Ever wondered how a traditional insurance company can reinvent its IT backbone to keep pace with digital disruption and regulatory demands?
Let us follow the journey of one established Asian insurer that tackled these challenges head-on, transforming its technology landscape to drive business agility and compliance.
The case begins with an insurance provider in Asia facing mounting pressures from both business growth and increasingly complex regulatory requirements. By 2017, its IT backbone — built on traditional, multi-tier architecture — was showing signs of strain.
The firm’s infrastructure had become fragmented, comprising multiple standalone components such as storage systems and virtualization environments. This complexity was compounded by a decentralized and cumbersome licensing model, which was creating significant operational inefficiencies and compliance risks.
Key challenges
The firm’s Vice President, Technology Solutions (Architecture, Infrastructure and Operations), Yew Wei Kee, had a list of challenges to contend with, namely:
- Fragmented infrastructure with disparate storage and virtualization systems
- Decentralized, time-consuming software licensing management across multiple countries, often requiring repeated vendor engagement just to verify entitlements
- High administrative overhead and increased compliance risks
- Frequent risks of downtime during system maintenance, security patching, and upgrades that required extensive planning
- Escalating costs from maintaining duplicate production and backup hardware, as well as projected spikes in licensing renewals
The challenges were particularly acute for regional teams, who had to manage licensing and entitlements across multiple jurisdictions. This not only slowed down business operations but also increased the risk of non-compliance with local regulations.
The company had recognized that, to remain competitive and compliant, a fundamental overhaul of its IT environment was needed. “In the case of our experience with our previous vendor, license management was a time-consuming and complicated process. After migration, our entire licensing landscape became clean, centralized and transparent via a single portal,” said Yew.
Choosing a hyperconverged infrastructure
The insurer responded by embarking on a comprehensive digital transformation (DX), focusing on modernizing its IT backbone through the adoption of new architectural approaches and cloud technologies.
The solution involved moving away from a traditional three-tier setup in favour of a hyperconverged infrastructure that supported both on-premise and hybrid cloud environments.
This shift enabled the company to centralize its IT management, streamline operations, and improve business agility. Key solution strategies included:
- Transitioning to a hyperconverged infrastructure for greater operational agility and simplified management
- Centralizing licensing and IT management to reduce administrative burden and compliance risks
- Streamlining backup and disaster recovery by moving secondary sites to the public cloud, reducing the need for duplicate hardware and enabling elastic provisioning
- Enabling on-demand scalability, allowing the company to add resources quickly as business needs changed, both vertically and horizontally
- Implementing cloud-based disaster recovery scripts to further optimize operational and data center costs
The transformation subsequently delivered immediate improvements in system resilience, operational stability, and lifecycle management. Security patching and version upgrades, which previously carried risks of downtime and required extensive planning, had become predictable and seamless. The firm also achieved measurable financial returns by avoiding projected spikes in licensing renewals and reducing its data center footprint.
Yew noted: “The ease of management post-migration has been the most visible benefit. My team now spends far less time managing infrastructure and more time supporting the business. We’ve reduced our server racks from three to just one — cutting down space, power and cooling needs. It’s a marked efficiency gain.”
The firm’s IT platform now allows for rapid scaling in response to evolving business requirements. “When urgent demands arise, we can simply add new nodes to the cluster. For cloud-based expansion, we can offload workloads seamlessly,” Yew added.
Continual DX journey ahead
With its foundational IT architecture streamlined, the company is now turning its attention to advanced workloads and future-proofing its operations. “As part of our application modernisation strategy, we are evaluating platforms for container workloads. At the same time, we’ve started exploring AI initiatives in the public cloud, with the eventual goal of bringing select AI workloads on-premise,” Yew confirmed, adding that the technology partner that executed this transformation, Nutanix, had provided the flexibility, scalability, and support needed to modernize IT operations and prepare for next-generation workloads.
Nutanix’s platform, according to a spokesperson, is designed to “support organizations seeking to modernize IT and prepare for next-generation workloads.”
By re-architecting its infrastructure and preparing for emerging technologies, the insurer’s DX experience can serve as a case study of how financial services firms can achieve agility, compliance, and sustainable innovation in a rapidly changing landscape.