In the legal profession, the work is only as strong as its support. A good argument isn't just persuasive, it's backed by citations. You can point to the contract clause, the case, the exhibit, and the chain of reasoning that got you to the conclusion. That's not academic formality. It's how legal work survives scrutiny in a court of law.
Insurance is moving in the same direction.
For decades, insurance operations could lean on experience and muscle memory. A tenured underwriter knew what "this form usually covers." A claims leader knew the standard response posture. A broker knew which markets were flexible. That knowledge still matters, but the environment has changed. Regulators, legal teams, and procurement groups now expect decisions to be documented, explainable, and consistent over time.
"Trust me" is no longer a reasonable operating model.
Why legal workflows look the way they do
Legal work is predicated on the ultimate potential that it will end up in front of a judge. This fear shapes all the work lawyers do.
A motion, an opinion letter, or a contract position might get scrutinized months or years later by a judge, with millions of dollars at stake. The only way to truly prepare for that situation is if the work product is structured to be audited. That's why legal workflows emphasize three things:
Citation. Show exactly where the claim comes from.
Reasoning. Make it possible to retrace the reasoning steps from source to conclusion.
Conclusion. Make it easy for another expert to validate or challenge the conclusion by having a very clear and articulate conclusion.
These practices aren't about slowing work down. They're how the legal industry moves quickly while staying defensible when the stakes rise.
Insurance is discovering the same truth, especially in claims and coverage interpretation.
Insurance is already under similar scrutiny
Insurance has always been regulated, but scrutiny is broader now and comes from more directions, including clients. Decisions can trigger omissions, bad-faith allegations, and liabilities that far exceed a coverage dispute.
State-by-state variability adds another layer. A defensible decision in one jurisdiction may be incomplete or risky in another.
At the same time, the work is deeply document-driven. Policies, endorsements, submissions, claim files, and correspondence are still stored in PDFs, scans, and formats that were created for manual review.
That means insurance decisions are often anchored in unstructured language that must be read carefully, compared across documents, and defended later.
In short, insurance faces legal-like constraints whether it realizes it or not.
The AI factor raises the bar, not just the speed
AI is often discussed as a productivity lever, but in insurance, the real challenge is credibility. When an AI-supported decision gets scrutinized, you need to show the basis for it. If the answer is a black box, you've created a new type of risk.
That's why the industry is increasingly prioritizing accuracy, explainability, and consistency over speed alone.
It's also why "model drift" matters. If a tool's behavior changes over time, it undermines consistency and auditability in regulated workflows.
This is one place where legal has a head start. Many legal technology workflows were designed around precedent and review. The focus is less about generating text and more about interpreting documents with citations and a clear path from source to conclusion.
Insurance now needs the same.
The future of insurance work
This shift isn't theoretical. It changes how teams should define quality.
In an insurance workflow built to withstand scrutiny, a good outcome isn't only correct—it's defensible. That means:
Your conclusions should point back to the policy language. Coverage positions and claim decisions need to be anchored in the actual text, not just institutional memory. Insurance has long depended on expert judgment in how professionals read policies, interpret exclusions, and apply precedent. The next step is making that judgment visible and reproducible.
Your reasoning should be transparent enough for peer review. If a colleague can't follow how you got there, an auditor or regulator won't either. Transparent reasoning isn't a luxury in high-stakes decisions, it's a requirement.
Your process should be consistent across teams and time. Insurance is full of niches and specialized expertise, but inconsistency is costly. As experienced practitioners retire, decision quality can decline if judgment stays trapped in individuals. Understanding the policy is the hardest problem in insurance. You can't solve it with expertise that only exists in people's heads.
Your documentation should be structured for "future you." Claims files, coverage analyses, and underwriting notes should read like work that's expected to be examined later. That's the legal mindset, and it's becoming the insurance mindset.
This is also why many leaders are talking less about flashy AI and more about repeatable operating models. The most valuable AI in insurance will look like consistency, documentation, and fewer surprises.
The practical takeaway for insurance leaders
If you're leading claims, legal, compliance, or brokerage operations, the question isn't whether your teams will use AI and automation. They already are.
The real question is whether you're building systems that will hold up when scrutiny arrives. That means setting standards for citation, traceability, and reviewability in the work itself, not as an extra step at the end.
It also means resisting tools and processes that optimize for speed while sacrificing transparency. In insurance, "close enough" is often where the risk begins.
Insurance is learning a lesson the legal industry learned long ago: when the stakes are high, the work must show its sources.








