Information technology now touches every aspect of the insurance business, and, as a result, files and data can be made available anywhere, anytime, and, at the touch of a button. At least, that's the way it's supposed to be. But while end-users may expect to have what they need almost instantaneously, it often doesn't work out that way.
Picture the immensity of the growing volumes of images and graphics files associated with claims transactions and marketing efforts. Some are stored within individual workstations or systems, some are maintained within departmental servers, and some are maintained within centralized enterprise repositories. When it comes to securing a particular file, many end users simply don't know where to begin to look-if they are even aware that there is something to look for.
In the long run it makes sense, for both preservation and efficiency purposes, to maintain graphics files within a centralized location and directory that is intuitive and accessible to end users. But within many insurance organizations, IT departments are still wrestling with big jobs-managing legacy systems and rolling out new claims processing, policy administration and analytics systems. The task of better managing graphics files remains on a back burner, and may at some point be addressed through options such as enterprise content management systems.
Many within the insurance industry can't afford to wait for some type of centralized solution to arrive on the scene. They need better ways to manage and find their files now. As a way to fill this gap, some end-user departments are turning to a new breed of lightweight, flexible solutions called Digital Asset Management (DAM). DAM solutions don't attempt to boil the ocean by handling every type of file that exists with a company. Rather, they focus on dealing with the issues of handling various media files, from photos to brochures to video, that are critical to operations.
Such is the case at American Modern Insurance Group, an Amelia, Ohio provider of specialty insurance for items such as mobile homes and recreational vehicles. To provide more support to its network of agents and dealers who require corporate images for their own marketing collateral, America Modern's marketing department implemented a DAM system to manage its stock of images and graphics.
ONE-STOP-SHOP
With American Modern's DAM implementation, "I can send 10 to 20 images to an agent that they can just download, versus sending 10 separate emails," says Krista Winters, marketing communications manager. "We now have kind of a one-stop shop for them to be able to download their photo requests." In addition, the library is maintained by an online service, versus being resident on American Modern's premises.
The DAM solution, ActiveMedia Essentials from ClearStory Systems Inc., Westborough, Mass., provides an online library of stock photo CDs, historical images, and other marketing graphics. Winters and her 30-member marketing team have shared access to the library, avoiding issues that arise when creative content is lost and needed to be repurchased or re-created.
The concern about lost content is justified: InfoTrends, an analyst firm based in Weymouth, Mass., estimates that up to 70% of all useful content in organizations is unnecessarily recreated. In addition, according to InfoTrends, between 25% and 50% of knowledge workers' time is wasted searching for content, generally due to inefficient search capabilities, and these workers fail to find their content as often as 40% of the time, and as a result, users are forced to re-create a substantial amount of their content "at exorbitant costs."
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