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An important part of our sustainability as a business is our relationship with our stakeholders.

Stakeholders are the individuals or groups which have a direct interest in, and influence on, IAG's success, as well as those individuals or groups that our operations affect.

Effective stakeholder engagement continues to be a key strategic priority for IAG as it informs our corporate strategy and the strategies of our operating businesses. It is embedded in our Group strategy, and detailed as an explicit priority, reflecting our commitment to be accountable to those that we have an impact on or who affect us. It is about being inclusive, through the on-going identification of all of our stakeholders; ensuring that we evaluate all issues in a consistent risk management framework, identified through assessment of our impact on them and their impact on us; and ensuring that we respond in a way that meets the needs and concerns of our stakeholders.

IAG is a diverse group and has a broad range of stakeholders, including our customers, our workforce and our community. IAG operates a devolved model which means that responsibility for engagement with and management of all of our different stakeholders is assigned throughout the organisation at both a Group and divisional level, to those areas or people closest to the stakeholder. We believe that this puts us in the best position to engage with and respond to stakeholder feedback.

We engage directly with stakeholder groups to understand their expectations. This engagement with our stakeholders allows us to understand and respond to their issues and feedback. We are clear about who our stakeholders are, focusing on how we might best engage with them. The identification of stakeholders is a 'live' process with each business responsible for assessing the operating environment regularly to ensure that we understand who our stakeholders are.

Further formal procedures are detailed in the stakeholder information below.

Engagement is managed across the Group, focusing 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.

Each division within IAG 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.

Customers

We create the most value when we are close to our customers. IAG's devolved model provides autonomy and accountability to our operating businesses, ensuring decision making is as close to the end customer as possible. This allows our businesses to act quickly to meet the needs of customers, giving them control over the levers needed to execute their strategies and manage performance within IAG's overall framework.

Our People

Our people deliver on the promises we make to our customers, shareholders and the community at large. That's why engagement with our people is critical.

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.

Investors

As well as institutional investors, IAG has one of the largest retail investor bases in Australia, with around 835,000 retail shareholders.

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.

Business and non-government 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), the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and the Geneva Association.

Community

Insurers are part of the front-line response to natural catastrophes, so we are well placed to help the community after disaster strikes. But it's also important to help communities adapt, and become more resilient in a world in which severe weather events will become increasingly common. There is a clear benefit to both us as an insurer, through reduced claims costs, as well as to our customers and the community through less damage to their assets.

Suppliers

Our suppliers enable us to provide a service to our customers. Our suppliers are therefore 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.