The Resilience Opportunity: Building on Strong Foundations

By: | April 12, 2026

Peter L. Miller, CPCU, MS, MBA, is president and chief executive officer of The Institutes Risk & Insurance Knowledge Group and a member of its Senior Management Team.

Insurers are making meaningful progress in how they approach resilience, according to a recent survey by the International Insurance Society, an organization affiliated with The Institutes. The findings of the IIS survey, “Resilience in Focus: Gaps and Opportunities for Insurers,” also highlight exciting opportunities to accelerate our impact.

The momentum is clear. Resilience has captured insurers’ attention. More than half of surveyed companies prioritize disaster resilience and digital resilience as critical focus areas. Climate adaptation follows close behind at 47%. Industry leaders recognize that building resilience helps customers mitigate risks and bounce back faster from losses. They see it as both a strategic imperative and a competitive advantage.

The opportunity ahead is equally clear. While resilience resonates as a priority, only one in four companies report that it’s “very” or “extremely” integrated into their strategic objectives. Half describe resilience as “somewhat” or “not at all” integrated into their strategies.

This shows us where to focus next. We’ve established resilience as important. Now we need to embed it more deeply into day-to-day operations and decision making.

The IIS survey helps identify the next steps. Forty-one percent cite unclear definitions of “resilience” as a challenge. This makes sense — resilience means different things in different contexts. Clarifying our definitions will help us execute more effectively.

Thirty-seven percent point to opportunities to strengthen public-private partnerships. These collaborative frameworks are essential for tackling systemic risks. Budget considerations and talent development also emerged as focus areas. Smaller firms particularly emphasize building internal capabilities, with 45% highlighting skill development as a priority.

Consider what insurer-supported resilience looks like in practice. We help customers strengthen roofs against hurricanes. We install IoT sensors to prevent electrical fires. We implement wildfire mitigation strategies. This is resilience in action. We’re reducing the likelihood of losses while ensuring that when events occur, the damage is less severe and recovery happens faster.

Technology adoption by insurers is gaining momentum, according to the IIS report. About half of respondents report that AI and machine learning have improved their resilience strategies. This is particularly true in underwriting, customer engagement, and claims handling.

Customer education by insurers shows similar momentum. Sixty-four percent use digital content to educate customers about resilience. Fifty-six percent employ agent and broker training. These scalable approaches are reaching customers effectively.

Looking ahead, insurers are preparing for the next chapter. They anticipate cyber threats, climate change, and geopolitical instability as key resilience challenges over the next five years.

The path forward builds on our current momentum. We’re moving resilience from concept to practice. This means refining our definitions to drive clear action. It means investing in talent and technology that power resilience initiatives. It means deepening public-private partnerships. And it means expanding how we engage customers and communities.

Most importantly, it means recognizing that resilience isn’t separate from our core business. It is our business. Every investment in helping customers prevent losses advances the benefit to society as a whole. Every partnership that strengthens communities against disasters creates value. Every technology deployment that enables faster recovery demonstrates insurance at its best.

The survey confirms what many of us already know — resilience matters deeply to insurance companies and the customers they serve. Now we have the opportunity to translate that conviction into an even greater impact. &

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