Insurance Operations Support Analyst Job Questions & Answers

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What channel does he give a speech on tonight? My teacher said fox but i checked the channel guide and it's Simpsons and other stuff. Please let me know what time and what channel. For DIRECTV please!
1 answer - Asked By: VickyluvsSHINee - 8/30/2012
He looked pretty good. No need to hear from CONS. We know what you think. Try to control yourself. Thanks.
16 answers - Asked By: Mary - 8/31/2012
8 answers - Asked By: wolf - 8/31/2012
Like an accountant or a stock broker? Any others?
3 answers - Asked By: AndyMan - 9/1/2007
I wonder what is the best career in US?and i mean career that pays good money
1 answer - Asked By: walid g - 8/17/2007
I completed cfa and mba and now looking for job please give details of financial placement consultant addresses to my email id and if you have any internal vacancies in kpo and financial services please inform me.
1 answer - Asked By: m2_srinivas - 3/28/2007
A closer look at some of Mitt Romney's claims in his speech Thursday closing the Republican National Convention: ROMNEY: "To assure every entrepreneur and every job creator that their investments in America will not vanish as have those in Greece, we will cut the deficit and put America on track to a balanced budget." THE FACTS: Romney promised to cut $500 billion per year from the federal budget by 2016 to bring spending below 20?f the U.S. economy, and to balance it entirely by 2020. But he's remarkably vague on how he would do that. He has offered ideas such as repealing President Barack Obama's health care law, which actually is projected to save money overall, and cutting smaller areas of government spending such as foreign aid and Amtrak subsidies. Some of his priorities, such as increasing military spending and reversing $716 billion worth of Obama's cuts to Medicare, would make the job more difficult. Romney has steered clear of proposals to touch Medicare and Social Security in the short run; that leaves a relatively limited portion of the $3.6-trillion federal budget to cut. He also proposed to cut tax rates while ending some deductions and exemptions, but he hasn't detailed which ones. ROMNEY: "And let me make this very clear -- unlike President Obama, I will not raise taxes on the middle class." THE FACTS: Obama enacted several laws that could raise taxes for some middle-class families. Other Obama laws, however, reduced taxes for many more such families. A 2009 law increased the federal cigarette tax to pay for expanding a health insurance program for low-income children. Also, the massive new health care law imposes fines for not getting health insurance. The Supreme Court called the fines taxes in the ruling that found the law constitutional. However, the 2009 economic stimulus package contained tax cuts for middle- and low-income families. One, the Making Work Pay tax credit, gave millions of working families up to $800 a year in 2009 and 2010. Obama also signed a temporary reduction in the Social Security payroll tax for 2011 and 2012. The payroll tax cut shifts $1,000 a year to a worker making $50,000 in wages. Romney says he wouldn't raise taxes on anyone. However, his tax plan would let the temporary tax cuts in Obama's stimulus package expire, resulting in higher taxes for some low- and middle-income families. ROMNEY: "I have a plan to create 12 million new jobs. It has five steps." THE FACTS: No one says he can't, but economic forecasters are divided on his ability to deliver. He'd have to nearly double the anemic pace of job growth lately. That's conceivable in a healthy economy. Moody's Analytics, one financial research operation, expects nearly that many jobs to return over the next four years no matter who occupies the White House -- provided there are no more economic bumps. Other analysts questioned Romney's rosy job promises. Romney's steps call for deficit cuts that he has not spelled out, and a march toward energy independence that past presidents promised but didn't deliver. Unlike Obama, he does not support curbs on demand; namely the much higher mileage standards that are coming into effect. Romney proposes boosting supplies, with freer access to development of oil, gas, coal and more. Independent energy analysts say supply and demand both have to be in the equation for energy independence to be achieved. ROMNEY: "His $716-billion cut to Medicare to finance Obamacare will both hurt today's seniors, and depress innovation -- and jobs -- in medicine." THE FACTS: The cuts in Obama's health care law hit hospitals, insurance companies and other service providers -- not seniors directly. Those cuts are being phased in over several years, and as yet they do not appear to have harmed the program.
3 answers - Asked By: EvilChild101 - 9/1/2012
A closer look at some of Mitt Romney's claims in his speech Thursday closing the Republican National Convention: ROMNEY: "To assure every entrepreneur and every job creator that their investments in America will not vanish as have those in Greece, we will cut the deficit and put America on track to a balanced budget." THE FACTS: Romney promised to cut $500 billion per year from the federal budget by 2016 to bring spending below 20?f the U.S. economy, and to balance it entirely by 2020. But he's remarkably vague on how he would do that. He has offered ideas such as repealing President Barack Obama's health care law, which actually is projected to save money overall, and cutting smaller areas of government spending such as foreign aid and Amtrak subsidies. Some of his priorities, such as increasing military spending and reversing $716 billion worth of Obama's cuts to Medicare, would make the job more difficult. Romney has steered clear of proposals to touch Medicare and Social Security in the short run; that leaves a relatively limited portion of the $3.6-trillion federal budget to cut. He also proposed to cut tax rates while ending some deductions and exemptions, but he hasn't detailed which ones. ROMNEY: "And let me make this very clear -- unlike President Obama, I will not raise taxes on the middle class." THE FACTS: Obama enacted several laws that could raise taxes for some middle-class families. Other Obama laws, however, reduced taxes for many more such families. A 2009 law increased the federal cigarette tax to pay for expanding a health insurance program for low-income children. Also, the massive new health care law imposes fines for not getting health insurance. The Supreme Court called the fines taxes in the ruling that found the law constitutional. However, the 2009 economic stimulus package contained tax cuts for middle- and low-income families. One, the Making Work Pay tax credit, gave millions of working families up to $800 a year in 2009 and 2010. Obama also signed a temporary reduction in the Social Security payroll tax for 2011 and 2012. The payroll tax cut shifts $1,000 a year to a worker making $50,000 in wages. Romney says he wouldn't raise taxes on anyone. However, his tax plan would let the temporary tax cuts in Obama's stimulus package expire, resulting in higher taxes for some low- and middle-income families. ROMNEY: "I have a plan to create 12 million new jobs. It has five steps." THE FACTS: No one says he can't, but economic forecasters are divided on his ability to deliver. He'd have to nearly double the anemic pace of job growth lately. That's conceivable in a healthy economy. Moody's Analytics, one financial research operation, expects nearly that many jobs to return over the next four years no matter who occupies the White House -- provided there are no more economic bumps. Other analysts questioned Romney's rosy job promises. Romney's steps call for deficit cuts that he has not spelled out, and a march toward energy independence that past presidents promised but didn't deliver. Unlike Obama, he does not support curbs on demand; namely the much higher mileage standards that are coming into effect. Romney proposes boosting supplies, with freer access to development of oil, gas, coal and more. Independent energy analysts say supply and demand both have to be in the equation for energy independence to be achieved. ROMNEY: "His $716-billion cut to Medicare to finance Obamacare will both hurt today's seniors, and depress innovation -- and jobs -- in medicine." THE FACTS: The cuts in Obama's health care law hit hospitals, insurance companies and other service providers -- not seniors directly. Those cuts are being phased in over several years, and as yet they do not appear to have harmed the program.
6 answers - Asked By: EvilChild101 - 9/1/2012
Alright. Here's the deal. I'm three decades old and I need to choose a career right now. I am going to give you all the information you could possibly need to help point me in the right direction. 1. In the order of the quality most preferred, I would like to find a career that provides: - a decent salary - is recession resistant - provides real opportunity for career advancement - can be initially tranied for in 2 years or less - offers flexible scheduling options (10 hour shifts, 12 hour shifts, etc) 2. Here is my personal profile that may bar me from or better qualify me for some of the suggestions you already have in mind. - 30 years old - good driving history - no criminal history or arrests - never been terminated from a job - very poor credit (thanks to the economy and loss of work) - no illegal substance use at all or bad habits such as tobacco use - good physical condition - high school diploma and around 38 college credits via computer crime investigations - single with no dependents and no tie downs - can travel heavily 3. Here is my professional profile that overviews my past experiences. - hospitality management and servicing - corporate security director - information technology support, client and server side (eight certifications held) - some basic insurance claim experience 4. Here are other areas of strong knowledge I have acquired. - law enforcement communications and operations such as dispatching and policing - private contract security operations - debt collection - aviation including general and some commercial knowledge 5. Here are some examples of a few things I would enjoy doing. - working in or around water in warm climates - traveling - policing 6. Here are some examples of a few things I don't want to do. - nursing - taxi cab driver (hah) - retail work of any kind even at a corporate level - dentist - paramedic / emt - firefighter - postal worker - oil field worker 7. Below are ideas I have already considered but probably can not successfully pursue because of my financial circumstance (required security clearances) or my age: - faa air traffic controller - most government jobs (due to bad credit and pending balances) - US coastguard officer - full time insurance adjuster - most financial services positions Any ideas you can give me would be great. Although my financial circumstance can rule out quite a few jobs that are either financially or information sensitive, not all good careers have credit requirements. So throw me ideas that maybe I haven't thought of! Thanks guys!
1 answer - Asked By: bzimmyb - 12/9/2009
I'm Wez. I'm a maths graduate who has no idea what I want to go for as a career. I tried secondary maths teaching but it wasn't for due to the lack of variety and large amount of out of hours work. I'm wanting a job where I get a lot of people interaction. Ideally something with some variety and one that keeps me very busy in work hours but I can put to rest once I am out of work. I honestly have no idea as to what is out there like that and it is so intimidating. I'm with recruitment agencies but they just tell me I need to think about choosing something specific. It's a nightmare that I do not know where to begin in solving. The career doesn't necessarily have to be something high paying or degree related. I just need something to focus on that I would have a decent chance of enjoying. Thought you could maybe help me out and give some suggestions,
3 answers - Asked By: - 8/12/2011
Was just wondering too those/ of you who watched the republican convention. have you decided after watching all of those speeches in your minds yet as too who you really really want as your president in the next election. have you made up your mind that hey romney is your choice or obama?? you don't have to tell who it is just in your mind have you made that critical choice yet.???
10 answers - Asked By: Adam - 8/31/2012
I'm watching his speech right now and it doesn't matter how much I try to believe his sincerity, I still get a sneaky, unsettling vibe when I look at that face of his. It almost looks like he's KNOWS he's lying and trying not to laugh. I am NOT voting for that man. As far as I'm concerned, anyone who is trying to be PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES and won't release more than 2 years of his tax returns (as of now, he's only release 1 and a half) just a few months before the election definitely has something to hide. I don't trust him. Plain and simple.
16 answers - Asked By: CK - 8/30/2012
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Insurance Career Tools

Operations Support Analyst - Insurance

Salaries

$29,000.00 - $68,850.00
Typical Salary for Operations Support Analyst - Insurance
(11 Respondents)
Source: Monster.com Careerbenchmarking Tool

Education / Training

Bachelor's
44.4%
Some College Coursework Completed
44.4%
Master's
11.1%
(9 Respondents)
Source: Monster.com Careerbenchmarking Tool

Operations Support Analyst - Insurance

Identifies information requirements; develops and maintains processing systems; provides support to customers.
Rate of Growth
0 %
Size of Industry in 2006:
N/A
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, May 2006

Related Skills

Customer Focus
Customer Service
Data Entry Skills
Large System Implementation

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