New opportunities for communication, education or cooperation
For example, there are plans that will see the metaverse creating entirely new opportunities for communication, education or cooperation. It will be a place where people shop, go to concerts or visit exhibitions. Industrial companies will be able to work collaboratively in the “industrial metaverse” and work on digitalised production processes in real time. Stadiums such as the Etihad Stadium in Manchester will have digital twins so that remote spectators will also have a spectacular experience. There will no longer be any spatial or temporal boundaries in the metaverse. It will be a fully functioning digital parallel world to which we will not only relocate parts of our social, but also our value-creating interaction. And the potential that lies behind it is immense.
According to McKinsey & Company, the value of business involving the metaverse is already projected to reach five trillion dollars by 2030. Of this figure, e-commerce is forecast to be the largest economic driver, at 2.6 trillion dollars, followed by virtual learning at 270 billion dollars, advertising at 206 billion dollars and gaming at 125 billion dollars. There have already been major rounds of financing for platforms that plan to offer metaverse experiences or services. From fashion companies to energy suppliers, a large number of sectors are already seeking advice on how they can leverage the metaverse for their own benefit in the future. And a race running into the billions has long since broken out between tech giants such as Apple and Meta to decide who will be the first to implement their own vision of the metaverse. The most recent development here was the launch of the Apple Vision Pro mixed reality headset just a few weeks ago.
Tremendous opportunities for the insurance industry
So the metaverse offers tremendous opportunities that the insurance industry can also leverage. For example, insurers have many use cases along their entire value chain that can be implemented here. In the area of product management, for instance, entirely new forms of product development and configuration are imaginable. New product categories that are tailored to the virtual world could emerge. For example, virtual property insurance against the loss or theft of virtual goods in the metaverse. We could see liability insurance products for developers of virtual objects or for virtual events – to name but a couple of ideas.
Sales and marketing could use the metaverse to make insurance products an immersive experience. What was previously abstract and theoretical could be made graphic and accessible by the metaverse. For example, if customers are shown a visual representation of potential risks, which would also allow the relevance of coverage to be conveyed again by different means. In cases like this, the metaverse offers opportunities for innovative ways to approach potential customers and for immersive storytelling.
The metaverse could also be used in HR for virtual learning and training. There could also be a recruitment process that is not limited just to virtual interviews, but also includes digital job fairs. A presence in the metaverse could allow insurance companies to position themselves to the young, digitally aware target group that is very difficult to reach using traditional communication channels. But which constitutes the next generation of potential customers and employees.