Which factors impact DEI programs at P&C brokerages

Diverse group at a conference table.

The size of a Canadian P&C brokerage and the makeup of its senior leadership continues to drive whether employees have access to formal diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs.

A Canadian Underwriter online survey, fielded in Jan. and Feb. 2023, and made possible with the support of Sovereign Insurance, found 31% of respondents described their organization as ‘leading’ in making DEI a core principle that’s supported by best practices. That’s 6% lower than was seen in the 2022 survey.

Another 25% described their firm as “aspiring to create a more diverse workforce,” down 3% from 2022’s results. A further 28% said they are beginning to make changes (3% ahead of 2022), but the percentage of respondents saying their firms had not yet started on DEI efforts grew to 15% in 2023 (4% higher than 2022).

The 2023 survey reached 322 Canadian insurance professionals – up sharply from 208 respondents in 2022. Of those 322, 67% work in commercial insurance and 48% in personal lines. Nearly all (92%) indicated they worked at retail brokerages and 8% worked at MGAs.

Despite a rise in those indicating formal DEI efforts weren’t underway, many verbatim comments from respondents showed an openness to diverse workplaces.

“We haven’t TALKED about it,” said a 50-plus respondent from an urban brokerage out West, “but we are just organically a pretty diverse organization.”

And, a boomer-aged Quebec respondent said, “We don’t ‘talk’ about that. It’s just clear. We’ve had engagement parties for same-sex couples. We have gay people in management. All is good.”

Yet, while a respondent who identified as LGBTQ+ noted their office is a mix of men, women and people of colour and that equal pay and fair pay are emphasized, there are no discussions of sexism, homophobia or racism.

See also  You'll Need A Special License To Drive 'Ultra High-Powered Vehicles' In South Australia

“It feels verboten,” the respondent said. “The office walks the walk much better than anywhere I’ve worked, but I do wish we didn’t have to pretend systemic discrimination wasn’t a thing.”

While 2023’s results showed 12% of broker respondents reporting senior leadership “reflects a vast amount of diversity” (a 2% decrease from 2022) and 17% said, “over 50% of our leadership team belongs to a historically marginalized or underrepresented identity group” (also down 2% from 2022), DEI progress was still reflected in organizations’ leadership structures.

The total for both categories, 29%, remained in line with the 31% of respondents who identified their firm as ‘leading’ on DEI in 2022’s survey.

Meanwhile, just over half (51%) said their firm’s leadership reflected some diversity, and 19% indicated there was no diversity within their firm’s leadership team (a 3% rise over 2022).

Fully 81% of respondents indicated there is at least some diversity within their organization’s senior leadership – 63% reported women leaders, and 59% indicated women over 55 occupied C-suite jobs. Other areas of cited were:

Those who speak more than one language (including with an accent) – 48%
People under age 40 – 44%
Visible/ethnic minorities – 40%
LGBTQ+ community – 15%
People with an evident physical disability – 3%

“Diversity and inclusion are the pillars of our company,” noted a Gen X woman at an urban Ontario brokerage who indicated she’s both an immigrant and speaks English as a second language.

But one millennial respondent at an urban brokerage noted that while their firm has a good mix of genders and some people of colour, “We don’t discuss politics, so I don’t think I would be ‘allowed’ to talk about being queer. At the same time, I don’t feel it would be held against me,” the respondent said.

See also  This Manual-Swapped Lexus IS300 SportCross Might Be The Perfect Wagon

“Disabilities and parenthood responsibilities are two things that are frowned upon, so I keep my disability to myself as much as possible.”

 

Feature image by iStock.com/PeopleImages