Insurance giant MetLife explores IoT and machine learning options
IoT and machine learning have to be taken seriously, says VP of enterprise analytics Malene Haxholdt
Global insurer MetLife is taking the Internet of Things (IoT) and machine learning very seriously, despite still being in the early stages of implementing and exploiting the technology.
Speaking to Computing at a SAS Global Forum media event in North Carolina, MetLife VP of enterprise analytics Malene Haxholdt said that the IoT has the potential to help the company develop new products, but that work in this area is still very much at an "exploratory" stage.
"IoT is definitely being considered as something you have to take seriously in this business. It's not a ‘oh it's going to go away' type of conversation - that data is not going away, so you have to take it seriously and figure out if there is a use for it," she said.
Haxholdt said she can see how IoT can play a part in the company's digital transformation efforts, enabling it to communicate better with its customers and use real-time data analytics to improve efficiency in its underwriting process.
"It could allow us to do it much faster yet still be very precise because of the data we'd have to support it," she said.
But Haxholdt believes that the accuracy of data from devices such as FitBits - which could have an impact on health insurance - is still not reliable enough for the company to exploit.
"We're still at a stage where there are questions about data accuracy and privacy; we could get a lot of data but do you have enough, and do you have it in a structured way to do some trustworthy analytics on it," she questioned.
Haxholdt said machine learning could play a big role in enabling MetLife to harness IoT data.
"We're exploring a lot of our access to unstructured data and we're using machine learning for that," she said.
Haxholdt said that machine learning was being developed in-house by MetLife data scientists, but added that the insurance company was also partnering with external organisations in this area.
She said one potential application for machine learning is with speech analytics in its call centre.
Machine learning, like IoT, is a subject that crops up more and more in conversations, said Haxholdt.
"It is definitely there, it's just about how you define it. We define it as deep learning using algorithms that go deeper and iteratively through data," she said.
"If you look at data from cars and Fitbits and so on, it is going to depend on being able to do machine learning. And when you think about digital interaction, where you need intelligent decision-making in a real-time environment, you're going to have to rely on machine learning to do it faster with a sense of accuracy," she said.