mantra is reiterated mindlessly, it will become the new Truth? Perhaps the Chancellor has been getting his inflationary figures seriously wrong, and only Scottish Provident have the inside track on reality.

Given that there is not one single thing to commend anything to do with your annual review of this policy, or for that matter your handling of our enquiry concerning the fictional inflation assumption, would it be possible for someone left within the building with a functional IQ to actually answer our questions?

Yours faithfully,


Kevin Moss, 10/12/2009

Feedback:
Duncan Orr10/12/2009 16:39
I'm desperately hoping that this letter may soon be available within Clarity as a standard "Life Assurance" enquiry template.
Sam Austin11/12/2009 16:22
Hurrah! Unfortunately the possibility of anyone at Scot Prov actually reading it (or indeed understanding it) is slim.
Kevin Moss (Guest)11/12/2009 16:32
Unfortunately, I think you are right, Sam. There is mounting evidence that those special persons who man the 'customer service' desks are actually incapable of reading. I am just fuming, having received a clear example of this from Axa - a blanket letter which ignores everything we've asked before.
Haydn Ellwood (Guest)11/12/2009 18:56
Oh no, I have two rather significant sized policies with Scott Prov for my wife and myself. I had a mild form of Sciatica at the begining of the year which disapeared on it's own accord. Scott Prov have none the less excluded my entire spine, spinal cord, related muscles, tendons and
ligaments!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
David Jeffreys (Guest)14/12/2009 10:43
Whilst I fully empathise with the desire to 'have a rant' I find that a very specific, factual and a unemotional letter to the top man/woman is the most effective. I recently did this in a letter to the new-ish Chief Exec of HMRC complaining about the dire state of HMRC work (the sheer volume of silly mistakes etc) which resulted in a fairly senior bod from HQ spending a constructive half day at my office taking detailed notes of my concerns!
Kevin Moss (Guest)08/01/2010 11:57
You are quite right, David. You'll appreciate that my 'rant' was the last item in a series of much more moderate, civil enquiries - which got me precisely nowhere. In fact, we have now arrived at a much more thoughtful resolution, where it appears that the insurer in question is in fact changing its procedures and training as a result of the episode.