Our approach to business sustainability is holistic and continues to encompass all areas which impact on our ability to remain a sustainable company including our economic, customer, workforce, community and environmental performance.
The five business sustainability levers are interdependent, and success in one area impacts success in another. Ultimately, our performance in the areas of workforce, customer, community and environment can impact our economic performance.
Our approach to business sustainability is embedded in our governance framework, with our Nomination, Remuneration and Sustainability committee (NRSC) this year re-endorsing our business sustainability strategy. Our continuing focus on the five key areas listed enables us to adopt a consistent approach.
Our strategy
Our focus on business sustainability underpins everything we do. IAG aspires to be the world’s most respected group of general insurance companies and our purpose is to help people manage risk and recover from the hardship of unexpected loss. Insurance is the ultimate community product as it enhances community resilience by sharing risk across the community. As an insurer, we are committed to assisting our customers manage and reduce their risks and, in the event of unexpected loss, we support customers and communities to recover and get on with their lives.
To achieve our ambition and purpose, we live by a set of principles:
1. Experts in the fundamentals of insurance
We’re focused on what we do best and getting the fundamentals right. This means excelling at understanding and
pricing risk, managing claims and distributing our products. It’s about keeping our costs low to make insurance
affordable. We take pride in knowing our business and the industry intimately.
2. Disciplined insurance leaders
We’re not just good at insurance; we’re good at business. We are high performing and professional.
We’re clear about our strategy and we execute it well. We set measurable goals and we pursue them with vigour.
We’re only satisfied when we deliver our best.
We expect a lot from our leaders. They live our values and lead by example. We give them responsibility and hold
them accountable for their results. In return, we reward performance. Our business is only as good as its people
and so we plan ahead by developing our future leaders.
3. Passionate about our customers
At every interaction, we demonstrate our passion for our customers, gaining our customers’ trust and loyalty, and making our customers our advocates. It’s not just about paying claims. We differentiate ourselves by the way we help our customers recover from the unexpected – getting them back on the road or back to work, or replacing their assets as quickly as possible.
4. Innovative and one step ahead
We’re determined to keep moving and be one step ahead of our competitors. By listening to our customers we stay
relevant and generate new ideas, cementing our competitive advantage. We gain insights into how we need to adapt
and evolve. It’s often the little things that we can continually improve that make the biggest difference.
5. Sustainable, so that we are around for the long term
We’re a successful and sustainable business that is around for the long term. This means bringing emerging risks and trends
into today’s decision making. We deliver for our shareholders, customers, people, and the community by taking a balanced
approach across the five key dimensions of Economic, Customer, Workforce, Community and Environment.
These principles are consistent across all of our businesses and are the foundation on which we operate.
Our strategic intent is to manage a portfolio of high performing, customer-focused diverse operations that provide
general insurance in a manner that delivers superior experiences for stakeholders and creates value for shareholders.
We deliver on this intent by actively managing our portfolio to drive operational performance and execution.
Active portfolio management enables the Group to deliver a more consistent performance, despite owning a group of general
insurance businesses operating at different stages in both the economic and the insurance cycle. Our approach includes two
key components:
- strategic portfolio management: deciding where to compete and invest and what the optimal composition of the portfolio should be; and
- operational portfolio management: optimising the performance of the current assets.
Our portfolio management is underpinned by our well developed approach to assessing and managing risk which is integral
to how we manage our day to day operations. Our corporate governance structure and risk management framework provide the
oversight for this approach. More details are located in the Corporate Governance
section of this website.
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Our strategic priorities
Our approach to strategy ensures that our strategic priorities support our ambition of becoming the world’s most
respected group of general insurance companies.
Our portfolio management focus means we set the broad strategic priorities which apply across the Group, and which
our operating businesses use as a starting point to set their own strategy.
IAG is in the process of implementing a three year strategy announced to the market in June 2008.
The strategy refocussed the business on the following priorities;
- Improving performance in our key markets of Australian and New Zealand;
- Pursuing selective growth opportunities; and
- Driving greater operational performance and accountability.
Where does sustainability come in?
Getting our approach to business sustainability right is crucial to ensuring we deliver our strategy.
Each of our five business sustainability levers supports our strategic priorities.
While economic sustainability is a crucial enabler of the strategy, it is also an outcome of its successful implementation:
| Strategy |
Improving performance in our key markets of Australian and New Zealand |
Pursuing selective growth opportunities |
Driving greater operational performance and accountability |
| Customer |
Listening to our customers and giving them the products and services they want; exceeding their expectations of us so they continue to choose our brands |
Developing a deep understanding of customers and target markets, selectively pursing customer opportunities |
Our relationships with our customers, and accountability for performance, rest with the operating businesses that are closest to the end customer |
| Workforce |
Ensuring that we have the right people in the roles; not only recruiting the right people now, but also into the future |
Developing the capacity and ability to transfer capability, and ensuring those called on to do this are supported |
Linking Group and divisional strategy to individual scorecards for our people against which their performance is assessed |
| Community |
Sharing our knowledge and promoting initiatives that reduce risks in the broader community; building and maintaining open relationships with our key stakeholders |
Engaging in open dialogue with key stakeholders, sharing knowledge and experience |
Aligning our approach to community investment with our core business; risk management |
| Environment |
Managing our operations’ impact on the environment by driving efficiencies in our consumption of resources;
and managing the impact of the environment on our business, our customers and the communities the we serve,
helping them to manage and adapt to the impact of increasingly severe and more frequent weather events |
Understanding and managing environmental risks in target markets, and helping our partners and businesses manage these risks |
Establishing 5% year on year carbon emission reduction targets to assist us reach our goal of carbon neutrality by 2012 |
| Economic |
Improving the underlying operational performance of our Australian and New Zealand businesses |
Applying the portfolio management approach in all markets, and maintaining strict acquisition criteria;
maintaining sufficient capital to leverage opportunities |
Ensuring our business is run efficiently, with a focus on controlling costs |
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For more information on our strategy and our purpose, refer to the strategy section of this website.
Our approach to managing performance
IAG’s strategy is to deliver superior performance by actively managing our portfolio and driving operational performance and execution.
This means that everything we do – from divisional strategies to individual goals – needs to support our ambition of becoming the world’s most respected group of insurance companies.
To ensure we are managing our diverse portfolio of businesses towards this common goal, IAG uses Strategy Maps and Balanced Scorecards as key components of the strategic planning process.
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Our approach to business sustainability reporting
Our aim is to ensure that the content of this report presents the information our stakeholders consider to be relevant and material to our business and our approach to business sustainability.
The readers of this report represent a range of stakeholder groups, from individuals to businesses and community groups. Each of these groups will have an interest in different aspects of IAG’s business and approach to business sustainability. These stakeholders include (but are not limited to):
- Customers
- Shareholders
- Employees
- Government and regulators
- Suppliers
- Community partners
We continue to use the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) (138kb .pdf) Sustainability Guidelines (including the Financial Services Sector Supplement), as the basis to determine the content of the report. A GRI index, which details the location of each of the standard disclosures is included. Our Corporate Strategy, Group performance during the year and the risks and opportunities identified through our Risk Management Framework also inform our reporting.
Our engagement with stakeholders and feedback from them throughout the year is critical as this report is for them. This is why we continue to choose to be assured against the AA1000 AccountAbility Principles Standard, which considers inclusivity, materiality and responsiveness. This standard holds companies to account for their management, performance and reporting on business sustainability issues, ensuring that they take responsibility and report transparently on the impacts to the operation of their business, decisions, actions, products and performance. Importantly, the standard asks companies to engage with their stakeholders and to be accountable to them.
Effective stakeholder engagement is a key strategic priority for IAG and it is embedded in our Group Strategy, reflecting our commitment to be accountable to those that we have an impact on or who impact us. It is about being inclusive, through the identification of all of our stakeholders; ensuring that we evaluate all issues in a consistent framework, and that we respond in a way that meets the needs and concerns of our stakeholders. Engaging with our stakeholders allows us to understand and respond to stakeholder issues and needs and we are clear about who our stakeholders are, focusing on how we might best engage with them on an on-going basis. IAG operates in a devolved model, which means that responsibility for engagement with all of our different stakeholders is assigned throughout the organisation, to those areas or people closest to the stakeholder. We believe that this puts us in the best position to listen to our stakeholders, respond to them and be able to integrate their feedback into our operations, whether this be our customers, the communities that we operate in, our employees or any other stakeholder that we engage with.
While IAG is broadly aligned with the principles of AA1000 APS, there are opportunities for us to strengthen this alignment, for example by ensuring that there is a consistent standard of engagement with our stakeholders across our devolved operations.
We engage with our stakeholders on an on-going basis and have undertaken a specific piece of stakeholder engagement
to get their feedback on what we did well in the 2009 report, and what we need to improve on. Stakeholders want:
- Greater transparency on how we have performed against target
- Clarity on our approach to sustainability and the link to our corporate strategy
- Refining and increasing the quantitative data we report on
- More disclosure about our approach to the community
Operating in a devolved business structure means that there will be some issues that are relevant at a divisional level
that may not be relevant at a Group level. In this report, we aim to strike a balance between these issues to give our
stakeholders a flavour of both Group-wide and divisional issues. To ensure that we get this balance right, each of our
divisions is responsible for bringing to the table the issues and opportunities that impact them.
The materiality of these issues to IAG and our divisions is then considered against the interests of our stakeholders,
and this determines the issues that are reported.
As our Risk Management Framework is part of the way that we operate and implement our strategy, the issues we deem material for reporting purposes align to the issues that we think are important for the sustainability of our business. The AccountAbility 5-part materiality test was also utilised to challenge our internal materiality assessment, which also takes into account commercial sensitivities. This test looks at issues against the criteria of the potential impact on short term financial performance, the level of community concern, the extent of regulation, and gives consideration to issues that have been identified as a priority by our peers and the extent to which we can influence the issue. Potential issues are rated against these criteria as high, medium or low, and where an issue has been rated as high, it is has been included for discussion in this website content.
The case studies included in the Case Studies and Key Risks and Opportunities section of this website discuss a number of IAG’s material issues. However there are some issues and risks that have not been included or discussed as they are considered commercially sensitive.
In the coming year IAG will be reviewing the business sustainability reporting suite to ensure that our reporting reflects our devolved operations and provides our stakeholders with the most relevant and useful information.
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Stakeholder engagement
An important part of our sustainability as a business is our relationship with our stakeholders. These are the individuals or groups which have a direct interest in, and influence on, our success, as well as those individuals or groups that our operations impact.
IAG is a diverse group and has a broad range of stakeholders, including our customers, our workforce and our community. Details of our engagement with these groups are included within the customer, workforce and community sections of this website.
Engagement with other key stakeholders occurs at both a Group and divisional level. For example, our Group investor relations team is responsible for engagement with our investment community. However customer engagement is the responsibility of each division.
Engagement is managed across the Group, focussing on:
- gauging stakeholder expectations;
- identifying and acting on the gap between those expectations and reality;
- educating stakeholders on our business, how it operates, and what we aim to achieve;
- taking on board feedback from our stakeholders, to inform our strategy and internal decisions;
- continuous monitoring of changing stakeholder views and needs; and
- maintaining a relationship of mutual respect, building credibility and earning trust.
Effective stakeholder engagement is a key strategic priority for IAG, so each division is accountable for demonstrating how they are engaging with their stakeholders. How this feedback feeds back into our business will depend on the stakeholder and nature of the engagement with them.
Engagement with our people, our customers and our community is discussed within the Workforce, Customer and Community sections of the website. However there are also a number of other key stakeholders that IAG engages with to seek feedback and input from on a regular basis:
Shareholders
Government and regulators
Suppliers
Business organisations and industry bodies
Unions
Shareholders
As well as institutional investors, IAG has one of the largest retail investor bases in Australia, with around 865,000 retail shareholders.
Our shareholders clearly have an interest in our financial success, as well as the ability to shape that success through their investment decisions.
We engage in and encourage dialogue with all shareholders, through a variety of formal and informal channels including:
- Half and full year results announcements, webcast via our website;
- Investor reports;
- Annual General Meeting – while we encourage shareholders to attend, we webcast the AGM for those who are unable to do so;
- Annual Review and Report;
- ASX announcements, also posted on our website;
- Investor strategy days;
- Investor road-shows following half and full year results announcements;
- A shareholder centre on our website that provides up-to-date and relevant information;
- One on one meetings with shareholders held throughout the year;
- A dedicated investor relations mailbox for retail investors.
Government and regulators
We engage with governments on a number of areas of policy, including regulation and prudential supervision, consumer protection and taxation.
In addition to representing our own and our stakeholders’ interests, we provide support in a range of ways, from writing statutory insurance classes such as compulsory third party, to helping ease the strain on government services after a natural disaster by looking after our customers.
IAG maintains a dedicated Government and Industry Affairs unit, and operating businesses are also actively involved in the public policy process. We participate in parliamentary inquiries, make submissions and research policy issues to provide insurance protection and security to the community. All public submissions to Government are available to view or download.
As an international group, we engage with governments in Australia, New Zealand, the UK, and across Asia.
In Australia we are in continual dialogue with:
- the Federal and State Governments;
- federal regulators such as Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) and Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC);
- statutory scheme regulators such as WorkCover Authority and relevant motor vehicle third party liability regulators; and
- industry associations such as the Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) , Business Council of Australia (BCA), and Australian Services Roundtable.
In New Zealand, we have contact with the national government, as well as the New Zealand Securities Commission and the Commerce Commission and the Ministry of Economic Development.
In Asia, IAG has ongoing relationships with regulators in the countries in which we operate, including the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (India), the Ministry of Finance, Office of the Insurance Commission (Thailand), Bank Negara (Malaysia), Monetary Authority of Singapore (Singapore) and China Insurance Regulatory Commission (China).
In the United Kingdom IAG engages with the Financial Services Authority and Lloyd’s of London.
IAG does not make direct contributions to any political party. However, IAG does engage in the democratic process by participating in lunches, dinners, conferences or other events with political parties. IAG representatives will make a financial contribution to attend these functions and events. Consistent with Australian legislative requirements, IAG discloses all political contributions that are made to political parties.
IAG's political contributions policy contributes to IAG’s long-term sustainability by our commitment to excellence in all of our dealings with policy-makers, regulators and public officials.
Suppliers
Our suppliers enable us to provide a service to our customers. Our suppliers are crucial to our ability to help customers recover after a claim, through providing smash repairs, building services, whitegoods, medical treatment and a range of other services.
The management of supplier relationships sits with the businesses which are closest to them, with only some procurement located centrally. Both formal and informal channels exist to manage these relationships within our supplier guidelines.
Supplier guidelines (XXkb .pdf)
Formal:
- contract re-negotiation;
- quarterly performance report feedback;
- monthly KPI meetings; and
- specific sustainability reporting queries/feedback;
Informal:
- ad hoc queries; and
- day-to-day contact.
We aim to establish strong relationships with our suppliers and facilitate a two-way dialogue. This means we can anticipate issues before they occur, and address them quickly if they do.
Business organisations and industry bodies
Participation and involvement in business organisations and industry bodies is encouraged where relevant for the Group. For example we are actively involved with the Insurance Council of Australia, Business Council of Australia (BCA), Australian Services Roundtable, the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and the Geneva Association.
Our employees and the business as a whole are involved in a number of business organisations and industry groups. Where relevant and appropriate, we encourage our people to take part in public debate on areas of relevance to our core business. Our managers regularly speak at seminars, conferences and public hearings.
Unions
Our consultation process with the Finance Sector Union (FSU) is detailed in the IAG Enterprise Agreement 2003 (Agreement). Under the Agreement, we consult with the FSU regarding workplace change programs impacting on employees. There are also specific consultation provisions dealing with situations when positions are being made redundant and/or employees are being retrenched.
IAG representatives meet with the FSU on a regular basis to discuss any issues that may impact on employees who are FSU members. In addition, FSU representatives are invited to address new recruits at our induction programs and may assist employees in accordance with the grievance procedure contained in the Agreement.
These processes are similar in New Zealand and detailed in the respective union collective employment agreements.
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