The present invention generally relates to providing insurance-related services and particularly relates to facilitating and responding to an electronic exchange of insurance information between electronic computing devices.
Drivers often keep respective hardcopies of their insurance information in their vehicles in case a vehicle incident such as a vehicle collision occurs. Following a vehicle incident, a driver may exchange insurance and contact information with another driver. Typically, drivers involved in a vehicle incident may use paper and pen to exchange insurance information. This paper and pen approach is also often employed to leave behind insurance information when a driver damages an unoccupied vehicle or other unattended property. In some circumstances, drivers may attempt to exchange insurance information by taking photos of the respective insurance cards.
Papers containing insurance information, however, are easily lost and damaged. Additionally, paper and pen may not be available or readily accessible in some situations. Moreover, depending on the severity of the vehicle incident, a driver may be rattled to the point that copying insurance information via paper and pen or taking a photograph of an insurance card is prohibitively difficult. Therefore, a need exists for improved approaches to sharing and exchanging insurance information between individuals.
The following presents a simplified summary in order to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the disclosure. The summary is not an extensive overview of the disclosure and is not intended to identify key or critical elements or to delineate the scope of protection sought. The following summary merely presents some concepts of the disclosure in a simplified form as an introduction to the more detailed description provided below.
A first aspect described herein provides a computer-implemented method of providing insurance information. An insurance application is provided to a mobile computing device, and the insurance application is configured to transmit insurance information to another mobile computing device. Transmission of insurance information from the mobile computing device to the other mobile computing device may be initiated using the insurance application. A message may be generated that indicates the insurance information was transmitted from the mobile computing device to the other mobile computing device. The message may be sent to an insurance system, and receipt of the message at the insurance system may cause the insurance system to respond to the transmission of insurance information from the mobile device to the other mobile device. The transmission of insurance information may be initiated in response to a bump gesture performed between the mobile device and the other mobile device.
A second aspect described herein provides non-transitory computer-readable medium having computer-executable instructions stored thereon that carry out one or more of the steps described above. As used in this disclosure non-transitory computer-readable media include all types of computer-readable media with the sole exception of a transitory propagating signal.
A third aspect described herein provides a system for exchanging insurance information between individuals. The system may include one or more processors and a data store that stores insurance information and vehicle telematics information. A telematics analyzer may, in operation, analyze the vehicle telematics information to determine whether a vehicle incident has occurred. In response to a determination that a vehicle incident has occurred, the vehicle telematics analyzer may identify the individuals involved in the vehicle incident based on at least a portion of the vehicle telematics data. An insurance information exchange handler may retrieve from the data store insurance information respectively associated with the individuals involved in the vehicle incident. The insurance information exchange handler may initiate transmission of insurance information for a first individual to a mobile computing device associated with a second individual. The insurance information exchange handler may also initiate transmission of insurance information for the second individual to a mobile computing device associated with the first individual.
The details of these and other embodiments of the disclosure are set forth in the accompanying drawings and description below. Other features and advantages of aspects of the disclosure will be apparent from the description and drawings.
Aspects of the disclosure may be implemented in certain parts, steps, and embodiments that will be described in detail in the following description and illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals indicate similar elements. It will be appreciated with the benefit of this disclosure that the steps illustrated in the accompanying figures may be performed in other than the recited order and that one or more of the steps disclosed may be optional. It will also be appreciated that one or more components illustrated in the accompanying figures may be positioned in other than the disclosed arrangement and that one or more of the components illustrated may be optional.
Aspects of the present disclosure are directed towards various approaches to facilitating and responding to an electronic exchange of insurance information. Individuals may wirelessly exchange insurance information via insurance applications installed at their respective mobile electronic computing devices (“mobile devices”). The wireless exchange of information advantageously improves the process of sharing insurance information with another individual and receiving insurance information from that individual. In particular, wirelessly exchanging insurance information via mobile device can be advantageous where writing instruments or writing materials are unavailable or inaccessible. Accordingly, the approaches described below provide a quick and efficient way to exchange insurance information between individuals.
Additionally, the insurance application at a mobile device may notify an insurance system located remotely relative to the mobile device that an individual shared insurance information with another individual. Individuals may share insurance information for a variety of reasons. For example, individuals may exchange insurance information following a vehicle incident such as a vehicle collision. Upon notification that an individual shared insurance information, the insurance system may initiate various workflows in response. The insurance system may automatically follow-up with the individual to verify whether a vehicle incident occurred and whether medical, police, or other types of assistance is needed. The insurance system may also automatically initiate a placeholder insurance claim in the event that a vehicle incident did occur and the individual wishes to file an insurance claim. Upon confirmation that a vehicle incident occurred and the individual wishes to file an insurance claim, the insurance system may elevate the placeholder insurance claim to a confirmed insurance claim and continue the claims processing procedure. In this way, the insurance system may advantageously automate at least a portion of the claims processing procedure.
Furthermore, the insurance system may be in communication with a vehicle telematics unit installed in the vehicle of the individual. The vehicle telematics unit may transmit vehicle telematics data to the insurance system, and the insurance system may detect when the vehicle is involved in a vehicle incident through an analysis of the vehicle telematics data. The insurance system may also identify other vehicles and individuals involved in the vehicle incident by analyzing the vehicle telematics data. In response to detection of a vehicle incident, the insurance system may likewise initiate various workflows. Again the insurance system may follow-up with the individuals determined to be involved in the incident and create a placeholder insurance claim for the incident. The insurance system may also facilitate the electronic exchange of insurance information between the individuals involved in the vehicle incident as described in further detail below. Moreover, the insurance system may facilitate sharing insurance information from an individual involved in a vehicle incident with an unoccupied vehicle (e.g., a parked vehicle) to the owner of the unoccupied vehicle. As described in further detail below, the insurance system may also facilitate settlement payments between individuals involved in vehicle incidents. These and other aspects will be appreciated with the benefit of the disclosure described in further detail below.
Referring to
Various approaches may be selectively employed to wireless exchange the insurance information 104a-b between the mobile devices 102a-b. In one example implementation, individuals may initiate the exchange of insurance information through a “bump” gesture in which the individuals physically bump the mobile devices 102a-b together. The insurance applications 108a-b in this example approach may be configured to detect and respond to the bump gesture. In response to detection of the bump gesture, the insurance applications 108a-b may wirelessly transmit the respective insurance information 104a-b and listen for wireless transmission of the insurance information from the other mobile device. It will be appreciated that a bump gesture is but one approach that may be selectively employed to initiate an exchange of insurance information between individuals. Other approaches may be selectively employed. A mobile device may store the insurance information received from another mobile device in a data store (not shown) at the mobile device. In
Insurance information may include information related to the individual, a vehicle associated with the individual, and an insurance policy associated with the individual. Information related to the individual may include, e.g., the name of the individual and contact information for the individual such as a mailing address, email address, and phone number. Information related to a vehicle associated with the individual may include, e.g., the make and model of the vehicle, the year of the vehicle, the color of the vehicle, a vehicle identification number (VIN), and a license plate number. Information related to an insurance policy associated with the individual may include, e.g., the name of the insurance provider, the insurance policy number, the insurance policy type, and the insurance policy effective dates. The mobile devices 102a-b may store the insurance information in various ways such as, e.g., as plain text, as an image, or as a digital pass similar to the digital passes used by Apple Passbook or Google Wallet.
Individuals may initiate the exchange process by launching the insurance applications 108a-b at the respective mobile devices 102a-b. Once the applications 108a-b are launched and running at the mobile devices 102a-b, the individuals may provide input at a respective user interface presented by the insurance applications, the input indicating a request to share insurance information with the other mobile device. For example, the individuals may provide the input by selecting a button of the user interface. In response to receipt of the input, the insurance applications may retrieve the respective insurance information 104a-b from the respective data stores and initiate the transmission of the insurance information to the other mobile device. Also in response to receipt of the input, the insurance applications may listen for transmission of the insurance information 104a-b from the other mobile device. Upon receipt of the insurance information 104a-b, the insurance applications 108a-b may store the received insurance information at the data store and present the received insurance information at the user interface. The insurance applications 108a-b may also be configured to retrieve and display any received insurance information in response to receipt of input, e.g., at a list of received insurance information.
Additional or alternative approaches to wirelessly exchanging the insurance information 104a-b may be selectively employed. The particular approach employed may depend on the platform on which the insurance application operates including the operating system of the mobile device and the hardware available at the mobile device. Additional or alternative approaches may exchange the insurance information 104a-b using, for example, Bluetooth®, WiFi Direct, AirDrop®, iBeacon, via near field communication (NFC) techniques, and other standards or services suitable for the exchange of wireless information between electronic computing devices in relatively close proximity to each other.
Referring now to
As also seen in
In the example system 120 of
The insurance application 132, in this example, may transmit the share request from the mobile device 122 and through the network 130 to the insurance system 128. The insurance application 132 may configure the share request 136 to include information identifying the sender and the recipient of the insurance information. The share request 136 may identify the sender and the recipient via unique identifiers respectively associated with the sender and the recipient of the insurance information 124. Identifying information for a sender and a recipient may include, e.g., a customer number, a telephone number, or an email address. In some circumstances, a sender may not know the identity of the recipient. In these circumstances, the sender may only have information relating to the vehicle associated with the recipient. Accordingly, identifying information for a recipient may also include the VIN or license plate number of the vehicle associated with the recipient. As discussed in further detail below, the insurance system 128 may be configured to determine the identity of the recipient based on the VIN or license plate number and retrieve contact information for the recipient in order to provide the insurance information associated with the sender.
In response to receipt of the share request 136, the insurance system 128 may retrieve the insurance information 124 for the sender indicated in the share request. The insurance system 128 may then transmit the insurance information 124 to the recipient indicated in the share request via the network 130. As shown by way of example in
It will be appreciated with the benefit of this disclosure that the approaches set forth above advantageously improves the process of sharing or exchanging insurance information. The example approach of exchanging insurance information via a bump gesture is quick and efficient when both the sender and the recipient are present, e.g., at the scene of a vehicle incident. The approaches set forth above also enable an individual to share insurance information with the recipient when the recipient is not present, e.g., after the individuals have left the scene of a vehicle incident or when a vehicle involved in a vehicle incident is unoccupied. Additional advantages will be further appreciated with the benefit of the additional disclosures provided below.
Referring now to
The mobile device 202 may be, e.g., a mobile telephone as described above and include, among other components: a data store 218; a location determination unit such as a Global Positioning System (GPS) unit 220; and a timing unit such as a clock 222. The data store 218 may store, among other things: insurance information 224 associated with an insurance customer that operates the mobile device; and an insurance application 226 configured to share and exchange insurance information as described above. The insurance application 226 may be in signal communication with the GPS unit 220 and the clock 222. Accordingly, the insurance application 226 may receive location information from the GPS unit 220 (e.g., latitude and longitude coordinates), and the insurance application may receive date and time information from the clock 222.
The insurance application 226 may configure share requests 214 and share messages 212 with the location information, date information, and time information. As a result, the insurance system 204 may determine the location, date, and time an insurance customer shared or exchanged insurance information. As described in further detail below, the insurance system 204 may analyze share messages 212 and share requests 214 to identify matching (or at least similar) share messages and share requests. If the insurance system 204 locates matching or similar share messages 212 or share requests 214, then the insurance may conclude that the individuals associated with those share messages or share requests were potentially involved in the same vehicle incident and likewise take various steps in response.
The insurance system 204 includes various components that facilitate the sharing and exchange of insurance information between insurance customers. The insurance system 204, in this example, also includes various components for responding to the sharing or exchange of insurance information. In addition, the insurance system 204 shown by way of example in
The data store 236 may store information 238 relating to insurance customers, information 240 relating to the sharing or exchange of insurance information, and information 242 relating to the telematics data received from the vehicles respectively associated with the insurance customers. The data store 236 may implement a data model that relates insurance customers, sharing information, and telematics information. The data store 236 may thus store the customer information 238, sharing information 240, and telematics information 242 in one or more corresponding database tables as related database records. The data store 236 may also include a database management system (DBMS) that facilitates the storage and retrieval of information at the data store. Any data store and DBMS suitable for providing insurance-related services may be selectively employed. Furthermore, the data store 236 may include multiple interconnected data stores with the customer information 238, sharing information 240, and telematics information 242 stored in a distributed fashion across the interconnected data stores.
Insurance customer information 238 may include, e.g., information 244 relating to one or more drivers, information 246 relating to one or more vehicles associated with a driver, and information 248 relating to an insurance policy associated with a driver. Driver information 244 may include biographic information (e.g., name, age), contact information (e.g., mailing address, phone number, email address), and other types of information associated with an individual. Vehicle information 246 may include, e.g., the make, model, year, color, VIN, license plate, repair history, and other types of information associated with a vehicle of an insurance customer. Insurance policy information 248 may include, e.g., the name of the insurance company, type of insurance policy, effective dates, coverage amounts, deductibles, and other types of information associated with an insurance customer.
Sharing information 240 may include records (“sharing records”) of share messages 212 and share requests 214 received at the insurance system 204. A sharing record may correspond to a share message 212 or a share request 214. Accordingly, a sharing record that corresponds to a share message 212 or share request 214 may include information describing a sharing or exchange of insurance information 216 between insurance customers including, e.g.: a unique identifier associated with sender; a unique identifier associated with the recipient; a geographic location from which the sender shared or exchanged the insurance information (e.g., latitude and longitude coordinates); a date the sender shared or exchanged the insurance information; and a time the sender shared or exchanged the insurance information.
Telematics information may likewise include records (“telematics records) of vehicle telematics data received from telematics units installed at the vehicles respectively associated with the insurance customers. Vehicle telematics data refers to technical information relating to the status or operation of a vehicle. Vehicle telematics data may include, for example, directional acceleration and deceleration (e.g., forward/backward, left/right, up/down), change in directional acceleration, vehicle speed or velocity, engine throttle and RPM (revolutions per minute), steering input, engagement of various vehicle subsystems (e.g., stability control systems, antilock brake systems), and the like. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that a vehicle telematics unit may be configured to collect and record data relating to the operation and status of the vehicle. The vehicle telematics unit may then provide the vehicle telematics data the insurance system 204 for storage and analysis.
The input handler 228, in operation, may handle share messages 212 and share requests 214 received at the insurance system. Accordingly, the input handler 228 may serve as the gateway, entry point, or access point to the insurance system 204 from computing devices located remotely relative to the insurance system. Upon receipt of a share message 212 or a share request 214, the input handler may take various actions in response. In some example implementations, the input handler may extract the information contained in the share message 212 or share request 214 and store the extracted information as new sharing information 240 at the data store 236. Accordingly, the input handler 228 may request creation of a new sharing record at the data store 236 containing the sharing information extracted from the share message 212 or share request 214 received. The input handler 228 may determine whether the communication received is a share message 212 or a share request 214. If the input handler 228 determines that a share message 212 has been received, then the input handler may notify the sharing analyzer 230, which may determine if any matching or similar share messages have also been received. If the input handler 228 determines that a share request 214 has been received, then the input handler may notify the insurance information exchange handler 232, which may initiate transmission of insurance information 216 to the recipient identified in the share request. In some implementations, the input handler 228 may notify the sharing analyzer 230 and insurance information exchange handler 232 by forwarding the received share messages 212 or share requests 214 to each respective component. In other implementations, the input handler 228 may notify the sharing analyzer 230 and insurance information exchange handler 232 by providing information identifying the respective sharing records created for the share messages 212 or share requests 214 received.
The insurance information exchange handler 232, in operation, manages the sharing of insurance information from a sender to a recipient and manages the exchange of insurance information between multiple individuals. The insurance information exchange handler 232 may distribute information to a recipient in response to receipt of a share request 214 identifying the recipient. The insurance information exchange handler 232 may also facilitate the exchange of insurance information between multiple individuals, e.g., following a vehicle incident.
Upon receiving a share request 214 at the insurance system 204, the input handler 228 may notify the insurance information exchange handler of the new share request 214. The insurance information exchange handler 232 may obtain information identifying the sender of the share request 214 and information identifying the recipient of the share request, e.g., by extracting the information from the share request or by querying the data store 236 for the sharing information 240 corresponding to the share request. The insurance information 216 transmitted to a recipient may include at least a portion of the customer information 238 associated with the sender of the share request 214. For example, the insurance information 216 transmitted to a recipient may at least include the contact information of the driver information 244 as well as the name of the insurance provider and insurance policy number of the insurance policy information 248. The insurance information exchange handler 232 may likewise query the data store 236 for the customer information 238 to include in the insurance information 216 to transmit to the recipient. As described above, the insurance information exchange handler 232 may thus initiate the transmission of the insurance information 216 to an electronic computing device associated with the recipient, e.g., a mobile device 202.
The insurance information exchange handler 232 may also facilitate the exchange of information between multiple individuals involved in a vehicle incident such as a vehicle collision. Through an analysis of the telematics information 242, the telematics analyzer 234 may determine that a vehicle has potentially been involved in a vehicle incident. As described in further detail below, the telematics analyzer 234 may identify multiple vehicles involved in the vehicle incident. Having identified the vehicle involved in the vehicle incident, the insurance system 204 may identify the insurance customers associated with those vehicles and the contact information (e.g., phone number, email address) for the insurance customers. The insurance system 204 may identify the contact information for the insurance customers based on the vehicle information 246 and driver information 244 stored at the data store 236 of the insurance system. Upon identifying the individuals involved in the vehicle incident, the insurance information exchange handler 232 may contact those individuals.
The insurance system 204 may also utilize the vehicle telematics information in other ways. As an example, the insurance system 204 may be in communication with one or more systems (not shown) of emergency response services, e.g., fire, police, and medical. If the insurance system 204 determines that a vehicle incident has occurred, then the insurance system may share the vehicle telematics information with the systems of the emergency response services. In turn, the emergency response services may be dispatched if needed. The vehicle telematics information may also be useful to identify vehicle incidents that go unreported to an insurance company. For relatively minor vehicle incidents, participants may choose to settle out-of-pocket rather than file an insurance claim. In these situations, an insurance company may remain unaware that the vehicle incident occurred. Using the vehicle telematics information, however, an insurance company may identify even relatively minor vehicle incidents and, in turn, conduct risk assessments of the driver, the road, and so forth, which may be useful for calculating insurance rates of usage-based insurance.
In some example implementations, the insurance information exchange handler 232 may push communications to the insurance applications 226 operating at the mobile devices 202 of the individuals determined to have been involved in the vehicle incident. In response to receipt of communications from the insurance system 204 at the insurance application 226, the insurance application may present the communications to the individual via the user interface. The communications pushed to the insurance application 226 may include requests to confirm an incident did occur and requests for permission to share the insurance information of the individual with other individuals involved in the vehicle incident. Communications pushed to the insurance application 226 may also include communications related to other insurance services, vehicle rental services, vehicle repair services, and so forth.
The insurance information exchange handler 232 may also be configured to identify an owner of a vehicle based on information received in a share request 214. As noted above, an individual may submit a share request 214 in order to share insurance information 216 with the owner of an unoccupied vehicle. The share message 214 may include a unique vehicle identifier associated with the unoccupied vehicle, e.g., a VIN or license plate number. The insurance information exchange handler 232 may thus perform a lookup at the data store 236 for vehicle information 246 corresponding to the unique vehicle identifier. The data store 235 may maintain an association between the vehicle information and driver information 244 of the owner of the vehicle. The driver information 244 may include contact information for the owner of the vehicle as described above, and the insurance information exchange handler 232 may use this contact information to push the insurance information 216 to the mobile device of the owner. In this way, the insurance system 204 facilitates sharing insurance information with the owner of an unoccupied vehicle, e.g., when an individual damages the unoccupied vehicle while driving, with a shopping cart, or in other ways.
Due to the private nature of the insurance information, the insurance system 204 may request permission from an individual to share the insurance information of that individual with other individuals. The communications pushed to the insurance applications 226 may also refer to individuals semi-anonymously (e.g., by their first name and first initial of their last name) until an individual gives permission to share insurance information. Upon receiving permission from an individual to share insurance information, the insurance information exchange handler 232 may distribute the insurance information as described above to the other individuals determined to be involved in the vehicle incident.
The sharing analyzer 230, in operation, analyzes share messages 212 or share requests 214 received at the insurance system 204 in order to identify matching or similar share messages or share requests. As described above, a share message 212 or share request 214 may include the date, time, and location that the insurance application 226 submitted the share message or share request. Accordingly, a share message 212 may match another share message where the date, time, and location information in the share messages match. A share message 212 may be similar to another share message where the date, time, and location of a share message are similar to the date, time, and location of another share message. For example, a share message 212 may be similar to another share message where each share message was submitted on the same date, within a predetermined time period of each other (e.g., 0-15 minutes), and within a predetermined distance from each other (e.g., 0-100 feet). A share request 214 may be similar to another share request in the same fashion.
Upon receipt of a share message 212 or share request 214, the input handler 228 may notify the sharing analyzer 230 of the new share message or share request received. The sharing analyzer may query the data store 236 for sharing information 240 that matches (or is similar to) the date, time, and location indicated in the received share message 212 or share request 214. As noted above, the sharing information 240 corresponds to previously received share message 212 or share requests 214. If the sharing analyzer 230 successfully locates sharing information 240 that matches (or is similar to) the information in the received share message 212 or share request 214, then the sharing analyzer may conclude that the individuals respectively associated with the share messages or share requests may each have potentially been involved in the same vehicle incident. The sharing analyzer 230 may then notify the insurance information exchange handler 232, which may initiate the process of confirming with the individuals that the vehicle incident occurred and facilitating the exchange of insurance information between the individuals as described above. It will be appreciated that the sharing analyzer 230 may employ the approach described above to identify two or more individuals involved in a vehicle incident. Moreover, the sharing analyzer 230 may determine each pairing of individuals to exchange insurance information. As an example, if the sharing analyzer 230 determines that a first individual and a second individual exchanged insurance information and that the second individual and a third individual exchanged insurance information, then the sharing analyzer may automatically determine that the first individual and the third individual should also exchange insurance information.
Upon determining that multiple individuals were potentially involved in a vehicle incident, the sharing analyzer may initiate automatic creation of a placeholder insurance claim. The individuals identified as being potentially involved in the vehicle incident may be automatically associated with the placeholder insurance claims, and the placeholder insurance claim may be automatically populated with basic information relating to the insurance customer, e.g., driver information 244, vehicle information 246, and insurance policy information 248. Upon confirmation that the incident occurred and at least one of the individuals wishes to file an insurance claim, the placeholder insurance claim may be elevated to a normal insurance claim for claims processing. The automatically generated insurance claim may be provided to an insurance agent to continue the rest of the claims processing procedure. If the individuals indicate that a vehicle incident did not occur or that they do not wish to file an insurance claim, then the placeholder insurance claim may be discarded. The telematics analyzer may similarly create a placeholder insurance claim as described above in response to an analysis of vehicle telematics data indicating that a potential vehicle incident has occurred. In view of this approach, it will be appreciated that at least a portion of the claims processing procedure may be automated, which advantageously allows insurance agents more time to focus on the details of the vehicle incident.
As noted above, the insurance system 204 may determine that an individual was potentially involved in a vehicle incident through an analysis of telematics data received at the insurance system from a telematics unit installed in the vehicle of the individual. The insurance system 204, in this example, includes a telematics analyzer 234, in operation, analyzes the telematics information 242 stored at the data store 236 in order to determine whether a vehicle associated with the individual has been involved in a vehicle incident such as a vehicle collision. The telematics analyzer 234 may also be utilized to identify other involved in a vehicle incident based on the telematics information 242.
Information describing the collection, processing, and analysis of telematics information is described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/791,338 filed on Mar. 8, 2013 and entitled “Automated Accident Detection, Fault Attribution, and Claims Processing” as well as U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/791,287 filed on Mar. 8, 2013 and entitled “Encouraging Safe Driving Using a Remote Vehicle Starter and Personalized Insurance Rates” each of which are assigned to Allstate Insurance Company of Northbrook, Ill. and each of which are incorporated by reference in this disclosure in their entirety.
The telematics information 242 may include vehicle telematics data corresponding to the operation of the vehicles of insurance customers. The telematics analyzer 234 may analyze the telematics information 242 to identify telematics events that may be indicative of an incident involving the vehicle (e.g., a vehicle collision). Examples of telematics events that may correlate with vehicle incidents include a hard-braking event, a sudden stop event, and a hard turning event. The telematics information 242 may also identify the vehicle that provided the telematics information. Accordingly, the insurance customer associated with the vehicle that provided the telematics information 242 may be determined. The telematics information 242 may also indicate the date, time, and location at which these events occurred. It will thus be appreciated that the telematics analyzer 234 may determine whether a telematics event has a date, time, and location that matches (or is at least similar to) the date, time, and location of a share message 212, a share request 214, or another telematics event. In particular, the telematics analyzer 234 may determine whether a telematics event occurred on the same day, within a predetermined time period (e.g., 0-20 minutes), and within a predetermined distance (e.g., 0-100 feet) of a share message 212 or share request 214. If so, then the telematics analyzer 234 may conclude that the vehicle associated with the insurance customer was potentially involved in a vehicle incident that may result in an insurance claim. The telematics analyzer 234 may similarly notify the insurance information exchange handler 232, which may initiate the process of confirming with the individuals that the vehicle incident occurred and facilitating the exchange of insurance information between the individuals as described above.
The insurance system 204, in this example, is also in signal communication with a third-party insurance system 208 via the network 206. As seen in
In particular, the sharing analyzer 230 may submit a query to the third-party insurance system 208 to determine whether the third-party insurance system has sharing information corresponding to a share message 212 or share request 214 received at the insurance system 204. Accordingly, the query to the third-party insurance system 208 may include the time, date, and location of the share message 212 or share request 214. If the third-party insurance system 208 indicates that it has located sharing information that matches (or is at least similar to) the share message 212 or share request 214 received at the insurance system 204, then the insurance system may conclude that a third-party insurance customer was also involved in the vehicle incident. The insurance system 204 may thus request, and the third-party insurance system 208 may provide, insurance information for the third-party insurance customer such as, e.g., driver information, vehicle information, and insurance policy information relating to the third-party insurance customer. The telematics analyzer 234 may similarly submit a query to the third-party insurance system 208 that includes the time, date, and location of a detected telematics event. If the third-party insurance system 208 indicates that it has located telematics information the matches (or is at least similar to) the detected telematics event, then the insurance system 204 may likewise conclude that a third-party insurance customer was also involved in the vehicle incident. The third-party insurance system 208 may thus likewise provide the insurance system 204 with insurance information for the third-party insurance customer.
The insurance information exchange handler 232 may also be configured to query the third-party insurance system 208 to facilitate distribution of insurance information among individuals. As noted above, a share request 214 may include unique vehicle identifier of a vehicle such as a VIN or license plate number, and insurance information exchange handler 232 may perform a lookup on the data store 236 in order to identify the vehicle associated with the unique vehicle identifier and the owner associated with the vehicle. In some situations, however, the owner of the vehicle may not be a customer of the insurance company associated with the insurance system 204, and the insurance information exchange handler 232 may not be able to identify the owner of the vehicle. In these situations, the insurance information exchange handler 232 may query a third-party insurance system with the unique vehicle identifier received in the share request 214. The third-party insurance system 208 may thus also attempt to identify the vehicle and owner based on the unique vehicle identifier. Upon identifying the owner, a third-party insurance system 208 may provide the insurance system 204 with contact information for the owner such that the insurance system can transmit the insurance information associated with the individual that submitted the share request. In some example implementations, the insurance system 204 may transmit the insurance information to share to the third-party insurance system 208, and the third-party insurance system may transmit the insurance information to the owner on behalf of the insurance system. It will be appreciated that multiple insurance companies operating respective insurance systems may be interconnected to advantageously identify parties to potential incidents in this fashion.
The insurance system 204, in this example, also includes a settlement handler 235 that, in operation, facilitates settlements between individuals involved in a vehicle incident. In some situations, individuals involved in a vehicle incident may prefer to file an insurance claim and obtain payment for any damage through the typical claims process. In other situations, individuals may be willing to settle out-of-pocket. As used in this description, an individual that is responsible for the vehicle incident and thus liable to another individual is referred to as the at-fault party. As also used in this description the individual that is not responsible for the vehicle incident and to which another individual is liable is referred to as the non-fault party. The settlement handler 235 of the example insurance system 204 is configured to facilitate out-of-pocket payments between an at-fault party and a non-fault party. Accordingly, the settlement handler 235 may be configured to obtain a damage estimate for a vehicle involved in the incident, propose a settlement amount to both the at-fault party and the non-fault party, determine whether the settlement amount is acceptable to both the at-fault party and the non-faulty party, and facilitate a payment between the at-fault party and the non-fault party.
The settlement handler 235 may be configured to obtain the damage estimate based on vehicle telematics information received from the vehicles involved in the vehicle collision. Insurance companies may have compiled correlations between impact velocities and resulting repair costs. The telematics information 242 may indicate the velocity of the vehicles at the time of impact, and the settlement handler 235 may compare this telematics data to correlation information in order to obtain a damage estimate. The telematics information 242 may also include sensor information provided by sensors installed in the vehicle. The sensor information may indicate damage to various vehicle systems or components. Insurance companies may also have compiled correlations between damage to various vehicle systems and components and respective repair costs. The settlement analyzer 235 may also use this sensor information to obtain a damage estimate for the vehicle involved in the vehicle incident. In some example implementations, the settlement handler 235 may provide the telematics information 242 to the vehicle repair service system 210 via the network and receive the damage estimate in response.
Having obtained the damage estimate, the settlement handler 235 may transmit the damage estimate to the non-fault party in order to determine if the non-fault party would be willing to accept a settlement for an amount equaling the damage estimate. If the non-fault party accepts the settlement amount, then the settlement handler 235 may transmit the settlement amount to the at-fault party in order to determine if the at-fault party would be willing to settle out-of-pocket for the settlement amount. If both parties agree, then the settlement handler may facilitate a payment from the at-fault party to the non-fault party. As seen in
The system 200 for facilitating and responding to the sharing and exchange of insurance information is shown by way of example in
Referring now to
Having logged in to the insurance application, the insurance customer may utilize the insurance application to electronically exchange insurance information with an electronic device of another individual, e.g., another mobile device. Accordingly, an insurance customer may initiate an insurance information exchange with another mobile device (block 308). The insurance customer may initiate the exchange of insurance information accordingly to one of the various approaches described above, e.g., via a bump gesture between the devices. During the exchange, the mobile device may transfer insurance information to the other mobile device (block 310) and receive insurance information from the other mobile device (block 312). As noted above, the insurance information may be stored at the mobile device such that the insurance information is available for transfer on demand.
Following the exchange of insurance information, the insurance application may transmit a share message to the insurance system (block 314) as described above. Because individuals may exchange insurance information following a vehicle incident such as a collision, the insurance system may initiate a follow-up communication with the insurance customer to inquire about the reason behind the insurance information exchange (block 316). The follow-up may be, e.g., a phone call from an insurance agent or one or more messages automatically presented at the mobile device via the insurance application. In some example implementations, the follow-up from the insurance system may be automated. The insurance system may, for example, transmit instructions to the insurance application at the mobile device instructing the mobile application to gather additional information regarding the potential incident. In response to the instructions received from the insurance system, the mobile application may ask the insurance customer a series of questions, e.g.: “Were you involved in a vehicle collision?”; “Do you need medical assistance?”; “Was anyone else involved?”; “Would you like to file an insurance claim?”; “Do you need vehicle towing or rental service?” Along with the instructions, the insurance system may provide a set of questions to the mobile application to present to the insurance customer. The insurance customer may thus provide answers to the questions presented, and the insurance application may transmit a set of answers back to the insurance system as a response, which may in turn provide the set of answers to an insurance agent of the insurance company.
The insurance system may also initiate various responses automatically based on the answers provided by the insurance customer (e.g., automatically creating an insurance claim). For example, the set of questions presented to the insurance customer may ask the customer to confirm a vehicle incident occurred (block 318). If the insurance customer confirms that an incident occurred (block 318:Y), then the insurance system may initiate the claims processing procedure (block 320), e.g., by elevating a placeholder insurance claim automatically created in response to the share message. If the insurance customer indicates that a vehicle collision did not occur (block 318:N), then the insurance system may follow-up with the insurance customer regarding other insurance services that may be of interest to insurance customer (block 322).
In
Upon detection of a potential telematics event (block 408:Y), the insurance system may identify an insurance customer involved in the potential vehicle incident based on the telematics data (block 410). As described above, the telematics data may identify the vehicle at which the telematics unit is installed, and information associated with the vehicle may identify the owner of the vehicle. As also described above, the insurance system may identify an additional insurance customer involved in the potential vehicle incident based on matching (or similar) telematics data received from a telematics unit installed in a vehicle of the additional insurance customer (block 412).
Having identified one or more insurance customers, the insurance system may retrieve the respective insurance information associated with each insurance customer determined to be involved in the potential vehicle incident (block 414). As noted above, the insurance system may request permission from the insurance customers before distributing the insurance information. Accordingly, the insurance system may request permission from a first insurance customer to transmit the first customer's insurance information to the second insurance customer (block 416), and the insurance system may request permission from the second insurance customer to transmit the second customer's insurance information to the first customer (block 418). If an insurance customer gives permission (block 420:Y), then the insurance system may transmit the insurance customer's insurance information to an electronic computing device (e.g. a mobile device) of the other insurance customer (block 422). If, however, an insurance customer does not give permission (block 420:N), then the insurance system may refrain from transmitting the insurance customer's insurance information to another individual (block 424). If an insurance customer does not give permission, the insurance customers may exchange insurance information through traditional means, e.g., pen and paper. After the insurance customers have exchanged insurance information, the claims processing procedure may be initiated (block 426). It will be appreciated that some of the example steps described above may be repeated, e.g., steps 410-424, in order to identify additional individuals involved in the vehicle incident.
In
Referring now to
It will be appreciated that some of the steps set forth above may also be employed to share insurance information with a recipient where the sender does know the identity of the recipient. Accordingly, an additional step may be performed asking the sending if the identity of the recipient is known. If so, an alternative step may be performed in which the insurance application prompts the sender for information that uniquely identifies the sender, e.g., a phone number, email address, driver's license number, and so forth.
In
In
The insurance system may then transmit the proposed settlement amount to the non-fault party in order to confirm the proposed settlement amount is acceptable to the non-fault party (block 810). The insurance application operating at the mobile device of the non-fault party may receive the proposed settlement amount and present the proposed settlement amount to the non-fault party. The non-fault party may then provide input at the insurance application accepting or rejecting the proposed settlement amount. The insurance application may then then transmit a message to the insurance system indicating whether the non-fault party accepted or rejected the proposed settlement amount. If the non-fault party accepts the proposed settlement amount (block 812:Y), then the insurance system may transmit the proposed settlement to the at-fault party (block 814) for presentation via an insurance application operating at a mobile device of the at-fault party. The insurance application may also prompt the at-fault party to accept or reject the proposed settlement amount. The at-fault party may thus provide input at the insurance application accepting or rejecting the proposed settlement amount, and the insurance application may transmit a message to the insurance application indicating whether the at-fault party accepted or rejected the proposed settlement amount. If the at-fault party accepts the proposed settlement amount (block 816:Y), then the insurance application may prompt the at-fault party to provide payment information (block 818). The insurance application may transmit the payment information received from the at-fault party to the insurance system, which may then initiate a payment between the at-fault party and the non-fault party (block 820), e.g., via the payment system described above with reference to
If the non-fault party rejects the proposed settlement amount (block 812:N) or the at-fault party rejects the proposed settlement amount (block 816:N), then the insurance system may initiate the typical claims processing procedure. It will also be appreciated that the insurance system and insurance application may be configured to facilitate negotiation of a settlement amount between the at-fault party and the non-fault party. During settlement negotiations, the at-fault party or the non-faulty party may propose a different settlement amount (e.g., a counteroffer) via the insurance application and the insurance system may transmit the different settlement amounts between the parties for acceptance or rejection.
With reference to
If the insurance system cannot locate a matching or similar share record at its own data store (block 1016:N), the insurance system may query a third-party insurance system for a matching or similar share record (block 1028) as described above. If the third-party insurance system cannot locate a matching or similar share record (block 1030:N), the insurance system may initiate a follow-up with the insurance customer (block 1026) regarding other insurance services as described above. If the third-party insurance system can locate a matching or similar record (block 1030:Y), then the insurance system may conclude that a vehicle incident occurred with a third-party insurance customer. The insurance system may initiate a fault attribution process with the third-party insurance system (block 1032). For example, the insurance system may exchange telematics data with the third-party insurance system to determine which insurance customer is the at-fault party. Through an analysis of the telematics data the insurance system and the third-party insurance system may attribute fault to one of the individuals involved in the vehicle incident. If the insurance systems do not agree on which individual is the at-fault party (1034:N), typical subrogation procedures may be initiated (block 1036). If, however, the insurance systems agree on which individual is the at-fault party (block 1034:Y), then payment between the insurance systems may be initiated (block 1038). In this way, the insurance system may automate at least a portion of the subrogation process.
Referring to
A personal computing device 1165 (e.g., a personal computer, tablet PC, handheld computing device, personal digital assistant, mobile device, etc.) may communicate with the computing device 1101. Similarly, a mobile device 1167 (e.g., a mobile cellular telephone, palmtop computer, tablet computer, laptop computer, and the like) may communicate with the computing device 1101. The communication between the computing device 1101 and the other devices 1165, 1167 may be through wired or wireless communication networks or direct links. One or more networks may be in the form of a local area network (LAN) that has one or more of the well-known LAN topologies and may use a variety of different protocols, such as Ethernet. One or more of the networks may be in the form of a wide area network (WAN), such as the Internet. The computing device 1101 and other devices (e.g., devices 1165, 1167) may be connected to one or more of the networks via twisted pair wires, coaxial cable, fiber optics, radio waves or other media. The term “network” as used herein and depicted in the drawings should be broadly interpreted to include not only systems in which devices or data sources are coupled together via one or more communication paths, but also stand-alone devices that may be coupled, from time to time, to such systems that have storage capability.
In another embodiment in accordance with aspects of the disclosure, a mobile device 1167 may operate in a stand-alone manner by locally storing some of the database of values stored in the memories 1115 of the computing device 1101. For example, a mobile device 1167 (e.g., a mobile cellular telephone) may be comprised of a processor, memory, input devices 1168, and output devices 1169 (e.g., keypad, display screen, speaker, and the like). The memory may be comprised of a non-volatile memory that stores a database of values. Therefore, the mobile device 1167 need not communicate, in one example, with a computing device 1101 located at a remote location. Rather, the mobile device 1167 may behave in a stand-alone manner and use its processor to perform particular steps disclosed herein. If desired, the mobile device 1167 may be refreshed with an updated database of values after a period of time.
In yet another embodiment in accordance with aspects of the disclosure, a personal computing device 1165 may operate in a stand-alone manner by locally storing some of the database of values stored in the memory of the computing device. For example, a personal computing device 1165 may be comprised of a processor, memory, input device (e.g., keypad, CD-ROM drive, DVD drive, etc.), and output device (e.g., display screen, printer, speaker, etc.). The memory may be comprised of CD-ROM media. Therefore, the personal computing device 1165 may use the input device to read the contents of the CD-ROM media. Rather, the personal computing device 1165 may behave in a stand-alone manner and use its processor to perform particular steps disclosed herein. If desired, the personal computing device may be provided with an updated database of values (e.g., in the form of updated CD-ROM media) after a period of time.
The data sources 1161, 1163 may provide information to the computing device 1101. In one embodiment in accordance with aspects of the disclosure, a data source may be a computer which contains memory storing data and is configured to provide information to the computing device 1101. Some examples of providers of data sources in accordance with aspects of the disclosure include, but are not limited to, insurance companies, third-party insurance data providers, government entities, state highway patrol departments, local law enforcement agencies, state departments of transportation, federal transportation agencies, traffic information services, road hazard information sources, construction information sources, weather information services, geographic information services, vehicle manufacturers, vehicle safety organizations, and environmental information services. For privacy protection reasons, in some embodiments of the disclosure, access to the information in the data sources 1161, 1163 may be restricted to only authorized computing devices 1101 and for only permissible purposes. For example, access to the data sources may be restricted to only those persons or entities that have signed an agreement (e.g., an electronic agreement) acknowledging their responsibilities with regard to the use and security to be accorded this information.
The computing device 1101 may use the information from the data sources 1161, 1163 to generate values that may be used to facilitate the sharing and exchange of insurance information and respond to messages indicating the sharing or exchange of insurance information. Some examples of the information that the data sources may provide to the computing device 1101 include, but are not limited to, accident information, geographic information, and other types of information useful to share and exchange insurance information as well as provide other insurance-related services.
I/O module 1109 may include a microphone, keypad, touch screen, and/or stylus through which a user of the computing device 1101 may provide input, and may also include one or more of a speaker for providing audio output and a video display device for providing textual, audiovisual or graphical output. Software may be stored within memory 1115 or storage to provide instructions to processor 1103 for enabling device 1101 to perform various functions. For example, memory 1115 may store software used by the device 1101, such as an operating system 1117, application programs 1119, and an associated internal database 1121. Processor 1103 and its associated components may allow the system to execute a series of computer-readable instructions to, e.g., share or exchange insurance information as well as receive and respond share messages and share requests.
The system may operate in a networked environment supporting connections to one or more remote computers, such as terminals 1141 and 1151. The terminals 1141 and 1151 may be personal computers, servers (e.g., web servers, database servers), or mobile communication devices (e.g., vehicle telematics devices, on-board vehicle computers, mobile phones, portable computing devices, and the like), and may include some or all of the elements described above with respect to the system 1101. The network connections may include a local area network (LAN) 1125 and a wide area network (WAN) 1129, and a wireless telecommunications network 1133, but may also include other networks. When used in a LAN networking environment, the system may be connected to the LAN 1125 through a network interface or adapter 1123. When used in a WAN networking environment, the system 1101 may include a modem 1127 or other means for establishing communications over the WAN 1129, such as network 1131 (e.g., the Internet). When used in a wireless telecommunications network 1133, the system 1101 may include one or more transceivers, digital signal processors, and additional circuitry and software for communicating with wireless computing devices 1141 (e.g., mobile phones, vehicle telematics devices) via one or more network devices 1135 (e.g., base transceiver stations) in the wireless network 1133.
It will be appreciated that the network connections shown are illustrative and other means of establishing a communications link between the computers may be used. The existence of any of various network protocols such as TCP/IP, Ethernet, FTP, HTTP and the like, and of various wireless communication technologies such as GSM, CDMA, WiFi, and WiMAX, is presumed, and the various computing devices and system components described herein may be configured to communicate using any of these network protocols or technologies.
Additionally, one or more application programs 1119 used by the system may include computer executable instructions (e.g., insurance information sharing and exchange programs) for sharing and exchanging insurance information, responding to share messages and share requests, and performing other related functions as described herein.
In view of the example approaches set forth above, alternative approaches to sharing and exchanging insurance information will be appreciated. In one alternative approach, an individual may use an insurance application at a mobile device to indicate a vehicle incident has occurred. The insurance application may retrieve geographic location information from a GPS unit at the mobile device and transmit a message to an insurance system. The message may include the location information. In response to receipt of the message, the insurance system may search for other messages having similar or matching location information (e.g., within thirty feet). If the insurance system locates message having matching or similar location information, then the insurance system may determine that the individuals associated with those messages were participants in the same vehicle incident. In response, the insurance system may facilitate the sharing or exchange of insurance information between those individuals as described above.
In another example approach, an individual may notify an insurance system without the use of an insurance application at a mobile device. Instead, the individual may send a text message such as a Short Message Service (SMS) text message to the insurance system wherein the text message includes the phone number of another individual to share insurance information with. In response to receipt of the text message, the insurance system may perform a lookup of insurance information based on the phone number the text message was received from, extract the phone number of the intended recipient from the text message, and transmit the insurance information to the recipient in a text message using the phone number of the recipient.
While the disclosure has been described with respect to specific examples including presently illustrative modes of carrying out the disclosure, a person having ordinary skill in the art, after review of the entirety disclosed herein, will appreciate that there are numerous variations and permutations of the above-described systems and techniques that fall within the spirit and scope of the disclosure.
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102010001006 | Jul 2011 | DE |
1826734 | Aug 2007 | EP |
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2012106878 | Aug 2012 | WO |
2012173655 | Dec 2012 | WO |
2012174590 | Dec 2012 | WO |
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