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1 Aug 2025
Is embedded insurance right for your business?
E-commerce in India has matured. Customers are shopping across categories, paying digitally, and getting orders delivered to remote towns in days.
E-commerce in India has matured. Customers are shopping across categories, paying digitally, and getting orders delivered to remote towns in days.
E-commerce in India has matured. Customers are shopping across categories, paying digitally, and getting orders delivered to remote towns in days.
Insurance
5 min read
5 min read
5 min read


Is Embedded Protection Right for Your Business?
More companies are offering embedded protection, but that doesn’t mean every business should.
If you're considering it, the real question is whether protection makes sense for your product, your customers, and the way you operate.
This guide outlines when embedded protection works, and when it doesn’t, so you can make a clear decision without the noise.
Why Some Businesses Are Adding Protection
Before deciding whether it’s a fit, it helps to understand why others are exploring it.
A Steady, Predictable Revenue Layer
Protection is typically paid for in recurring premiums. That means stable income over time, layered on top of your core revenue. It’s not a growth hack, but for some businesses, it becomes a meaningful secondary stream.
More importantly, you’re not chasing new customers. You’re monetising existing ones—people who already trust your product.
It Adds Stickiness
When customers get protection through your platform, they’re more likely to stay.
Not because of a lock-in. Simply because the experience is complete. They don’t need to go elsewhere to manage risk, and that convenience often translates to longer relationships.
It Fits Into the Flow
People rarely go out of their way to buy protection. But when it’s offered at the right moment, in a way that makes sense, it gets adopted.
That’s why protection often works better when embedded. The friction is lower. The decision is easier. And if it’s built well, it doesn’t feel like insurance at all.
When does Protection Actually Makes Sense
It’s a Natural Extension of your core product
If your product is valuable, time-sensitive, or essential to someone’s day-to-day, protection can make sense. Especially if it’s something they’d reasonably want to insure, guarantee, or cover.
A few examples:
Electronics marketplaces offering warranties
Platforms supporting small businesses with continuity tools
Mobility services offering basic accident coverage
Protection works best when it solves a question your customer is already asking—even if only subconsciously.
You Have Distribution, Not Just Traffic
If you already have a consistent base of customers, protection can improve your average revenue per user. Especially when there's frequency or depth of engagement.
The stronger your distribution, the less effort it takes to scale protection. You’re not adding a new line of business, you’re expanding what your existing one can offer.
You’re Willing to Treat It Like a Product
Protection only works when it’s thoughtfully designed. That doesn’t mean complexity. It means relevance, timing, and simplicity.
If you’re already in the habit of improving your product based on customer needs, you’re in a better position to offer protection well and improve it over time.
When Protection Might Not Be the Right Move
Your Team Is Stretched Thin
Even simple integrations take time—whether that’s design, legal, or technical work. If your team is at capacity, forcing in protection can create more friction than value.
Some businesses come back to it later, when there’s more room to do it properly.
You’re Not Set Up to Navigate Compliance
Protection isn’t a regular feature. It comes with regulations, especially if you're dealing with insurance categories.
You don’t need to handle it all yourself, but you do need to care about doing it right. If you’re not able to take that on, or don’t want to rely on a partner, it’s worth waiting.
You’re Looking for a Quick Add-On
Protection won’t work if it’s just another button on your site. If it’s not designed with context, your customers will treat it as noise.
This isn’t about building a huge new team, but it does require intent. Otherwise, it’s just shelfware.
The Real Questions to Ask
Instead of “Should I offer protection?” ask:
Are there risks my customers already think about?
Do I have the time and structure to support a protection layer properly?
If the answer is no, don’t force it.
If the answer is yes, it may be worth exploring seriously.
Protection isn’t about ticking boxes. It’s about helping your product feel more complete and more worth returning to.
Still unsure?
Assurekit helps businesses evaluate whether protection is worth pursuing, and if so, how to do it without adding unnecessary complexity.
If you're thinking about it, we're happy to help you think it through.
Is Embedded Protection Right for Your Business?
More companies are offering embedded protection, but that doesn’t mean every business should.
If you're considering it, the real question is whether protection makes sense for your product, your customers, and the way you operate.
This guide outlines when embedded protection works, and when it doesn’t, so you can make a clear decision without the noise.
Why Some Businesses Are Adding Protection
Before deciding whether it’s a fit, it helps to understand why others are exploring it.
A Steady, Predictable Revenue Layer
Protection is typically paid for in recurring premiums. That means stable income over time, layered on top of your core revenue. It’s not a growth hack, but for some businesses, it becomes a meaningful secondary stream.
More importantly, you’re not chasing new customers. You’re monetising existing ones—people who already trust your product.
It Adds Stickiness
When customers get protection through your platform, they’re more likely to stay.
Not because of a lock-in. Simply because the experience is complete. They don’t need to go elsewhere to manage risk, and that convenience often translates to longer relationships.
It Fits Into the Flow
People rarely go out of their way to buy protection. But when it’s offered at the right moment, in a way that makes sense, it gets adopted.
That’s why protection often works better when embedded. The friction is lower. The decision is easier. And if it’s built well, it doesn’t feel like insurance at all.
When does Protection Actually Makes Sense
It’s a Natural Extension of your core product
If your product is valuable, time-sensitive, or essential to someone’s day-to-day, protection can make sense. Especially if it’s something they’d reasonably want to insure, guarantee, or cover.
A few examples:
Electronics marketplaces offering warranties
Platforms supporting small businesses with continuity tools
Mobility services offering basic accident coverage
Protection works best when it solves a question your customer is already asking—even if only subconsciously.
You Have Distribution, Not Just Traffic
If you already have a consistent base of customers, protection can improve your average revenue per user. Especially when there's frequency or depth of engagement.
The stronger your distribution, the less effort it takes to scale protection. You’re not adding a new line of business, you’re expanding what your existing one can offer.
You’re Willing to Treat It Like a Product
Protection only works when it’s thoughtfully designed. That doesn’t mean complexity. It means relevance, timing, and simplicity.
If you’re already in the habit of improving your product based on customer needs, you’re in a better position to offer protection well and improve it over time.
When Protection Might Not Be the Right Move
Your Team Is Stretched Thin
Even simple integrations take time—whether that’s design, legal, or technical work. If your team is at capacity, forcing in protection can create more friction than value.
Some businesses come back to it later, when there’s more room to do it properly.
You’re Not Set Up to Navigate Compliance
Protection isn’t a regular feature. It comes with regulations, especially if you're dealing with insurance categories.
You don’t need to handle it all yourself, but you do need to care about doing it right. If you’re not able to take that on, or don’t want to rely on a partner, it’s worth waiting.
You’re Looking for a Quick Add-On
Protection won’t work if it’s just another button on your site. If it’s not designed with context, your customers will treat it as noise.
This isn’t about building a huge new team, but it does require intent. Otherwise, it’s just shelfware.
The Real Questions to Ask
Instead of “Should I offer protection?” ask:
Are there risks my customers already think about?
Do I have the time and structure to support a protection layer properly?
If the answer is no, don’t force it.
If the answer is yes, it may be worth exploring seriously.
Protection isn’t about ticking boxes. It’s about helping your product feel more complete and more worth returning to.
Still unsure?
Assurekit helps businesses evaluate whether protection is worth pursuing, and if so, how to do it without adding unnecessary complexity.
If you're thinking about it, we're happy to help you think it through.

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Assurekit is a full-stack digital insurance platform built for growth, that enables anyone to create, sell and manage contextual insurance products in a plug-and-play manner



©2024 Assurekit technology & service pvt ltd

Assurekit is a full-stack digital insurance platform built for growth, that enables anyone to create, sell and manage contextual insurance products in a plug-and-play manner



©2024 Assurekit technology & service pvt ltd

Assurekit is a full-stack digital insurance platform built for growth, that enables anyone to create, sell and manage contextual insurance products in a plug-and-play manner



©2024 Assurekit technology & service pvt ltd