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#REDIRECT [[Definition:Time-and-materials contract (T&M)]]
⏱️ '''Time-and-materials contract''' is a commercial arrangement, widely used in insurance technology and consulting engagements, under which the buyer — typically an [[Definition:Insurance carrier | insurer]], [[Definition:Managing general agent (MGA) | MGA]], or [[Definition:Insurance broker | broker]] — pays the service provider based on the actual hours worked at agreed-upon labor rates plus the cost of materials consumed, rather than a predetermined fixed price for the entire deliverable. In the insurance sector, this structure commonly governs engagements where the scope of work is difficult to define precisely at the outset: custom development of [[Definition:Policy administration system (PAS) | policy administration]] modules, complex [[Definition:Technology migration | system migration]] projects, [[Definition:Actuarial science | actuarial]] consulting assignments, or specialized [[Definition:Regulatory compliance | regulatory compliance]] implementations where requirements may evolve as regulators issue new guidance.
⚙️ Under a time-and-materials arrangement, the contract specifies hourly or daily rates for each category of personnel — architects, developers, project managers, business analysts, [[Definition:Actuary | actuaries]] — along with markup percentages on any third-party materials such as software licenses or hardware. Most insurance organizations negotiate safeguards to prevent runaway costs: rate caps, not-to-exceed ceilings that trigger renegotiation once spending reaches a certain threshold, and requirements for regular progress reporting against estimated effort. These terms are typically documented either as standalone agreements or as statements of work under a broader [[Definition:Master services agreement | master services agreement]]. The buyer retains flexibility to redirect the provider's effort as priorities shift — essential in insurance environments where a regulatory mandate or market event can abruptly reprioritize an [[Definition:Information technology (IT) | IT]] program — but assumes the risk that total cost may exceed initial estimates if the work proves more complex than anticipated.
📌 Choosing between a time-and-materials structure and alternatives like fixed-price or [[Definition:Performance-based fee | performance-based fee]] models is a consequential decision for insurance organizations undertaking significant technology or operational programs. Time-and-materials contracts work best when requirements are genuinely uncertain and the insurer has strong internal project-management capabilities to monitor progress, manage scope, and hold vendors accountable for productivity. They are less suitable when the deliverable is well-defined and the insurer lacks oversight capacity, since the vendor has limited incentive to deliver efficiently without contractual cost constraints. In practice, many large insurance programs blend models: a time-and-materials arrangement for an initial discovery and prototyping phase, transitioning to fixed-price delivery once specifications are locked down. Understanding these trade-offs has become increasingly important as insurers deepen their reliance on external technology partners to modernize operations and compete in a digitally evolving marketplace.
'''Related concepts:'''
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* [[Definition:Master services agreement]]
* [[Definition:Performance-based fee]]
* [[Definition:Service-level agreement (SLA)]]
* [[Definition:Technology migration]]
* [[Definition:Outsourcing]]
* [[Definition:Vendor management]]
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