- Inefficient core business system (1,600 MIPS) residing in an IBM mainframe
- System inflexibility affecting availability, performance, reliability, and capacity
- Costly mainframe technology impacting agility
- Infrastructure not optimal for batch processing, transactions, and online trading partners
Meritz Fire Insurance offers car, bundled, health, and accident insurance, along with pension and savings products.
Its annual revenue is in the billions of dollars, with annual growth at about 10%, and its number of contracts is in the millions.
The insurer has close to 100 online trading partners, located all over the world, and Its core business systems serves tens of thousands of users.
Meritz Fire Insurance’s core business system (1,600 MIPS) was housed in an IBM mainframe. Each year, there was a noticeable increase in the costs of maintaining the mainframe and its footprint of 19,000 batch processes. In addition, concurrent processing and sub-optimal transaction application speed were affecting the insurer’s bottom line and business agility.
The company needed a different and more efficient approach that could address policyholder and transaction growth with high availability and capacity, increased stability, and expandability. They wanted a lower-cost, more manageable environment, and they wanted it fast. Therefore, they decided to migrate applications and data from their IBM mainframe to an open system environment.