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Reuters Events Webinar: From Disruption to Revolution: The Tech-Enabled Digital Strategy to Ensure Success

Reuters Events Webinar: From Disruption to Revolution: The Tech-Enabled Digital Strategy to Ensure Success

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London, United Kingdom–(Newsfile Corp. – June 14, 2022) – Digital transformations have taken the world by a storm, and the insurance industry’s turn is long overdue. Back-end operations, customer experience and products are mostly dominated by legacy systems. To adapt to the volatile new normal, carriers are going to need a resilient technology strategy that will secure their position as a premier digital-first provider.

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How can carriers obtain the immense benefits available to their internal systems, products and CX, over the digital horizon?

Sign up to our free webinar: From Disruption to Revolution: The Tech-Enabled Digital Strategy to Ensure Success -June 29th, 12pm EST.

Get exclusive insights from:

  • Sam Passafiume, Senior Director & Head of Data & Information, RBC Insurance
  • Hashmat Rohian, Vice President & CTO – Emerging Business Models, The Co-operators
  • Moderator: Bryan Falchuk, Managing Director, Insurance Evolution Partners

We will hear about:

  • Get the most from your technology: Monitor the performance of your technology investments to make necessary adjustments that will create sustainable ROI and provide standards of how technology is used within your organization.
  • Change starts from within: Deploy technology to the areas that require it most and follow with a steady organization-wide digital transformation to resourcefully shift from legacy systems.
  • Innovating products and pleasing customers: Build futuristic and flexible products that cater to modern customer needs and create seamless customer experiences by utilizing rapid and effortless digital platforms.

Ensure you’re on top of everchanging tech developments – sign up now!

If you can’t join us the webinar live, register to receive the recordings.

Kind regards,

Sonia

Sonia Saiedi
Conference Producer | Insurance
Reuters Events
+44 20 3197 8127
Sonia.saiedi@thomsonreuters.com

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To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/127656

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Heed the events in France – populism is gaining ground and only a revolution can stop it | Simon Jenkins

If today’s democracy teaches any lesson it is don’t underestimate populism. Insult it, deride it, excuse it, no-platform it, but it is a serious force in electoral politics. In France, Marine Le Pen has surged into contention for the presidency.

Earlier this month, Hungary’s authoritarian Viktor Orbán swept the board. In Russia, albeit in vexed circumstances, Vladimir Putin retains a patriotic hold on opinion. In the US, Donald Trump refuses to disappear. These individuals are in no way the same, but they speak the same message.

The message is that party is being supplanted by personality and identity. As relative prosperity rises, voters are taking recourse in prejudice and emotional security. They can distrust outsiders. They can hate globalists, parliamentarians, bureaucrats and liberals, however defined. They want to feel control over their own lives, as Britain’s Boris Johnson ludicrously but successfully offered them in the form of Brexit. They want to like those who purport to lead them.

This populism has torn the left-right spectrum apart. Emmanuel Macron won power five years ago as a radical outsider. He has smashed France’s party system – the two old parties scored under 10% at this election. He has proved a determined, even bold, reformer of France’s archaic political economy, modernising its welfare state and easing labour rigidities where his predecessors failed.

The supposedly rightwing Le Pen has identified herself with the poor, with reckless pledges of cheaper petrol, higher taxes on the rich and lower ones on the poor. She wants to exclude immigrants from welfare and defy the EU. She has depicted Macron as an insider, the embodiment of Parisian insensitivity towards provincial France, a classic elitist patrician.

A defect of presidential constitutions is to promote personality over policy. It puts a premium on the crudities of politics, on likability, naivety and short-termism. As Alexis de Tocqueville said, it promotes the mob over the club. When parties dissolve, so do the disciplines of parliamentary government. Manifestos become meaningless. Competence amounts to no more than getting through the next crisis. Collective responsibility is reduced to loyalty to a leader and an image, witness Johnson’s Britain.

Romantics can find in all this a glimmer of a new politics, one more responsive to popular opinion. It is sometimes summed up as the “global village of the internet”, the democracy of the unmoderated platform. In many ways Brexit was its most glaring manifestation, a cry of protest against Europe’s most centralist governing elite. No other EU state has since dared hold such a referendum and even Le Pen has backed off one. As with Trump in the US, give voters an opportunity to speak naked truth to power and they may use it.

It is six years since the World Values Survey recorded a plummeting faith in democracy. Less than half of under-50s “believed it was essential to live in a country governed democratically”. In Germany, the US and Japan, between 20% and 40% would opt for a “strong leader who does not have to bother with parliaments and elections”. Conventional politics must confront these truths or die. Group identity must be somehow respected or worldwide immigration will become a torment. Federalism must be installed or separatism will destabilise states everywhere. Parliaments and parties must reform their processes or become irrelevant.

The odds are still on France saving itself in two weeks’ time, but its lessons are clear for all to see.