Compart - Document- and Output-Management

WWK Insurance

"Compart has an excellent reputation as a specialist in data streams and multichannel-capable output management."

 

Rudolf Wolf, WWK Insurance
Rudi Wolf
WWK Insurance

Centralization of individual correspondence: WWK Lebensversicherung Insurance reduces with production costs per mailing with DocBridge FileCab

The main reason WWK Lebensversicherung embedded its individual correspondence into transaction processing (batch) was to achieve higher productivity and process reliability. A plausibility check is integrated into the workflow to reduce to virtually zero the risk of creating documents with errors.

The central hub is an output management system (OMS) based on, among other things, DocBridge Pilot to prepare the documents for printing and mailing. This OMS "cooperates" with DocBridge FileCab software, which "gathers" all the locally generated correspondence.

 

 

Annual print volume: 3,2 million mailings
(23 million printed pages)

High process reliability through integrated plausibility check 

Higher clerical productivity

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If not digital, then optimal. It may sound cryptic at first, but on closer examination this IT project proves to be one of the most ambitious at WWK Lebensversicherung in recent years. The insurance group, repeatedly named "Germany's best life insurance company" in Focus Money magazine, has been using DocBridge FileCab since the end of 2017. The Compart-developed software collects individual correspondence (Office documents) prepared on user PCs and transmits it to a central printing and mailing instance.

Processing clerks used to have to print individual letters on local multifunctional "floor printers," review and sign them, include any necessary inserts, and get them ready for pickup by the mailroom. The diversity of insurance products along with WWK's mission to offer customers and brokers the best individual service quality dictates the need for individualized correspondence. Business transactions that cannot be finalized using standard documents require functions for creating individual correspondence. Examples include contract change inquiries, confirmation of benefits, or premium adjustments. In each case, the responsible clerk selects the appropriate procedure. One thing is clear: responses are as specific and wide-ranging as customer concerns.

In the past, individualization meant that clerks also had to handle the menial tasks (printing, adding inserts, enveloping). Add to that the unnecessary back-and-forth that kept them from their primary tasks. Specialists, managers, and mainly the employees themselves expressed the desire and need for relief, process improvement, and automation. In the end, it was they who initiated the project. They wanted to work more efficiently, free once and for all from the "burden of extraneous tasks."

No more running back and forth between the PC and the printer!

So WWK Lebensversicherung set up its document processing to link individual correspondence with the production steps (processes) of automated bulk processing, thus putting an end to the constant to-and-fro. What could have been more obvious than embedding individual correspondence into central, automated document production?

First a look at the structures: WWK Lebensversicherung uses two specialized applications – comparable to an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system – that cover the insurance business. These applications are linked to a central system for document creation, which generates approximately 3.2 million mailings at a print volume of nearly 23 million printed pages: contracts, policies, allowance applications, bonus and value notifications, etc. The "switching point" between the applications and the print provider (WWK Lebensversicherung outsourced document production) is an output management system (OMS) designed by Canon that receives, identifies, and classifies the generated documents, as well as adds additional information (such as control codes for inserts, enveloping, franking). Within the OMS, Canon provides the COSMOS solution, a comprehensive workflow management system. A third-party product supplies the OM technology to prepare the documents for production and mailing.

The OMS generates standardized metadata that provide the print provider all the information needed for automated production (printing, bundling/sorting, adding inserts, enveloping, franking, handover to postal provider). WWK Lebensversicherung and the print provider agreed on clearly defined handling rules (e.g., same-day document printing and mailing). Status lists are automatically generated for monitoring this service level agreement (SLA).

Early plausibility check

So much for batch processing. But what about the individual correspondence? In principle, the workflow is the same with one exception: the documents originate in an Office program and not a specialist application. In WORD, processing clerks select the document template appropriate for the business transaction from a "digital template cabinet" stored in the system and fill in the recipient address and other process-specific fields.

They then start DocBridge FileCab, which at WWK Lebensversicherung acts as a printer driver. A dialog box opens with the user-specific functions and features needed for automatic processing.  The clerks can check the document against various functional and technical criteria (correct spelling and position of the address, accurate reference line, compliance with corporate identity, etc.), include case-related comments, and add static inserts (PDF files) that are valid groupwide. If everything is correct and complete, the individual letter is sent to the archive and the central OMS. From there, the workflow is the same as for bulk processing (transaction documents). The workflow at WWK Lebensversicherung is set up so that DocBridge FileCab collects the documents created on the current 600 PC workstations and transmits them to the output management system, consisting of DocBridge Pilot and COSMOS, where they are centrally processed.

The following graphic illustrates how standard and individual correspondence is processed

 

The choice fell to DocBridge FileCab for a number of reasons. Rudi Wolf, then project manager at WWK Lebensversicherung: "Compart has an excellent reputation as a specialist in data streams and multichannel-capable output management." The other Compart solution, DocBridge Pilot, which was implemented along with DocBridge FileCab, also evidenced Compart's expertise. "DocBridge Pilot has major strengths when it comes to mail bundling," continues the manager. With DocBridge FileCab, a plausibility check prior to printing can be integrated, an option Wolf finds especially fascinating.  "This function fits into our application scenario really well."   

Process reliability, first and foremost

Since these structures were established, processing times in the individual departments at WWK Lebensversicherung have dropped dramatically. Gone are the days of employees running back and forth to the department printer. Only in rare cases (e.g., for registered mail) are documents still produced locally. Otherwise, everything runs automatically as described above.

And greater productivity is just one aspect. The major advantage of modernization – on this everyone agrees – is the process reliability of individual correspondence. In particular, the integrated quality check early on during document creation takes the pressure off the clerks. Embedding local correspondence into automated standard processing has significantly reduced the risk of selecting the wrong template, adding an out-of-date insert, or using an invalid address.

The WWK Lebensversicherung anticipates a return on investment (ROI) within 12 months, with shorter processing times producing most of the savings. In any case, so much of DocBridge FileCab's potential is still untapped: not all the individual correspondence of each of the business areas has been integrated. WWK Lebensversicherung anticipates using the Compart solution for an annual volume of 150,000 documents. A third of this goal was already reached in just the first few weeks after commissioning.

© WWK Insurance

WWK Lebensversicherung Insurance

The WWK Lebensversicherung Insurance Group is a financially strong, innovative and independent provider of financial services. Founded in 1884 as the "Witwen- und Waisen-Unterstützungscassa des Bayerischen Verkehrsbeamten-Verein" (WWUK) [Widows and Orphans Relief Fund of the Bavarian Transport Civil Servants Association], today the Munich insurance company is one of Germany's 25 largest insurers.

WWK Lebensversicherung is managed as a mutual insurance association (Versicherungsverein auf Gegenseitigkeit, VVaG). This legal form exemplifies like no other the idea of reciprocity characteristic of the insurance industry: The burden of the individual is borne by all. This principle is also strongly reflected in WWK's corporate philosophy.  As a mutual insurance association, WWK Lebensversicherung is obligated only to its customers, the members, and operates independently of shareholder interests.

Solidity and financial strength are the company's hallmarks. In terms of financial solidity and net equity, the life insurance group has long been one of the strongest in Germany, befitting its business volume. Focus Money magazine periodically analyzes the long-term solidity of all Germany life insurers. The result: In 2017, the WWK Lebensversicherung received the highest solidity ranking among all insurers – for the 12th time in a row. The WWK Lebensversicherung was also awarded top grades from DFSI Rating GmbH and received the coveted AAA again in 2017.