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Airmic Conference 2014 Roads to Resilience

Airmic Conference 2014 Roads to Resilience. Wednesday 18 th June 2014. Arnout Van der Veer. Airmic. Martin Caddick. PwC. Ian Canham. Lockton. Neil Allcroft. Crawford and Company. Agenda. Introduction to Roads to Resilience, Arnout Van Der Veer, Airmic Board

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Airmic Conference 2014 Roads to Resilience

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  1. Airmic Conference 2014Roads to Resilience • Wednesday 18th June 2014 • Arnout Van der Veer • Airmic • Martin Caddick • PwC • Ian Canham • Lockton • Neil Allcroft • Crawford and Company

  2. Agenda • Introduction to Roads to Resilience, Arnout Van Der Veer, Airmic Board • Resilience – Board, Culture and Management Views, Martin Caddick, PwC • Practical Progress, Neil Allcroft, Crawford & Company • Insurance considerations, Ian Canham, Lockton • Open Discussion

  3. Roads to Resilience • In depth case studies of; • AIG • Drax Power • IHG • JLR • Reviewing • People and culture • Business Structure • Strategy, tactics and operations • Leadership and governance • ODA • TTP • Virgin Atlantic • Zurich Insurance Case study research into what does ‘good’ look like - Cranfield Business School 2013

  4. Preparing for Roads to Resilience • Catastrophic failures of risk management appear to take everyone by surprise… • …and yet with the benefit of hindsight the underlying causes of these failures appear obvious • Can we apply the lessons of hindsight to planning for the future?! Conclusions of Roads to Ruin -

  5. Roads to Ruin: Seven key points of failure • Board experience, skill and lack of NED control • Board risk blindness • Inadequate leadership on ethos and culture • Defective internal communication • Organisational complexity • Risks from remuneration structures • Risk Glass Ceiling

  6. Roads to Resilience Identified Key Questions and Enablers • How do resilient organisations oversee and manage their risk management strategy? • What are the enablers, drivers and risk management practices in place? • How do they measure the results and impact of risk management activities? • What are their governance (and empowerment) controls and strategies? • What are the critical leadership and business structure issues? Questions Enablers: • People and culture • Business structure • Strategy, tactics and operations • Leadership and governance

  7. Roads to Resilience Outcomes: 5 Resulting Principles • Resilient companies have exceptional risk radar to detect changes in the external and internal situation • Resilient companies have diversified resourcesandassets to facilitate alternative approaches • Resilient companies build strong relationships and networks, both internally and externally • Resilient companies have the ability to respond rapidly and decisively to an emerging crisis • Resilient companies review and adapt based on experience and changing circumstances

  8. Components of Principles and Business Enablers Principles: Business Enablers:

  9. Roads to Resilience: Model for Resilience

  10. PwC – Board, Culture and Management ViewsSome reflections…. • The traditional ‘protective disciplines’ are not enough. You can do these well and still fail. • It is not going to get easier – increasing speed and complexity makes risk less predictable. • Cannot be done in silos - resilience requires leadership from the top. • What We Know • Who We Are • How We Do It • What We Do

  11. Hot Topic? Academia : Harvard, NYU Cranfield, Leeds, Glasgow, Warwick

  12. Barriers and challenges The fog of resilience • You need to: • be able to measure key factors • use what you have, but cut across silos • discuss, debate, make intelligent decisions based on key factors Lack of appetite Conflicting definitions Resilience False assurance Limited horizon (time) Lack of a delivery plan – too conceptual Limited/no consensus Protectionism Preconceptions

  13. Crawford – Practical Progress • New Risks into ERM Process • Classic frequency/severity matrix • Need a monetary value to inform risk appetite for emerging non physical risks • When does solvency, interest cover, credit rating, dividend cover become stressed? • What is the $£ value of risk appetite per risk and in the aggregate • Real problems assessing these values in respect of; • Cyber • Reputation • Regulation • Lack of historic reference points to provide guidance and benchmarking.

  14. Practical Progress • Scenario Planning • More organisations/corporates are doing pre planning workshops within their businesses, driven by ERM compliance. This helps to engage and inform the risk management function more widely with operations • Engages with profit drivers e.g. Markets, Supply Chain, Unique Delivery and sources of competitive advantage • Drives out the key $£ risks and forces quantification and prioritisation • Currently this is episodic in many companies, rather than an embedded and living process • What should risk managers and insurers be thinking and doing?

  15. Lockton - Insurance Considerations • Insurance and the Road Series of Reports • The majority of Airmic members are insurance buyers • Roads to Ruin found that insurance makes no difference in protecting companies in times of ruin • Roads to Resilience did not identify insurance purchasing as a required enabler to a resilient company • Is this fair and if so, can we make insurance more relevant?

  16. Insurance Considerations • Do insurers take these findings into account? • Long term robustness and the identification of required principles and enablers provide longer term underwriting data, rather than short term lagging indicators such as claims.

  17. Insurance Considerations • Do buyers take these findings into account? • Short term buying patterns and market behaviours inhibit insurers ability to meet the real risks facing the Insured

  18. Insurance Considerations • Does the report appeal to an insurer’s/client’s beliefs but clashes with their actions? • Is there a fundamental mismatch between long term companies resilient needs and insurance market behaviours, which means insurance will always be a tactical not strategic purchase? • Can insurers differentiate risks from both a pricing and coverage perspective on long term resilience findings versus short term indicators? • Will clients take a longer term view of pricing even if it moves against market trends? • What risks are insurers willing to accept to create true risk partnership with their clients to ensure insurers get a fair share of the risk financing spend?

  19. Insurance Considerations • Or are brokers to blame?

  20. Final Observations • Effective risk management is NOT just about compliance • Risk is at the heart of strategy and effective risk management should be an enabler and a potential differentiator • Growth in a flat market can only be achieved by taking risks – these must be calculated and transparent • Reputation is critical and reputation risk management should be prioritised • The tone is set at the top • The information required to take risk aware decisions is most likely to exist already inside the company

  21. Route to Resilience? • How can resilience be achieved? • How can current levels of resilience be measured? • Is wide organisational change required, or does resilience fit with your current agenda? • How do you ensure the Board receive the correct messages? • What barriers to resilience are anticipated? • What would assist you in making your organisation more resilient?

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