In the Enterprise:
IBM Debuts Grid Offering for Life Insurance Industry
IBM announced a new Grid computing offering to help life insurance
clients decrease the time needed to run complex insurance model
scenarios.
Called IBM Grid and Grow for Actuarial Analysis,
the offering combines IBM and IBM business partner and ISV technologies
to help insurance clients improve financial risk and capital
management, give a faster time to market with new products and gain a
competitive advantage.
Actuaries -- basically risk
mathematicians for the insurance industry -- often perform calculations
with simple personal computers or with basic, manually provisioned,
distributed processing environments. The time and efficiency lost
through these conventional methods costs the insurance industry
millions of dollars a year. Using the IBM actuarial solution, actuaries
receive results much quicker making it possible for them to run more
calculations and tune their models to improve accuracy. The ability to
model more accurate, complex financial scenarios is key in gaining a
competitive edge. It also helps meet regulatory compliance and ever
increasing reporting demands.
"With Grid computing,
infrastructures are faster and more resilient, automatically
circumventing hardware failures or capacity issues to ensure complex
queries complete in an accelerated fashion," said Ken King, vice
president of Grid computing at IBM. "For insurance companies, as with
almost any business, the ability to understand the complex and
ever-changing balance between risk and reward in a timely manner is
crucial to success. Grid computing can do weeks of work in mere hours
and the time saved can make a real difference in the marketplace."
The
Actuarial Analysis solution is a packaged set of hardware, software and
services leveraging industry leading Grid ISV offerings like Milliman's
MGALFA, SunGard's iWORKS Prophet, DFA Capital Management Inc.'s ADVISE
and GGY's AXIS, as well as middleware from IBM business partners
DataSynapse and Platform Computing. IBM clients already using an early
version of the solution are reporting an immediate payback in their
investment. An internal IBM survey of customers using IBM Grid
solutions for the insurance industry showed as much as a 75 percent
reduction in time spent manually scheduling jobs and a 97 percent
reduction in job processing time.
"Grid computing has moved
well beyond traditional research and academia. Offerings like IBM's
Grid and Grow bundle pre-packaged products, including Platform
Enterprise Grid Orchestrator, which enable rapid benefits to customers
solving 'real world' business problems," said Chris Purpura, vice
president of strategic alliances and new ventures for Platform
Computing. "By working with IBM, we have the opportunity to expand our
deep experience in insurance to offer rapid deployment solutions for
Actuarial Analysis."
IBM's Grid and Grow program was launched in
August to allow a simple, cost-effective way for businesses both large
and small to incorporate Grid computing into their infrastructures. IBM
has specialized Grid offerings that provide hardware, software and
middleware packages for a variety of industries, including financial
services and medical archiving.
"We have been pleased to be
involved with several of IBM's Grid and Grow offerings to date," said
Rick Moran, senior vice president of business development for
DataSynapse, an IBM ISV that provides the application virtualization
technology to the Actuarial Analysis offering. "By grouping the best
technologies available to handle very specific computing needs -- these
offerings can change the way Grid computing impacts an entire business,
like the insurance industry."