The LMA and Lloyd’s Underwriting Talent Summit brought together 180 senior underwriting leaders to shine a spotlight on the trends impacting the pipeline of female underwriting leaders.
The event’s purpose was threefold: to share the lived experiences of female underwriting leaders, to identify the barriers slowing progression and to outline the clear steps that we can take forward as a market.
Below, we outline the individual actions that CEOs, CUOs and underwriting leaders can take to drive meaningful change to build the female underwriting leadership pipeline across our market.
CEOs and CUOs
Address the underlying cultural issue
- Understand the lived experience of female underwriters in your company – their 5 to 9 shift; their experience of your entertainment events; their experience of comments and benevolent bias in your organisation.
- Call out the inappropriate comments when you hear them.
- Discourage those short-notice team drinks.
- Check the guest list of your entertainment events: if there’s never more than one or two women there, change the type of the event.
Diversify your underwriting leadership
- Who are the female underwriter role models in your organisation? If you don’t have any, go out and hire them.
- If there’s only one female, check in with her. She might be exhausted from carrying the burden of trying to single-handedly represent the voice of every female underwriter in your organisation.
- What is your 0-2 year and 2–5-year pipeline for female underwriters? Is it better than the 15% average? Is this a talent league table that you can and want to be top of?
- Don’t forget the ethnically diverse viewpoint. Today, the combined male and female figure is about 7%, versus 46% ethnic diversity in London (2021 census).
Encourage sponsorship
- Sponsorship means speaking up for them at promotions, introducing them to new networks, getting them opportunities to speak at big events (internal and external), bringing them into important strategic conversations, getting them involved in the overall Syndicate Business Forecast process.
- Offer executive coaching.
Review succession planning and promotions
- One leading managing agent spoke about how they promote twice as many people as they hire. Examine your promotion processes and have someone in the room who challenges the decisions made to ensure they are fair.
- Promote for outcomes, not presenteeism, ‘executive presence’ or who hosts the most popular broker events.
- Look at your 3–5-year pipeline and think about how you can build it. Let’s not exacerbate the problem into the future.
Revisit parental leave policies
- Benchmark yourself against your peers and be ready to uplift that policy to give equal rights for men.
- At a minimum, introduce 12 weeks of paternity leave fully paid and 6 months of maternity leave (best practice being both fully paid for 6 months).
- Make both a day one of employment right.
- Shout loudly about those men who take the full paternity leave – make them role models, particularly on your ExCo.
- If a male member of your ExCo is about to become a father, strongly encourage him to take the full paternity leave and set an example for other men in the organisation.
- Look at financial support measures you can take to support those with caring responsibilities, such as like paying for X days emergency childcare or elder care, or subsidised deals with national childcare chains.
- Explore whether your organisation would participate in or advocate for a returner initiative. Commit to hiring from the programme once participants complete it.
Shift the conversation on flexible working
- 75% of women in our survey said flexible working arrangements have been pivotal in supporting them.
- Judge by outcomes, not presenteeism – set women an objective but let them choose how they deliver it (e.g. new business target or team training).
- Flexible working can take many forms over someone’s career – don’t be rigid in what it means. Instead, talk to the individuals about what could work for them.
- Challenge the norms on travel and entertainment – one week per month to either the US or Asia is enough. Two nights of entertaining per week is enough. Finishing dinners by 8pm needs to become the norm. Set this standard yourself and role model this example.
Build a community
- Work to build community amongst the female underwriters in your company and join up with other companies.
- 22 Bishopsgate, for example, brought together senior women in Hiscox, Beazley and Canopius to facilitate their network.
Underwriting leaders
Encourage conversations on flexible working
- Speak up internally about what flexible working needs to look like for you, your teams and to support your life outside of work.
- Normalise these conversations so people feel empowered to articulate what they need to thrive.
Create a structured support framework for parents
- Put in place tailored support for pregnant underwriters and those taking adoption or paternity leave.
- Consider matching them with senior parents who can guide them through the process and ensure they remain connected to P&L roles.
- Prioritise their reintegration back into P&L positions when they return.
Encourage men to take their parental leave
- Make it clear that men on your teams are supported to take their full parental leave entitlement.
- Emphasise the importance of role modelling this and the positive cultural shift it creates.
Support an underwriting returner programme
- Explore whether your organisation would participate in or advocate for a returner initiative.
- Make sure leaders commit to hiring from the programme once participants complete it.
Broaden your talent pipeline
- Look to insurance-adjacent industries and roles for senior women who could transition effectively into underwriting leadership.
- This expands the pipeline and brings in fresh, diverse perspectives.
Encourage lateral moves within your organisation
- Consider talent mobility and lateral transfers into underwriting teams.
- This can unlock internal potential, give others a development opportunity and diversify future leadership.
Promote inclusive networking opportunities
- Facilitate networking formats that don’t revolve around alcohol or sport.
- Create spaces that allow a wider range of people to participate and build genuine professional connections.
Set boundaries on travel and social
- Introduce clear expectations around travel (for example, no more than one week per month) and socialising (for example, a maximum of two evenings a week).
- Support your teams to adhere to these boundaries to protect wellbeing and balance.