One minute you are riding a crest of high moral authority based on the ‘noble cause’ of protecting the lives and livelihoods of Australians.
The next you are squeezed on uncomfortable seats in a brightly-lit room with your industry peers listening to speaker after speaker ruminate on big problems like the ‘trust deficit’ facing insurers, but offering few solutions to fixing its root cause.
Such was the day I spent last week in Sydney at the Financial Services Council’s annual risk insurance gab fest.
Aside from the intelligently comic relief of futurist Mike Walsh, the day was a largely turgid affair. (Why is it that all ‘futurists’ are men with long hair? Another of the great mysteries of the industry conference market).
Mike, complete with all-black attire and a spooky sci-fi sound track, delved into the industry’s future through wry and witty insights about looming artificial intelligence, algorithmic leadership technologies and the digital tsunami that will swamp any remaining old-school dinosaurs and tie wearing actuaries.
Poor actuaries. And the lawyers. I am sure I heard it mentioned somewhere during the day, that the industry would not be in this giant pickle of horribly complex, costly products and rapidly receding reputation were it not for the actuaries and the lawyers conspiring over the years to conceive their lengthy, legalese underwriting documents and impossibly dense insurance contracts.
The problem is that the room full of people who turned up to hear and solve the problems appeared to be either lawyers or long-suffering actuaries. Which might explain the sound of crickets chirruping when it came to question time. Yes, a few well-meaning marketers made a solid point. We need to start now to reverse the trend of complexity, restore consumer trust and fight the good fight of paying legitimate claims.
But that was it. Everyone, including me, was waiting to hear some well-considered thoughts on resolving the major issues. And it never really came. The panel (again, more lawyers) discussing ASIC’s life code of practice ventured into unexpected turf suggesting we need to act with love, and that the implementation of the code should not be ‘half-arsed’. At least there is language there that the average Aussie can understand.
The point is, if the industry were looking to resolve the trust deficit and turn around its failing reputation, there is no silver bullet.
It takes hard work. And it begins with being a worthy adversary in the discussion. Just as the financial planners went from rogues to professionals, the fight is a combination punch of structural reform with overt communication. The communication needs not to defend the old ground, but carve out a new paradigm and bring the market along to that place.
The old place is now overrun with investigative journalists, fee-hungry lawyers and, yes, the occasional actuary hanging on to the certainty of the good old days of tied distribution and analogue telephones.
Bruce Madden is founder and director of Financial Media Services




Agree 110% with Anonymous – the FSC has feathered its own nest all the way along, happily re-directing ALL of the industry’s ills on ‘greedy upfront commission hungry advisers’. The greatest irony is with all the life companies increasing their premium rates anything from 7.5% to 30% in the past 6-12 months – I reckon advisers are now even more crucial in helping life offices to ‘sell’ the need for premium hikes and proposed watering down of future product offerings. Talk about cutting of the hand that feeds you!
What an honest and sad article on the “Financial Services Council’s annual risk insurance gab fest”.
This group have no answers?? Well maybe the truth is that which will never be discussed and should be the way forward – insurers cost reductions to enable premiums to be lowered, more people able to take up insurance and more clients able to claim when its needed most.
I’ll bet the FSC never question whether their CEO’s are really worth the millions of dollars in ludicrous salaries and bonuses, whether they actually need all of the mid level ludicrously overpaid managers or BDM’s earning six figures plus but contributing nothing.
But stitching up advisers to the point that many will have to leave the industry. There was a great forward thinking move!
so hang – the insurers – and their mechanics are worried about the fate of the insurance industry – so how does that stack up when they have collectively shafted their distribution arm. Its a really awkward discussion sitting across from an insto BDM – both knowing full well that there masters have collectively stiffed the (“their”)advisers – and now they worry about reputation damage – I have yet to see one adviser sing the praises of the insurers in the current state of affairs – one could say this malaise is entirely self inflicted and its true to form.
And then again – maybe thats the point – look towards the UK – one can see they decimated their adviser numbers – maybe its easier to sell a half crappy product direct – than be called to account with IFA’s trying to ensure the client gets support and value for money. The more things change the more they stay the same