Mr Sunday Thomas, Commissioner for Insurance, National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) has urged the insurance and banking sector to increase penetration in Nigeria by looking beyond the traditional distribution channels.
Thomas gave the advice at a virtual forum with topic: Bancassurance in Nigeria- “unlocking growth for Banks and Insurers”, organised by Ernst and Young Nigeria (EY) in Lagos.
Bancassurance is a relationship between a bank and an insurance company that is aimed at offering insurance products or insurance benefits to the bank’s customers. In this partnership, all the banks sales channels become a point of sale and contact for the customer.
According to him, insurance penetration in Nigeria currently stands at .5 per cent.
“We believe that we should begin to look beyond the traditional distribution channels for the purpose of reaching out to the unreached, insurance wise.
“Not just people in the sense of national population but an organised set of people who have the capability of meeting the requirements for insurance purposes.
“As at December 2020, about 111.5 million active bank accounts exist in Nigeria; when you look at these numbers, compare to the number of people that have one form of insurance or the other.
“By my record it is less than 10 million; It’s a far cry! It portends a great opportunity for the insurance sector to be able to reach out to deliver insurance benefits to the people,” he said.
The insurance commissioner therefore, said that with Bancassurance, he believe that working together with the banking sector, stakeholders could reach out to more people.
He also advised operators to adopt the referral models of Bancassurance for the purpose of distribution, saying that other models would require issuance of special licenses and certificates.
Thomas explained it would allow them make contact and leverage the data base of the banking sector for the purpose of distribution.
He further said that it was a model which the present structure and relationship within the financial services sector and principally between NAICOM and the Central Bank of Nigeria allowed.
The insurance commissioner supported deepened retail market, noting that it was the future of insurance sector.
He added that the corporate account was good to build portfolio, but in terms of sustainability, operators needed retail business to do that.
Mr Rotimi Okpaise, Partner and Insurance Sector Leader, EY West Africa, mentioned three success factors that would transform the industry.
“Moving from a low level of penetration now to where we want will require a transformative spirit of mindset.
“First is having an active client centricity, where people actually understand what insurance is and what the benefits are.
“The second and third are having both plans toward distribution channels and retaining and attracting talents with regards to clients centricity,” Okpaise said.
Dr Tosin Oshinubi, Director, Business Consulting, EY West Africa, urged Nigeria to join countries using Bancassurance to scale and do well particularly in retail expansion, as benefits were immense.
“To the insurer, you have access to active market; an insurance company is able to quickly scale and spread their tentacles to areas where they do not have strong geographical presence leveraging the distribution channels of the banks among others.
“To the banks, while the benefits of the commission may not be juicy as they want it, it is still a way to diversify their revenue base because they already have the channels and the customers.
“So, this is just like an added income on what they currently have today, and so on.
“To the economy at large, the benefit is that it helps to improve insurance penetration and then more lives and goods are covered,” Oshinubi said.