How often do you have a leading European C&R practitioner with nearly 40 years’ experience, dropping real-life knowledge on topics that most likely are causing you a headache? In this blog series, we’ve got you covered!
The best way I can demonstrate this is to reflect on a previous engagement I had at a UK Bank on Credit Cards and Unsecured loans. In this organisation, the collections strategy was created by the Risk Division and deployed by the Operations Division, managed by Service Level Agreements and KPIs.
So, we changed the strategy and the priority treatment of accounts and brought in some practical segmentation ahead of risk grouping and reduced the subsequent risk groups from 1 to 3.
In terms of practical segmentation for Cards, this included:
After these segments were collated, the rest migrated to the appropriate risk group.
When prioritising these accounts, we chose to do this by impairment or provision value as opposed to balance. IFRS9 brought with it a different way of provisioning at account and not portfolio level and, of course, a balance of say 3,000 pounds may have a smaller impairment value than one of 1,500 pounds.
By focusing on impairment value per account we were now able to focus on those accounts with a bigger impact on the P&L and ensure that Risk and Operations had a common KPI.
This is hugely important as too often Risk and Operations have a different focus with one focusing on efficiency and capacity and the other on impairment.
Implementing the Strategy
Achieving 12% reduction in new impairment
The resultant roll out as champion strategy to 100% of the collections portfolio resulted in a 12% reduction in new impairment in the financial year with an impact on the P&L of several millions.
Key Takeaways
Blending practical and scientific segmentation and building treatments accordingly around impairment value can bring substantial financial benefit in Collections strategy and helps close that bridge between Risk and Operations with a common goal.
Bob Welsh is a leading European industry practitioner in Collections and Recovery with nearly 40 years’ experience. A former Collections Executive at Bank of Scotland, RBS and Lloyds Banking Group his experience has been supplemented as a consultant with assignments at Debt Purchasers, Debt Collection Agencies and multiple sectors across Europe. From leading large, complex systems upgrades and migrations to heading up Operations and Strategy Bob is a well-respected voice in the sector.