Liverpool Victoria (LV) is
intent on getting integration right. The insurance company is pursuing growth
and cannot afford to worry about the technology fit of any company it acquires.
“The company has made a strategic decision to support growth through
acquisition, but an acquisition is not necessarily chosen for the technology
platform on which it runs,” says Jonathan Barber, LV group IT director.
He says LV is similar to other financial services organisations, having grown
with a variety of products-based systems whose components are tall and thin
rather than horizontal.
Knitting together the business is a complex operation and Barber’s aim is to
create an architecture that can support LV’s plans for growth and yet still
sustain its diversity.
“We are implementing an architecture to lower costs and deliver higher
performance by lifting our service users above any specific technology
components,” says Barber.
“It should not matter to the service user which technology we are using to
deliver the service, just that it works.”
LV is using a number of integration tools, including
Edge IPK’s edgeConnect
software, an online presentation layer, to reduce the development time and cost
of building front-end applications.
The software integrates with LV’s quote engines, with the input of applicant
data and corresponding return quote delivered via a web services layer.
“It provides a common window into the services available below the
waterline,” says Barber.
“The general insurance business is moving into the aggregator market, and on
a traditional mainframe platform producing a quote to an aggregator is costly as
it is an intensive process involving lots of computer processing power.”
Barber says the IPK technology will allow the firm to launch products easily,
change prices quickly and support business needs.
In addition, adopting a more component-based architecture will allow LV to
perform a more sophisticated analysis of costs for each business unit and enable
the company to respond rapidly to market changes by investing IT resources for
more return.
“It will be easier to price use of our technology services, rather than
allocate lump costs on a somewhat artificial basis,” says Barber.
To support the transition, LV is planning to terminate its 100 per cent
outsourcing relationship and is instead re-establishing in-house capability and
sourcing services from a number of best-of-breed partners.
“These new relationships will help us to move out of our heritage environment
and to implement the new architecture so that we can outperform our
competitors,” says Barber.
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