Reputational Risk Management in a Global Insurance Company
Claudia Meyer and Maurice LeBlanc
Introduction
Reputational Risk: A Short Introduction
What History Teaches Bankers about Reputation Management
An Asset–Liability View of Banks’ Reputation
Reputational Risk in the Universe of Risks: Boundary Issues
Corporate Governance Changes Following Reputational Damage in the Financial Industry
Reputational Risk and Prudential Regulation
Managing Stakeholder Expectations
Environmental and Social Risks from the Perspective of Reputational Risk
The Relationship between Reputational Risk Management and Business Continuity
Tracking Reputation and the Management of Perception at UniCredit
Successful Recovery from Reputational Crises: Legitimate versus Illegitimate Risk Case Studies
Reputational Risk Management Across the World: A Survey of Current Practices
Governance as the Starting Point for a Reputational Risk-Management Process
Managing Reputational Risk in a Major European Banking Group
The Implementation of the UniCredit Group Approach
Promotional Banks: An Introduction to Reputational Risk Management
Reputational Risk Management in a Global Insurance Company
Reputational Consequence Management: The Future
Whereas the previous chapters of this book dealt with reputational risk management in banks, this chapter discusses how reputational risk management was successfully implemented and lived in an international insurance company.
For both banks and insurance companies the most important value is the brand or franchise value and its good reputation. Without good reputation and trust, these companies cannot sell their products to clients; nor are they able to contract intermediaries that support the purchase of insurance or asset-management products; nor are they able to refinance themselves in the market under ideal conditions. When a direct or indirect reputational incident occurs in an insurance company or bank, a lot of effort and money need to be spent to manage the stakeholders’ expectations and to reduce the financial and non-financial impact of the event. As it is difficult to assess the future lost profits or influence on the share price from a reputational risk incident, the proactive management of stakeholders’ expectations is a key success factor by which companies should align their reputational risk-management strategy.
When dealing with indirect reputational risks
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