Summary
* Registered e-mail services give court litigants a leg to stand
on.
* Some electronic registered mail services are simple and easy to
use.
* In some cases, they have cut down on paper and mail costs by as
much as 60 percent.
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Comfort with business e-mail and the combination of a slowing
economy and rising courier costs are enhancing the attractiveness of
paperless business transactions. However, recent e-commerce court
decisions combined with e-discovery horror stories give pause to those
insurance professionals who are currently using their standard e-mail
programs for business-critical correspondence.
In May 2007, for example, the landmark U.S. federal court case
Lorraine v. Markel highlighted some of the biggest shortcomings of
e-mail. In this case, all of the printed e-mail evidence was discarded
by the judge because neither party could authenticate the e-mail content
or the transmission of electronic record data of the disputed e-mail
message.
In the end, the costs involved to the litigants weren't
significant but the case highlights what is occurring quietly, often in
far greater magnitude, behind the scenes in confidential binding
arbitration.
"The industry can no longer ignore the opportunities brought
on by electronic transactions--and we can no longer ignore the real
costs of transitioning to electronic without proper systems in place to
protect against disputes," says John Muir, senior partner at Willis
Ltd. and chairman of the London Market Endorsement Steering Group, which
is promoting the wider adoption of electronic submission and agreement
of contract changes. "There is real cost if we don't take
action. There is a greater cost if we take action without putting the
proper accountability measures in place."
Standard e-mail lacks verifiable proof of delivery, content of
e-mails and attachments, uniform time sent and received and transaction
audit trails. With a few mouse clicks, anyone can easily alter an
incoming e-mail or an e-mail in their sent folder and purport it to be
the original message.
A recipient could also easily delete an e-mail and claim it was
never received or dispute the time of delivery for time-sensitive
communications. An archived version of standard e-mail may prove what
you sent, but it does not prove what was received by the counter party.
And the "Read Receipts" that you get from your standard e-mail
program are legally meaningless and provide no evidentiary value since
they can be easily forged, do not prove content and require recipient
action and settings to function.
In sum, printed copies of e-mail, traditional e-mail read receipts
and e-mail archives are inadequate in defending against legal challenges
involving delivery, time, or content of business e-mail and are easily
dismissed once questioned. By way of example, if an insurer claims they
never received an endorsement from an agent that was sent via e-mail,
how would the agent ever produce legally valid proof of the message
delivery status and content?
Registered e-mail services address the shortcomings inherent in
simple e-mail thereby providing sufficient protection and comfort for
businesses to move to electronic transactions. Registered e-mail
messages provide legal and verifiable proof of delivery, message content
including attachments, and official time stamp, all embedded within a
digital snapshot of the server-to-server transaction attached to a
"registered receipt" e-mail that is automatically returned to
the sender.
Doug Mills, vice president and chief operating officer of New
Orleans-based insurance broker Gillis, Ellis & Baker Inc., says his
company became interested in using such a service in connection with the
renewal of an errors and omission policy.
"The proper use of e-mail was one of the focal points of the
audit," he says. "Through the audit, we learned that courts
would not always admit traditional e-mail as evidence. We realized we
needed to be able to have legally verifiable proof that our e-mails were
sent, received and had not been altered."
Gillis, Ellis & Baker uses a service by a company called
RPost[R].
Since Hurricane Katrina, the insurance industry has become
sensitive to agent-client and agent-carrier/broker communications, as
the industry's dealing more with nonstandard policy forms and a
changing set of terms and conditions, Mills also says.
Aon, the Chicago-based global brokering giant, has also recently
begun using RPost's mail services for 1,500 employees in the
broker's U.K. division. The service protects Aon against
misunderstandings regarding e-mail, particularly involving reinsurance
transactions among major trading partners.
"Aon continues to lead the market's transition from
unstructured data or paper to structured data in support of the
insurance/reinsurance life cycle, however, as with many businesses,
e-mail is increasingly used during negotiation processes and as such,
there is the potential for its abuse," says Ian Summers, managing
director--eBusiness & Market Reform, for Aon Ltd.
Brokers are not the only members of the industry who are benefiting
from the service. Underwriters are adopting the service too as a way to
deliver regulatory notices, waiver and rider documents electronically
while retaining legally verifiable proof of delivery.
Registered e-mail messages give large and small insurance companies
an effective, yet simple means to drive business success through
electronic process improvement while retaining full legal protections,
according to proponents of registered e-mail services.
In addition to RPost's core service for proof, RPost offers
proprietary electronic signature features which are allowing claims
processors to get client signoff on waivers, coverage decisions, payouts
and settlements by e-mail without the need for paper. On average, the
service is cutting down on signoff turnaround time from four days to one
day.
More than 100 new insurance industry customers have signed up for
RPost's service in 2008 so far, according to RPost executives.
Registered e-mail services can replace certified mail channels and
standard e-mail in need of protection and proof of delivery. Deliveries
of pieces of certified and overnight envelopes by the three U.S. majors,
the United States Postal Service, FedEx and United Parcel Service, came
to more than 1.1 billion pieces in 2007, according to their annual
reports.
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RPost executives estimate that at least 50 percent of all physical
certified mail volume has an electronic origin, and is therefore a
candidate for a registered e-mail service. Given that assumption, the
size of the global market for registered e-mail could be worth more than
$400 million at the average price of $0.59 per registered e-mail unit,
according to RPost. Adding mail volume from first class mail, faxes,
telephone calls and regular e-mail could push the size of the market for
registered e-mail to nearly $1 billion, according to RPost.
Although often not publicized, disputes regarding e-mail do happen
and pose a real and expensive threat to corporate e-mail users.
A June 2008 poll of major insurance brokers revealed that 40
percent of respondents had already been involved in at least one dispute
where the delivery or content of an e-mail was an issue, according to an
RPost poll. Companies who've been through e-discovery know that
electronic file search, legal fees and errors and omissions liability is
expensive, underscoring the need for a registered e-mail service.
The Graham Company, a commercial insurance brokerage based in
Philadelphia, is a ease in point. The firm has a 32-person claims
services department, and many Graham Co. clients take advantage of this
service to report claims through them rather than directly to the
carder.
In one instance, a claims consultant sent a general liability
report for a $60,000 claim to a carder using a registered e-mail
service. Months later, the carder stated that they were denying coverage
because the insured did not report the incident to them in a timely
manner. "If we had been unable to prove delivery of the claims
report, the insurer would certainly have declined coverage for the claim
because of late notice," says Peter Prinsen, general counsel for
the brokerage.
Fortunately, this was not the case. Because the claims consultant
had used RPost's service to send the claim first report, he was
able to retrieve the registered receipt e-mail and prove to the
insurance carder that the message and attachment had been delivered to
the carder's system on time. The Carder ended up covering the
client.
"As e-mail has become one of our primary forms of
communication, I became concerned about our ability to prove that a
recipient of an important e-mail actually received it," says
Prinsen. "That led us to look for a method by which we could prove
that delivery of an e-mail actually occurred." Graham Co. also uses
RPost's Registered E-mail[R] offering.
Many companies, from individually-owned businesses to big insurance
carriers, are using a registered e-mail service. It's helping them
close business faster and cut the cost of certified mail by more than 60
percent by cutting time spent on trips to the post office, eliminating
faxes, minimizing time spent filling out forms and reducing errors and
omissions exposure, according to RPost CEO Zafar Khan.
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