Monte Carlo reinsurance Rendez-Vous a go-go

Last week the reinsurance world descended on the glamorous Monte Carlo for the annual reinsurance Rendez-Vous.

Among the diamonds, champagne and glitz of the setting, real work was being done, brokers standing their ground on reinsurance pricing for the January 1, 2012 renewals, reinsurers saying prices will rise by up to 10%.

This dance will continue in Baden Baden in October, when the real negotiations are finalised, and may well result in a 5 to 7% rise, according to those in the know.

This year, there was a newcomer to the event, however. World Risk and Insurance News – a new dedicated insurance news channel launched there and has produced several reports on the back of it – and they are very good, well edited and well presented with good content. Continue reading

Welcome to our new website

We are really pleased with our new website www.rein4ce.co.uk and re-branding, which we have launched today just  in time for the reinsurance conference, Les Rendez-Vous in Monte Carlo.

Please give us your feedback – and anything you would like to see on here that is not explained.

As many readers know, we are a public relations company that specialises in financial services, particularly insurance and reinsurance and we also deal with the companies that serve this market.

We also have a niche expertise in business to business social media – a skill set developed out of a need in the market. So, if you are so inclined and are on any platforms, please find us – we are on Twitter (@rein4cePR and @reinsurancegirl), Facebook, and LinkedIn and Mairi Mallon and Stephen Breen are also on Google+.

And if you are not, here is a wee video (showing my age here) to help us celebrate…. Celebration time! Cool and the Gang

Back to risk management with Facebook – for insurance and reinsurance companies

facebook imageI had a huge response to last week’s posting on Facebook inserting Wikipedia pages of Fortune 500 and FTSE 100 companies without their permission – or even knowledge. It is a potential public relations disaster.

Many listed insurance and reinsurance companies and large insurance and reinsurance brokers (and other large corporations) now have “Pages” which are listed under their name under the tag “Organization”. Swiss Re and  Munich Re are there. As are many, many others. The bigger the organisation, the more likely it is to have a page.

A little technical detail now to follow up on last week’s post: Continue reading

The amazing folly of large corporations not being on Facebook

Today I was looking for something on Facebook and came across the Lloyd’s of London group site. What I found (see screen grab below) was a page imported from Wikipedia – this time in Portuguese (!). I’ve talked about this before, but it really beggars belief that Lloyd’s is so sloppy in its risk and brand management as to not have control of its own Facebook page.

A while back, Facebook started importing Wikipedia pages for Fortune 100 and FTSE 100 companies onto Facebook if the companies did not have a Facebook page – all without their knowlegde . Remember Wiki pages are updated by the general public, and not controlled by any company or organisation. I’m sure you can see the risks of that without me having to spell them out. For corporations that pride themselves in managing their image this is not good – to put it mildly. Continue reading

Monte Carlo report

Last night the Rendez-Vous at Monte Carlo, reinsurance’s big annual conference, kicked off in usual glittering style at the Guy Carpenter party in the Hotel de Paris.

Sipping glasses of Tattinger, the good and the great of the reinsurance world met in the gilded ballroom. Chief executives and presidents rubbed shoulders with brokers and caught up with each other. Continue reading

Monte Carlo here we come

hurricane_ike 12008It is that time of year again, when the good and the great of the reinsurance world head to Monte Carlo for the annual Rendez-Vous. Bermudians and Americans will already be winging their way across the Atlantic, while most BA flights from London and Zurich on Sunday contain most of the worlds’ reinsurance brains in one metal vessel – wonder what the risk assessment for that would be… Continue reading

Five key tips for using social media in the re/insurance markets

Mairi Mallon In the past couple of months,  word about the importance of social media has definitely reached the ears of those at the top of the insurance and reinsurance markets.

Many may not understand the ins and outs of it all, but a growing band of CEOs and marketing executives are starting to dip their toes into these unknown waters – take as an example, Munich Re America, which is now on Twitter.

For those of us who are carefully trying to find the best use for social media in our part of the corporate world, helping remove scales from their eyes is a big part of our job. We come in and look to see if this would work as part of their overall PR strategy and then help work out a digital strategy. Then we can help implement it.

This is how we do it:

  1. Watch what others are doing in this space. Showing examples of just how well it can be done and how it can be used is a great way of converting the uninitiated. But there are very still few out there with an implemented plan – reinsurance brokers Guy Carpenter (for blogging), US attorneys Goldberg Segalla (especially on LinkedIn)… Us folks at rein4ce… Erm. That’s it (bar a few good publications and individuals).
  2. Working out a digital PR strategy. A lot of what is out there already is all based on business to consumer, on engaging and talking with customers, which is fine if you are Confused.com (who, by the way, spend just 10 to 15% of its PR budget on  digital, which seems surprisingly low). But for the brokerages, London Market, Bermuda Market (click through and that will take you to a good PwC survey on the Bermuda Market) and other global reinsurance giants, this model does not work.
  3. Keep it corporate – and legal. Remember the old adage of don’t put anything online that you wouldn’t want your mum to read or your boss to see. Corporate guidelines need to be set. And by having a properly run campaign, you can minimise the risk of litigation by rogue employees blogging about your company in their own time – as it ring-fences your corporate brand and identity under your own umbrella, which is controlled by you.
  4. What is it worth? In our world, social media cannot be measured by a straightforward “ROI” as so many claim. It is much more intangible than that. But some if it can be measured – by the number of clicks on your website, by how many people log on and read your blog, by how many people follow you on Twitter, by how many mentions you get online. When helping our clients in this world, we have to show the pitfalls. There is the thorny issue of moderation – who monitors and reports what is being said. And implementing the resources required to feed an audience that is hungry for content can be costly, especially because the key point about social media in this sector is about providing quality content.
  5. Keeping it up. Consistency is also important. Many fail to keep up with the idea once the decision has been made – you cannot set up a Twitter feed or a blog and not keep it updated. Generally, a lack of resources can stop the best laid plan in its tracks.

Mairi Mallon heads up the niche PR company rein4ce and blogs and tweets as reinsurancegirl – rein4ce is also on facebook if you’d like to join the group type in rein4ce on facebook’s search box.

Will there be less champagne flowing at the 2009 Rendez-Vous?

This time in two weeks I will be in Monte Carlo along with another 2500 or so people from the weird and wonderful world of reinsurance.
For those of you not familiar with the annual Rendez-Vous, it is the largest reinsurance conference in the world, a place where the brokers and underwriters do a preliminary dance to decide on reinsurance pricing for the January renewals.
For those of you who have never been to Rendez-vous, it is a conference unlike any other. The hub of the action takes place around Casino Square and in the Cafe de Paris, where men (and a handful of women) in chinos and button-down pastel-coloured shirts meet. Over €10 espressos, there are half hourly meetings where numbers are scribbled down on bits of paper, pushed around, and debated hotly, before everyone gets up on the half hour mark, shakes hands and checks the Blackberry for the name of the person and location of the next half hour meeting. This merry dance goes on from the Sunday 9th of September to Wednesday 9th of September, sometimes even to the Thursday.
Every night there are lavish cocktail parties, champagne flowing with fancy canapés to nibble on, followed by rich dinners and late drinks, followed by even later drinks and sometimes a spot of gambling. Chief Executives can be seen at tables at the two casinos, which seems appropriate, given the nature of the business. At the late night bars, pocket loads of business cards are collected, as people meet and exchange industry gossip and arrange to meet again in Baden Baden in October (or London, Bermuda, Zurich, Dublin or New York).
But this year, will the credit crunch affect the way people spend? According to the Principality of Monaco, only the world-famous Grand Prix brings in more money than the Rendez-Vous. Already parties have been cancelled and few have sprung up to take their place. What do you think? I’ve created a short (only four questions) survey to see what you think of spending at Monte – please take it and I’ll publish the results.

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=Md07orF1Qmn6IlAcPPAwlQ_3d_3d
http://www.rein4ce.co.uk/

The best live entertainment at the rendezvous yet

With Aon Benfield and the DIFC cancelling champagne-fuelled parties this year at the Rendezvous, I was worried that entertainment might be a bit hard to come by come September in Monte Carlo.
But help is at hand. Well-known Monte aficionados John Guy, Adrian Ladbury and Neil Smith have decided to create a new form of entertainment – and one that is highly suitable for the credit crunch. They are taking part in the Iron Man Half Marathon.
Now, let’s remember that these guys are in the 40s and have between them probably propped up more hotel bars than they would care to admit while working and schmoozing in the re/insurance space.
So they are on the wagon and in training as we speak in order to raise cash for prostate cancer.
Many of you will know John well – he is doing the running on the Sunday, 6th Sept, the final leg a 21 km run. Adrian is swimming 1.9km and Neil has a 90k cycle. The best time to catch them is during the final run which should be between 11.30 and 1.30, when the half marathon is underway round the streets. It is in a three mile loop, I am told, including a climb up from the harbour to the Casino Square five times including the finish.
So it is time for us to empty out our wallets for them. To sponsor this mad dash in the mid-day sun go to http://www.justgiving.com/jonguyironman/. Or at least put down your €10 coffee at Casino square and go and watch – then buy them all a beer at the end.