“We’re insured, so we’re OK
…aren’t we?”
Managing risk through change:
A presentation to Charities Aid Foundation clients
• Public confidence dropped for the first time in 10 years
• Increased governance requirements
• Political and economic uncertainty
• Diversification
• Pressure to improve fundraising – increase in digital campaigning
• Lack of collaboration within the sector
• Data protection and cyber fraud
• Pressure to maintain trustee, employee and volunteer numbers
• Skill shortages and training needs
• Morale in the sector is low
The changing nature of risk
– The backdrop
Brexit…
• Reduced investment in the sector (esp. for grant making organisations)
• Fall in sterling / rise in inflation exacerbates a fall in charitable giving
• End of EU structural funds?
• More legislative changes
• Exacerbation of skills shortages
• Divided society / social tensions
• Rising levels of social need = additional pressure on services
The changing nature of risk
– The backdrop
• Funding and financial instability
• Moving away from traditional values and over-diversification
• Continuity planning
• Managing social media
• Cyber threat
• Understanding purchasing frameworks and public service
requirements
• The Insurance Act
• Reputational damage
The changing nature of risk
– The insurers’ perspective
Building resilience –
Good management = good risk management
Identify and
assess risks
Risk
measurement
Link to business
strategy
Risk
appetite
Stress and
scenario testing
Monitoring and
reporting
Risk
culture
Building resilience
– Informed decision making
• Material damage
• Loss of income
• Money
• Public liability
• Employers’ liability
• Professional indemnity
• Trustees’ indemnity
• Cyber liability
• Crime/fiduciary
• Motor
Charities
– Main insurable risks
“Insurance provides financial recompense
following a loss, but won’t always help in
the event of a liability that causes damage
to your reputation. Prevention is better
than cure…”
• Create a business continuity plan that focuses on the major risks
identified within the risk register, including a team to own it
• Getting the first hour right is critical to a successful crisis response
• In the digital age you need to move fast and start talking to the media
right away – no charity can afford reputational damage from bad
publicity
• Implement your business continuity plan and get your communication
sorted within 24hrs
• Then move on to longer term requirements and a critical appraisal of
your response
• Providing a manual is not enough. Employees and volunteers need to
know exactly what to do in the event of specific crisis, when they need
to do it, and have practiced their response
Building resilience
– Business continuity
• More and more people engage with you and your brand online,
therefore how you manage social media is paramount. New skills are
required
• Social media requires you to be prompt and enthusiastic, however, its
effect are immediate
• In the event of an issue you need to decide what your message is and
get it out there on all channels quickly via a crisis management team
containing senior leaders and communications staff with autonomy
• Get the tone right. No-one conquers social media. Success comes from
wit, humility and good humour, not from aggression and control
Building resilience
– Managing social media
• This is still a relatively new area of risk in many ways and the remedial
action is a blend of risk management and insurance, however the
starting points would be:
– Cyber risk assessment
– Media management plan
– Crisis recovery plan
• Traditional insurance policies can respond to elements (libel,
copyright, loss of revenue, data reinstatement etc.)
• Specialist policies will provide cover for areas like crisis containment,
forensic investigation, legal defence costs, legal liability etc.)
• Uninsurable areas include reputational damage, fines, upgrade cost,
contractual obligations etc.)
Building resilience
– Cyber threat
• Appreciate both the opportunities and the risks associated with public
service delivery, and decide whether it is right for your organisation
• Fully understand the procurement and commissioning process, as well
as the award criteria
• Make efforts to establish relationships with prospective customers
• Be sure that service delivery can be maintained and that you mitigate
any risks to your organisation’s reputation
• Be clear on what you can do for the commissioner and the
communities they serve
• Demonstrate good governance and business continuity arrangements
• Consider forming a consortium and tendering collaboratively
Building resilience
– Understanding the Public Sector
A fair presentation of the risk required clear
and accessible disclosure without material
misrepresentation, of:
Every material circumstance which the
insured knows/ought to know.
Or failing that, sufficient information to put
a prudent insurer on notice that it needs to
make further enquiries to reveal those
material circumstances.
Knowledge of
senior management
Knowledge of the
insurance team,
including brokers
Information which
would be revealed by
a reasonable search
Information held by the
insurer and accessible
to the underwriter
relevant to the risk
What an insurer
writing this risk
would reasonably be
expected to know
Common
knowledge
What must be disclosed to insurers What is not required to be disclosed to insurers
Insurance Act
– Duty of disclosure
• Duty of disclosure and representation – The existing duty remains and is
clarified with the requirement for businesses to make a “fair presentation” of the risk to
insurers.
• Remedies for non-disclosure or misrepresentation – Remedies must now be
proportionate and reflect the actual underwriting impact, had the correct information been
provided originally.
• Basis of contract clauses – Are abolished removing mechanisms which allow
avoidance if risk information provided is inaccurate.
• Remedy for breach of warranty – Warranties can continue to be applied but
breach will now mean liability is only suspended for the period of the breach and only where
relevant to the claim.
• Remedy for fraud – The new remedy removes the option of avoidance. In the event of
fraud an insurer remains “on cover” for claims made before the fraud occurs but has the
option to cancel the policy with effect from the date of the fraudulent act.
Insurance Act
– What does the Act include?
• Passion isn’t enough – a clearly defined strategy is essential
• Trustees must act as “critical friends”
• Objectivity and challenge is required – both internal
and external
• Skills sets should be aligned to objectives
• Recruitment, training and retention is vital
• Continual review and understanding of risks inherent
within the organisation is paramount
We’re not all
Kids Company
www.lucasfettes.co.uk
To find out more just call 0330 660 148 or
email charitiesandnfp@lucasfettes.co.uk
Source: Please note that some of the material within these slides has been sourced from Zurich UK.

Managing risk through change: charities

  • 1.
    “We’re insured, sowe’re OK …aren’t we?” Managing risk through change: A presentation to Charities Aid Foundation clients
  • 2.
    • Public confidencedropped for the first time in 10 years • Increased governance requirements • Political and economic uncertainty • Diversification • Pressure to improve fundraising – increase in digital campaigning • Lack of collaboration within the sector • Data protection and cyber fraud • Pressure to maintain trustee, employee and volunteer numbers • Skill shortages and training needs • Morale in the sector is low The changing nature of risk – The backdrop
  • 3.
    Brexit… • Reduced investmentin the sector (esp. for grant making organisations) • Fall in sterling / rise in inflation exacerbates a fall in charitable giving • End of EU structural funds? • More legislative changes • Exacerbation of skills shortages • Divided society / social tensions • Rising levels of social need = additional pressure on services The changing nature of risk – The backdrop
  • 4.
    • Funding andfinancial instability • Moving away from traditional values and over-diversification • Continuity planning • Managing social media • Cyber threat • Understanding purchasing frameworks and public service requirements • The Insurance Act • Reputational damage The changing nature of risk – The insurers’ perspective
  • 5.
    Building resilience – Goodmanagement = good risk management Identify and assess risks Risk measurement Link to business strategy Risk appetite Stress and scenario testing Monitoring and reporting Risk culture
  • 6.
  • 7.
    • Material damage •Loss of income • Money • Public liability • Employers’ liability • Professional indemnity • Trustees’ indemnity • Cyber liability • Crime/fiduciary • Motor Charities – Main insurable risks “Insurance provides financial recompense following a loss, but won’t always help in the event of a liability that causes damage to your reputation. Prevention is better than cure…”
  • 8.
    • Create abusiness continuity plan that focuses on the major risks identified within the risk register, including a team to own it • Getting the first hour right is critical to a successful crisis response • In the digital age you need to move fast and start talking to the media right away – no charity can afford reputational damage from bad publicity • Implement your business continuity plan and get your communication sorted within 24hrs • Then move on to longer term requirements and a critical appraisal of your response • Providing a manual is not enough. Employees and volunteers need to know exactly what to do in the event of specific crisis, when they need to do it, and have practiced their response Building resilience – Business continuity
  • 9.
    • More andmore people engage with you and your brand online, therefore how you manage social media is paramount. New skills are required • Social media requires you to be prompt and enthusiastic, however, its effect are immediate • In the event of an issue you need to decide what your message is and get it out there on all channels quickly via a crisis management team containing senior leaders and communications staff with autonomy • Get the tone right. No-one conquers social media. Success comes from wit, humility and good humour, not from aggression and control Building resilience – Managing social media
  • 10.
    • This isstill a relatively new area of risk in many ways and the remedial action is a blend of risk management and insurance, however the starting points would be: – Cyber risk assessment – Media management plan – Crisis recovery plan • Traditional insurance policies can respond to elements (libel, copyright, loss of revenue, data reinstatement etc.) • Specialist policies will provide cover for areas like crisis containment, forensic investigation, legal defence costs, legal liability etc.) • Uninsurable areas include reputational damage, fines, upgrade cost, contractual obligations etc.) Building resilience – Cyber threat
  • 11.
    • Appreciate boththe opportunities and the risks associated with public service delivery, and decide whether it is right for your organisation • Fully understand the procurement and commissioning process, as well as the award criteria • Make efforts to establish relationships with prospective customers • Be sure that service delivery can be maintained and that you mitigate any risks to your organisation’s reputation • Be clear on what you can do for the commissioner and the communities they serve • Demonstrate good governance and business continuity arrangements • Consider forming a consortium and tendering collaboratively Building resilience – Understanding the Public Sector
  • 12.
    A fair presentationof the risk required clear and accessible disclosure without material misrepresentation, of: Every material circumstance which the insured knows/ought to know. Or failing that, sufficient information to put a prudent insurer on notice that it needs to make further enquiries to reveal those material circumstances. Knowledge of senior management Knowledge of the insurance team, including brokers Information which would be revealed by a reasonable search Information held by the insurer and accessible to the underwriter relevant to the risk What an insurer writing this risk would reasonably be expected to know Common knowledge What must be disclosed to insurers What is not required to be disclosed to insurers Insurance Act – Duty of disclosure
  • 13.
    • Duty ofdisclosure and representation – The existing duty remains and is clarified with the requirement for businesses to make a “fair presentation” of the risk to insurers. • Remedies for non-disclosure or misrepresentation – Remedies must now be proportionate and reflect the actual underwriting impact, had the correct information been provided originally. • Basis of contract clauses – Are abolished removing mechanisms which allow avoidance if risk information provided is inaccurate. • Remedy for breach of warranty – Warranties can continue to be applied but breach will now mean liability is only suspended for the period of the breach and only where relevant to the claim. • Remedy for fraud – The new remedy removes the option of avoidance. In the event of fraud an insurer remains “on cover” for claims made before the fraud occurs but has the option to cancel the policy with effect from the date of the fraudulent act. Insurance Act – What does the Act include?
  • 14.
    • Passion isn’tenough – a clearly defined strategy is essential • Trustees must act as “critical friends” • Objectivity and challenge is required – both internal and external • Skills sets should be aligned to objectives • Recruitment, training and retention is vital • Continual review and understanding of risks inherent within the organisation is paramount We’re not all Kids Company
  • 15.
    www.lucasfettes.co.uk To find outmore just call 0330 660 148 or email [email protected] Source: Please note that some of the material within these slides has been sourced from Zurich UK.