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Case Study
Client Spotlight:
LIFE, ANNUITY, AND INVESTMENT PRODUCTS LEADER
IMPROVING
OPERATIONAL EFFECTIVENESS IN ANNUITY CLIENT SERVICES
A leader in life, annuity, and investment products for individuals and employers recently asked for our assistance in delivering rapid process improvements for their annuity client services area. Nolan engaged in a three-month effort that resulted in savings in excess of $2 million on a $10 million budget.
The Need For Change
Over the past four years, our client had undergone several reorganizations, finally consolidating several disparate operations and acquired businesses. Significant process improvements were then implemented to adjust for changing sales volumes, intensified expense pressures and growing market competitiveness. These efforts delivered more efficient services, but the rate of change and impact were both too gradual to meet business needs.
Given our client’s urgent need for accelerated and dramatic improvement in terms of expense reduction, combined with distribution pressures to transition from a functional to a customer-oriented organization, the decision was made to partner with the Robert E. Nolan Company to accomplish these objectives. The immediate goals were to eliminate $2 million in expenses and transition to a client-centric service model in support of a new service strategy being implemented company-wide.
The project was set to focus on the high-potential customer-facing areas and the surrounding transaction processing teams. The project followed a sequence of deliverables, each building upon the prior one:
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Selection and role definition for the Core Team and Steering Committee.
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Establish goals to achieve the $2 million target reduction in expenses.
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Identification, quantification, and mapping of key services and transactions, creating a common foundation of knowledge for group members.
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Redesign of processes and transactions, striving for innovative, out-of-the-box ideas that would accomplish the stated objectives.
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Organization, consolidation, and evaluation of the redesign and improvement ideas, resulting in a list of quantifiable, actionable, and achievable recommendations.
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Creation of an implementation plan outlining the steps necessary to accomplish each recommendation, noting responsible parties and measurable milestones.
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The workshop process was scheduled for completion in a 12-week timeframe, with the 13-member team jointly presenting the finalized implementation plan. With the Core Team containing representatives from all of the potentially affected areas, organizational buy-in to the recommendations was assured.
Summary Findings
The process improvement ideas generated during the workshop redesign sessions showed a number of commonalities:
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Transactional specialization, backlogs, and limited training were creating handoffs, delays, duplication of effort, and even a few extraneous units—all adding to the expense structure and detracting from service quality.
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Misalignment of staff and processes, in part the result of incremental and segmented organizational growth, was causing inefficiencies and clouding ownership—in effect, erasing individual account-ability for completing a service transaction in totality.
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Focus on benign call center, without counter-balancing focus on off-phone transactions (often found to be the source of the calls) was resulting in “over servicing” of the phones and failure in completing customer service requests.
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Resource mis-utilization (a direct result of being limited to single job grades for entire functions with minimal service request segregation) was resulting in higher compensated staff servicing the simplest to the most complex requests indiscriminately.
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