Definition:Learning and development (L&D)
📚 Learning and development (L&D) encompasses the formal and informal programmes, resources, and strategies that insurance organizations deploy to build, maintain, and enhance the knowledge and skills of their workforce. In an industry where technical expertise is heavily regulated — underwriters must understand evolving risk landscapes, actuaries must stay current with standards like IFRS 17 and local reserving requirements, and compliance professionals must track shifting regulatory expectations — L&D is not a discretionary function but a core operational necessity.
⚙️ Insurance L&D programmes typically cover a broad spectrum: mandatory continuing professional education for licensed roles, technical training on new policy administration systems or claims platforms, soft-skills development for client-facing staff, and specialized courses on emerging topics such as cyber risk, climate risk, and artificial intelligence applications. Delivery methods have evolved significantly, with many insurers and insurtechs shifting toward blended models that combine digital learning platforms, virtual classrooms, and on-the-job projects. In regulated markets, L&D also directly supports fit and proper compliance: regulators in jurisdictions governed by Solvency II, as well as authorities in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Japan, expect firms to demonstrate that individuals holding key function holder designations maintain adequate competence through ongoing professional development.
💡 Effective L&D functions do more than check regulatory boxes — they serve as engines for organizational agility. When an insurer enters a new line of business, such as parametric insurance or embedded insurance, L&D teams design rapid upskilling programmes that bring underwriting, distribution, and technology staff up to speed. Similarly, during major system migrations or post-merger integrations, L&D capacity determines how quickly the workforce can adopt new processes without disruption to policyholders. Insurers that treat L&D as a strategic investment — linked to leadership development and succession planning — consistently outperform peers in employee engagement surveys and talent retention metrics, both of which matter in an industry grappling with generational workforce transitions.
Related concepts: