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Legal & General – recovering

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I wasn’t good at learning on management courses, but I did once write down and remember this list

  1. Acknowledge your mistakes. Never try to cover up or blame others for what went wrong. …
  2. Learn from your mistakes. Once you learn from your mistakes, don’t repeat them.
  3. Teach others from your mistakes. …
  4. Move beyond your mistakes.

Legal & General made a mistake –

They failed to plan for the impact of lockdown – and found themselves unable to support a telephone helpline – even for vulnerable customers . I spoke with Emma Douglas, Head of DC Solutions at LGIM about this and she has written to me confirming our conversation.

When we needed to send staff home for their own safety we had to make a key decision on the helpline, given that the previous business continuity plans (two sites in Cardiff plus a warm site in Bristol) would not work in the pandemic.

The decision we faced was whether to close the helpline down for a short period to ensure we could operate it in a safe and controlled way and focus on online support and outbound calls OR to keep it open but with the possibility of long wait times and high abandon rates. Market feedback is that the long wait times and high abandon rates is what customers were experiencing with a number of our competitors who did keep the lines open and in this case it could be argued that a poor service is worse than no service.

We took the decision to close, knowing this would be for a few days, and we were able to open our phone lines again from Monday 6th April, with a focus on taking calls from vulnerable customers in the first instance. We have increased the number of staff able to take calls over the rest of this week. Our biggest concern during the period when we had closed the helpline was how would customers, especially vulnerable customers, get in touch with us and so we made sure there was robust online support:

The DC team is working successfully from home.


It’s not for me to judge how well L&G has recovered from its mistake, but this statement suggests that L&G

  1. Acknowledge (their recovery plan was inadequate)
  2. Are learning (what vulnerable customers need)
  3. Are teaching ( themselves new ways of learning
  4. Are moving on ( I understand that they will be publicising their helplines are open after Easter)

It is now with Emma and her management team to ensure they meet future challenges better prepared. I’m grateful to her for putting L&G’s position on this matter for me to publish.

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