Title: Keynote introduction The significance of the TCF initiative
1Keynote introduction The significance of the
TCF initiative
Rob Devey Managing Director, HBOS Financial
Services
2Context Three Inter-related initiativesThematic
Work 2008/9
Retail Distribution Review
Financial Capability Programme
Treating Customers Fairly
Access and Understanding
Market Effectiveness
Fair Outcomes
3Context Six Inter-related consumer
outcomesLinking Providers and Distributors
- Culture of organisation allows customers to be
confident they will be treated fairly - Products/Services meet needs of customer and are
targeted accordingly - Clear information clients informed before,
during and after sale opportunity to ask
questions - Advice is suitable
- Products perform as clients have been led to
expect associated services are acceptable - No unreasonable barriers to change product,
switch provider, or make a complaint
4TCF - Overview
MANAGE PEOPLE
T C F
SET CLIENT EXPECTATION
DELIVER SERVICE
Well-managed businesses will only find a small
number of areas that may require change but
EVIDENCE is essential
5Key Dates, Deadlines and Progress Milestones
6March 2007
March 2008
Development of Management Information
TCF Implementation Plan
Identification of Key Issues
Process Review
Client related MI
Gap Analysis
Client Survey
December 2008
7By end March 2007 the FSA expected
- Basic staff training on TCF
- 1st stage Gap Analysis undertaken
- Key Issues identified
- Written and communicated TCF Plan
- Action Plan in place to deal with TCF key issues
8. and from March 2007
- Action Plan being implemented
- Progress review against milestones in the action
plans - Evidence of measurable change consumer outcomes
- Increased use of Management Information
- Structured staff training and development to
support the enhanced client outcomes
9By end of March 2008 FSA expected firms to
demonstrate effective TCF MI
- 13 of firms assessed met the March deadline
- FSA believe that with substantial effort 80 of
firms will meet the December deadline - Examples of good practice
- Strategy consistent with fair treatment of
customers - Well constructed and easy to interpret MI owned
by Senior Management - MI incorporated into existing governance
structure and driving the identification and
resolution of customer fairness issues - Fair treatment of customers written into personal
objectives at all levels - Firms listened to, and acted on, feedback from
customers
10By the final deadline it is expected that firms
are able to demonstrate that .
TCF is being integrated into their business
culture The appropriate MI and measures are in
place to test whether they are treating customers
fairly (including delivering the six TCF
outcomes) The MI demonstrates consistently
treating customers fairly and delivering on the
consumer outcomes There are processes in place
that monitor the MI to enable the right people to
take action
11HBOS Implementation of TCF
12HBOS Interpretation Customer Contract
- Applies to all brands
- To provide positive outcomes for clients
- Brings the client outcomes to life for the
business - Gives meaning to TCF at the personal level
- Provides the principles to support business
decision taking and day-to-day operations
13HBOS Customer Contract - how does it work?
Annual Product Review at the core of Customer
Contract, incorporating MI from across the
product life cycle
14Developing policy, actions and MI around the 6
client outcomes is key Outcome 1
- Consumers can be confident that they are dealing
with firms where the fair treatment of customers
is central to the corporate culture - Senior management engagement
- Performance assessment encourages TCF
- Remuneration linked to expectations and accounts
for quality (e.g. advice, complaints etc). - Staff opinion survey covers views on TCF
15Developing policy, actions and MI around the 6
client outcomes is key Outcome 2
- Products and services marketed and sold in the
retail market are designed to meet the needs of
identified consumer groups and are targeted
accordingly - Analysis of retention indicates high levels of
persistency and the reasons for cancellations do
not indicate TCF issues - There is an expected profile of customers for
each product that is compared to the actual
profile this is reviewed and tracked over time
16Developing policy, actions and MI around the 6
client outcomes is key Outcome 3
- Consumers are provided with clear information
and are kept appropriately informed before,
during and after the point of sale - Customer experience including documentation is
developed and maintained in collaboration with
Customers via customer focus groups
17Developing policy, actions and MI around the 6
client outcomes is key Outcome 4
- Where consumers receive advice, the advice is
suitable and takes account of their
circumstances - quality of advice is assessed to ensure very low
levels of advisory failure - the expected and actual mix of advised sales is
assessed to spot potential issues of sales bias - the expected and actual percentage of
recommendations made for products that do not
attract commission is reviewed at Adviser level
18Developing policy, actions and MI around the 6
client outcomes is key Outcome 5
- Consumers are provided with products that
perform as firms have led them to expect, and the
associated service is of an acceptable standard
and as they have been led to expect - Annual product reviews assess the existing
products to ensure they are meeting Consumer
expectations - Development of new products is consumer lead via
detailed research and customer forums
19Developing policy, actions and MI around the 6
client outcomes is key Outcome 6
- Consumers do not face unreasonable post-sale
barriers imposed by firms to change product,
switch provider, submit a claim or make a
complaint - The use of penalties and lock-in periods are
assessed as fair to the customer and then
reviewed regularly - The route to the provider is clear via numerous
communication methods
20Quant and Qual Evidence Senior Management and
Customer Involvement
- Board Review of TCF MI including the green
indicators! - Monthly Sampling complaint letters and individual
ownership of some complaints - Observed interviews and call listening across all
channels - Calling detractors and promotors
- Development, implementation and communication of
TCF plans accountability and oversight - Customer panel made up of practitioners to review
new literature and monthly sample of satisfaction
questions on outcomes
21Summary
- TCF is core to FSAs agenda and is here to stay
- Increasingly the lens for all supervisory
activities - Firms response must be led from the top
- Outcomes are everything, evidence is key
- TCF can be a competitive weapon