Amica Mutual Ranks Highest among Auto Insurers for a Ninth Consecutive Year
WESTLAKE VILLAGE, Calif., Aug. 28 /PRNewswire/ -- Auto insurance customers
with high commitment levels not only make more recommendations and are more
likely to renew their policies, but are also significantly less sensitive to
pricing offers from competitors, according to the J.D. Power and Associates
2008 National Auto Insurance Study(SM) released today. Auto insurers with
highly satisfied customers have a renewal rate that is 9 percentage points
higher, on average, than insurers whose customers report low levels of
satisfaction.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050527/LAF028LOGO-a)
The study measures customer satisfaction with auto insurance companies
across five factors. In order of importance, they are: interaction, policy
offerings, billing and payment, price and claims.
The study finds that 59 percent of customers with high commitment report
they would not switch their auto insurer for any price, compared with only 9
percent of low-commitment customers who say the same. Policy renewals are also
much more likely among customers with high commitment levels, as 90 percent
report they 'definitely will' renew their auto insurance policy, compared with
only 14 percent of low-commitment customers who indicate that they 'definitely
will' renew.
Customers with low commitment levels are also much less likely to provide
recommendations to friends and family (9%) compared with highly committed
customers (81%). Additionally, the average number of recommendations made by
customers with low commitment (1.4) is notably lower than the number of
recommendations made by high-commitment customers (7.7).
'Increasing their numbers of highly committed customers by delivering
positive service experiences can be very rewarding to auto insurers and
significantly impact their financial returns,' said Jeff Leiman, senior
director of the insurance practice at J.D. Power and Associates. 'In an
industry where a one-percent shift in total market share can amount to a
$1.6 billion dollar shift in premiums, enhancing the customer experience to
gain highly committed customers is absolutely critical to auto insurers.'
Overall satisfaction across the auto insurance industry has increased --
up from 781 points on a 1,000-point scale in 2007 to 787 in 2008.
Additionally, satisfaction has increased steadily during the past five years,
improving by 25 points since 2004. In 2008, eight of the 27 profiled
insurance carriers demonstrate significant year-over-year-improvements in
customer satisfaction.
Intense competition in the marketplace and the consistent improvement by
carriers over time signal that insurance companies recognize that merely
satisfying customers is not enough to remain competitive,' said Leiman.