Options
Jonas Raphael Jahnert
Former Member
Title
M.A. HSG
Last Name
Jahnert
First name
Jonas Raphael
Phone
+49 16093095805
Now showing
1 - 10 of 14
-
PublicationType: journal articleJournal: Risk Management and Insurance Review
-
PublicationThe Relationship Between Net Promoter Score and Insurer’s Profitability: An Empirical Analysis on the Customer LevelThis paper examines the relationship between customer satisfaction and profitability at the level of the individual customer. In many industries, investigations detect a positive, decreasing relationship between customer satisfaction and firm profitability. The insurance industry has rarely been the object of such investigations. Pooser and Browne (2018) started this discussion in 2018 by examining U.S. insurers at the firm level. We provide reasons why the positive satisfaction-profitability relationship might be reversed, particularly in the case of the insurance industry. We conduct an array of OLS regressions with customer level data. Our results reveal a strong positive relationship between customer satisfaction and profitability. The effect is considerably large and also robust when investigating the effect of several customer characteristics on this relationship. We recommend that the increase in profitability is induced by a strong positive correlation between customer satisfaction and premium income, while satisfaction is not associated with the combined ratio.Type: journal articleJournal: Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance - Issues and PracticeVolume: (forthcoming)
-
PublicationType: conference paper
-
PublicationPurchasing Behaviour of Sustainable Insurance Products( 2022-08)Zehnle, MeikeType: conference paper
-
-
PublicationType: conference paper
-
PublicationType: conference paper
-
PublicationType: conference paper
-
PublicationEssays on Customer Satisfaction, Pricing Strategies, and Sustainable Purchasing Behavior in the Insurance IndustryThis dissertation empirically investigates the consumer behavior of insurance customers to draw implications for the strategic decisions of insurers. The implications are relevant for decisions regarding customer and pricing strategies as well as the development of sustainable insurance products. The first paper analyzes whether satisfied customers are also profitable customers. The second paper examines, how insurance companies can optimize their pricing strategies in a regulated and competitive market, considering customers willingness to pay (WTP). The subsequent two papers examine the purchasing behavior of sustainable insurance products. The first paper, The relationship between net promoter score and insurers' profitability: an empirical analysis at the customer level, investigates, at the level of a single customer, whether high NPS-Scores of customers are associated with greater contribution margins. Based on the data of a Swiss insurer, we show that satisfied customers are also profitable customers, as they exhibit more signed contracts and have longer-lasting relationships with the insurer. The second paper, Pricing Strategies in the German Term Life Insurance Market: An Empirical Analysis, compares actuarial fair prices for term life insurance contracts in Germany with the respective market prices and customers WTP. Taking regulatory requirements and competition into account, we derive separate profit-increasing pricing strategies for three different product segments, compared to the status quo. The third paper, Consumers Perceptions and Purchasing Behavior of Sustainable Insurance Products, examines consumer behavior with regard to sustainable insurance products. First, a survey is conducted to compare consumer attitudes toward sustainable products in six different industries. Then, two experiments are conducted to evaluate the effect of a sustainable insurance product on consumers purchase intention, trust, and perceived quality. The results show that sustainable attributes substantially increase consumers' purchase intention for an insurance product, even at a price premium. The last paper, What matters more being a Green Company or offering Green Products?, analyzes the question of whether it makes a difference in consumer perception of whether an insurance incorporates a sustainable attribute at the product or the company level. In three studies, the paper shows that sustainable attributes at the product level, lead to higher purchase intention, WTP more, and increased perceived greenness.Type: doctoral thesis
-
PublicationType: newspaper articleJournal: Handelszeitung - Insurance