Consumer Attitudes Point the Way as China's Insurance Market Matures

HONG KONG, CHINA--(Marketwired - May 5, 2016) - Life and auto insurers in China will have to do a better job in some fundamental areas if they want to hold onto their share in the fast-changing Chinese insurance market, according to new research by The Boston Consulting Group (BCG). The research, described in "Listening to What Chinese Consumers Say About Insurers," an article that is being released today, uses consumers' recommendations and criticisms over a recent 12-month period to provide insights into the must-haves of insurance in China.

What determines whether Chinese consumers recommend an insurance brand is the trust they have in the provider and the simplicity of the provider's offerings, according to the BCG survey. The claims stage of insurance produces the most criticism, with half or more of those who have criticized an insurance brand saying they have done so because of a claims process that was too slow, not transparent enough, too time-consuming, or didn't leave them feeling adequately compensated. These are deficiencies that Chinese insurance companies should address.

The study, for which BCG's China Center for Customer Insight surveyed 3,200 Chinese consumers, captures the sentiment toward insurers at a time of rapid change. Chinese regulators are opening the market to competition and pushing for reforms that will benefit consumers. At the same time, new consumer technology, including mobile devices, is creating expectations for simpler, more transparent interactions with insurance providers.

"The power in the Chinese insurance market is shifting to consumers," said Tjun Tang, a senior partner at BCG and a coauthor of the article. "To hold onto or improve their market positions, providers need to focus on the customer experience in a way that hasn't been necessary before. They also need to figure out how they can enhance their reputation for being trustworthy and for the simplicity of their services."

Middle-aged and older Chinese are among the least enthusiastic when it comes to insurance brands, especially when they feel they've gotten poor customer service.

More than three in five Chinese customers aged 46 to 55 who said something negative about their life-insurance provider in the period covered by the survey did so after a poor customer-service experience. No other factor accounted for anything close to that level of expressed dissatisfaction.

Another group not inclined to say a lot of good things about insurance brands are people who live in big cities. With respect to both life insurance and auto insurance, tier 1 city dwellers (those who live in the biggest cities, including Beijing and Shanghai) have relatively low advocacy scores compared with people in smaller tier 3, tier 4 and tier 5 cities.