People are becoming more sophisticated in perpetrating fraud—filing claims online and operating from around the world, people are approaching
Insurance companies have been put to the test since spring of 2020, as pandemic relief funds came into play and insurance organizations felt the changing profile of claims within personal and commercial lines. With the increasing difficulty to predict and segment claims, many organizations have found themselves falling behind, giving people a wide berth to carry out fraud without detection.
Fortunately, there are new methods, using artificial intelligence, that eases the burden and helps insurance companies stay one step ahead. Historically, insurers tend to react tactically to verification and customer checks, leaving gaps in detection accuracy because of the manual nature of this process. The latest AI techniques can help fill in these oversights with interpretable results that provide context for automation and efficient operational decisions. The combination of data and tech gives the insurer full control to see how any AI model decides to ensure a fair customer process, following regulatory scrutiny.
Preventing insurance fraud
The right AI can help insurance companies
Gaining this accurate, contextualized and holistic view gives insurance companies the ability to use their existing data more effectively. It also frees up the time and talent of employees so they can carry out complex investigations as needed instead of spending hours sifting through out-of-date data only to come up short.
Data visualization
Once companies begin to
AI does this by providing a fully transparent view of the customer, their claim and their network. This view then lets decision-makers automate, build and understand the timeline of events leading to a claim. Data and visualization speed up this process, gaining back valuable time and energy that employees can instead use to improve the experience of legitimate customers and investigate and pursue fraudsters before they cause harm.
An enterprise view of data
With the right technology in place, it becomes far easier for companies to decide whether to pursue a fraud investigation in the first place. That extra time can help prevent further fraudulent activities and give insights into criminal networks that may have infiltrated a company’s claims process.
To fight insurance fraud, companies need to be able to consolidate all the disparate data they currently have and combine it with powerful, external insights. Instead of using fragmented data, they need a