Strategy & Leadership

Reinventing Aviva

January 31, 2011

Global

January 31, 2011

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Aviva is the sixth-largest insurance group in the world, but until recently it was a loose federation of companies with more than 40 different brands across 28 markets. In October 2007 the company’s chief executive, Andrew Moss, announced an ambitious plan to unite the company under a single brand. The programme was called “One Aviva”.

"If you look at Aviva, it is a company that is more than 300 years old, so we have a fantastic collection of legacy businesses,” says David Rogers, group chief accounting officer at Aviva. Among those legacy businesses are Norwich Union (UK, founded in 1797), Commercial Union Poland and Hibernian (Ireland).  The One Aviva programme’s goals included the elimination of complexity and duplication. This was achieved in part by introducing shared services, creating common business processes and rationalising the IT infrastructure. The unified enterprise also allowed the firm to improve economies of scale and increase purchasing power to levels unattainable in its loosely federated state.

However, to restructure and rebrand a firm the size of Aviva is a costly exercise. The advertising campaign alone—featuring, among others, Ringo Starr, a member of The Beatles band, and the actor Bruce Willis—cost between £10m and £20m. Running an expensive advertising campaign during a global recession may have seemed foolhardy, but not to Amanda Mackenzie, the firm’s chief marketing officer. “It’s turned out it probably couldn’t have been a better time, because there are fewer people advertising, so our advertising cuts through more,” says Ms Mackenzie.

The less glamorous side of the programme involved changing 10,000 documents to reflect the new organisation, renaming 900 funds and decommissioning 118 unnecessary product systems—not to mention the painful process of shedding nearly one-fifth of the workforce. The five-year restructuring programme is still in progress, but the effort is already paying off. By driving out complexity, the firm has achieved £500m in cost savings, a year ahead of schedule. And, according to the 2010 Brand Finance Global 500 survey, Aviva is among the top ten most valuable brands in the UK.

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