Origami Risk adds AI insurance program management to RMIS platform
Origami Risk folded policy, placement, quote, endorsement, and analytics into one AI-driven RMIS workflow, betting buyers want less spreadsheet drift.
Origami Risk pushed its RMIS platform deeper into insurance operations with new AI-powered program management tools that aim to replace the stitched-together spreadsheets, email threads, and manual handoffs many risk teams still rely on. The release, introduced on June 15, 2026, is built around one idea: RMIS should do more than store risk data, it should actively run the insurance program workflow.
The new capabilities connect policy, placement, quote, endorsement, and analytics work inside a single platform experience. Origami Risk said the AI-enabled functions include policy data ingestion, placement management, quote tracking and comparison, endorsement tracking, and program-level analytics. Taken together, those steps cover much of the day-to-day administration around a commercial insurance program, from pulling in policy information to comparing quotes and watching changes as endorsements come through.

That matters because program management is still where a lot of software promises run into operational reality. Risk teams and carriers often have the data, but not in one place, and the handoffs between tools are where mistakes creep in. A quote gets rekeyed incorrectly, an endorsement is missed, a policy version is buried in email, and the next renewal cycle starts with bad information. Origami Risk is betting that tighter workflow convergence can cut those breaks in the chain and make the whole process easier to audit.
The pitch also shows where AI is being judged in insurance software now. It is not enough for a platform to summarize text or answer questions on top of existing records. Buyers want to know whether AI can remove manual work, improve decision speed, and make regulated workflows more dependable. In this case, that means less time spent chasing documents and reconciling versions, and more time spent understanding program performance and spotting gaps before they become problems.
The bigger move is strategic. Origami Risk is treating RMIS less like a repository and more like an operating layer for insurance programs, with AI supporting the workflow instead of sitting beside it. That is the direction the market has been moving, from point solutions toward orchestration, and this release is a clear push to make that shift visible inside one platform.
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