The Florida Office of Insurance Regulation’s agenda for its April 15-16 Insurance Summit includes sessions on financial reporting by insurers, changes in data calls, and compliance with orders, along with insights from insurance executives on the use of artificial intelligence.
Registration for the two-day Tallahassee conference is open until March 30 and can be accessed . Attendees will hear from Florida Commissioner Michael Yaworsky and deputy commissioners, along with California Insurance Commissioner Richard Lara, Missouri Director Angela Nelson, and Louisiana Commissioner Tim Temple.
Other panelists at the summit will include a consumer representative, OIR’s general counsel and the head of data analytics and insurance technology for Conning, an investment firm focused on the insurance industry. One session will help insurers complete applications, such as those for certificates of authority, changing officers, or expanding into Florida, all of which can be exhaustive and often lead to mistakes by carriers, an OIR official said.
The summit will be at the Augustus B. Turnbull III Florida State Conference Center on the campus of Florida State University. The full agenda is .
Ten days later, Duck Creek Technologies hosts its three-day conference in Orlando on the future of insurance technology. The Formation ’26 event will examine the tech firm’s vision for agentic A.I. and how it will help insurers “reshape decision-making, automation, and operational agility.” Sessions will include technological changes for the industry, educational sessions, zero-touch claims, and data usage.
The conference will be April 27-29 at the Signia by Hilton Bonnet Creek Resort in Orlando. Registration information is and the agenda is .
Topics InsurTech Data Driven Artificial Intelligence Florida
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.

US Home Insurance Prices Set to Keep Rising With Severe Weather
After Milton’s Damage to Stadium, St. Pete Votes to Raise Coverage to $50M
Iran-Linked Hackers Take Aim at US, Other Targets, Raising Risk of Cyberattacks
US $20B Reinsurance Plan Unlikely to Restart Gulf Shipping Without Liability Cover 

