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2008 Risk Innovators: in a class of their own: what have innovators in risk management and insurance done for you lately? Plenty, as it turns out. They just do it quietly and with little fanfare. That makes them sometimes hard to spot, but the time has come to recognize their contributions.


[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Summary

* Innovators in risk management and insurance and the innovations that matter.

* Innovators in risk management cut across all sectors, and classes of risk.

* Leaders of the pack: Winners of the Responsibility Leader awards.

**********

It's one thing to think of or talk about an innovative idea--just listen to the presidential candidates in the closing weeks of "silly season Noun 1. silly season - a time usually late summer characterized by exaggerated news stories about frivolous matters for want of real news
period, period of time, time period - an amount of time; "a time period of 30 years"; "hastened the period of time of his
"--but it's quite another to turn those ideas into reality. And that's exactly where the winners featured in our 2008 Risk Innovators issue separate themselves from their peers ... and those running for office.

Every one of Risk & Insurance[R] magazine's 2008 Risk Innovators was able to muster the energy and the will to peel their ideas off their mental page and turn them into an executable process to the benefit of colleagues, customers, senior management and even themselves.

Some of those processes offered incremental improvements in risk and insurance management, others are more transformational in nature with longer-term benefits to the industry.

Take, for instance, Mike Perito, risk engineer of the Dubai-based Oman Insurance Co., and inventor of the superhero su·per·he·ro  
n. pl. su·per·he·roes
A figure, especially in a comic strip or cartoon, endowed with superhuman powers and usually portrayed as fighting evil or crime.
 character Super Oman.

The marketing coup for his employer aside, odds are that Super Oman has done more for communicating the importance of loss control to foreign-language workers than any white paper or loss-control consultant armed with a Ph.D has ever done for communicating the importance of on-the-job safety.

OK, maybe we're exaggerating a little, but you've got to give Perito credit, or at least a raise. How many people, with just a comic strip comic strip, combination of cartoon with a story line, laid out in a series of pictorial panels across a page and concerning a continuous character or set of characters, whose thoughts and dialogues are indicated by means of "balloons" containing written speech. , have the power to change attitudes and cut down on workers' comp injuries, particularly among hurly-burly workers in the construction and real estate industries?

As Perito already knows, Super Oman and the comics have a lot of power to communicate. You can read more about Perito by turning to Page 32.

Interviewing candidates and talking with their colleagues and peers has been a thrilling, sometimes humorous process, and by now we've done enough digging to know that innovators in risk management and insurance come in as many shapes and sizes as do their innovations.

Some risk innovators embrace technology and relish in creating master programs to control losses. Others cast themselves as almost on the level of idiot savants, plodders of decent intellect who are able to follow their hunches and build teams that create winning solutions for them and their companies.

Which is why there's a special place in our hearts for Paul Buckley, senior director of risk management with Tyco International For the unrelated division of Mattel, see .

Tyco International Ltd. NYSE: TYC is a diversified manufacturing conglomerate incorporated in Bermuda, with United States operational headquarters in New Jersey.
. He's one of us, or sounds like it: "The problem is I am not that smart, I have to keep things simple for me," he said.

And for us too ... and the rest of the executives with risk responsibility working around the country.

That's the kind of thinking that has an impact on the people who work for and around you: Get out of your own skin and inspire others to do the same. Buckley's reorganization of Tyco's claims operation required imagination more than anything else.

He was creative enough or willful enough to convince two competing TPAs to hold hands across the globe, trusting each other through a symbiotic symbiotic /sym·bi·ot·ic/ (sim?bi-ot´ik) associated in symbiosis; living together.

sym·bi·ot·ic
adj.
Of, resembling, or relating to symbiosis.
 system to channel claims reports all the way back to his office in Princeton, N.J. In the end, he unified a claims management program that functions on six continents Six Continents is a large retail PLC in UK which split into Six Continents Retail known as Mitchells and Butlers plc. The hotels and soft drinks business of Six Continents PLC is now known as InterContinental Hotels Group PLC.  and more than 30 countries.

No large capital outlays needed here; no booting up See boot.  fancy risk management information systems, thank you very much. All Buckley needed was to get his subordinates speaking in the same language. Where's the innovation in that, you ask? In its simplicity.

Getting employees on different continents to communicate with one another about the nature or status of a claim is a big step forward for a company whose former CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  seemed more concerned with throwing toga-clad birthday parties in Sardinia.

"I'm just an idea guy," said Buckley. That's right. But ideas don't cost anything. Good ideas can even bring in a lot of money, or at least cut your claims costs, as they did under Buckley's reorganization. Great ideas, well, they last forever. Buckley's profile appears on Page 58.

And this brings us to the kinds of innovations that, while not technically earth-shattering, make a big difference to the end-users, the people who ultimately matter most.

How much data is stored in the bowels of a Fortune 500's mainframe, yet remains buried under layers and layers of code? How much have companies spent on consultants and TPAs with empty promises of turning data into information palatable by the end-user: risk managers, claims or disability managers, or even the chief financial officer?

That's where Michael Wissman, risk management administrator for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority The Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) is a regional quasi-public state agency that serves 3.8 million people in five counties in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania region. , rides to the rescue. If there's one innovation to remember him by in his profile on Page 70, it's the expression "user-friendly statistics."

Anyone who can make statistics a friend of the user deserves consideration by the Nobel committee, in our opinion.

Yes, we know, we're using a little hyperbole here. But let's keep the big picture in mind. The point we're getting at is that turning data into information relevant and clear to people on the front lines of the risk management industry is worthy of recognition.

The subsequent profiles summarize their achievements, the strategies, the challenges faced and challenges conquered of risk innovators in their own words and in the words of those who work with them every day to bring some rationality to the world of risk.

Innovation is alive and moving forward quickly in many places, in fact. Enterprise risk management is one such area, though where it's headed isn't quite clear.

"Enterprise risk management is ripe for innovation all over the place," said Robert Morrell, founder and CEO of Marietta, Ga.-based Riskonnect Inc., a marketer of risk management software involved in "making spatial special," in the words of one writer.

It is. But Morrell, who sold a risk management information systems company known as RiskLabs to Aon a few years ago, insists ERM (Enterprise Relationship Management) An umbrella term with many shades of meaning over the years. It may refer to the management of information from any or all of an organization's customers, suppliers, business partners and employees.  isn't solely an exercise in quantitative thinking. Maybe so. But if Morrell is convinced that ERM is at its core not about quantitative analysis Quantitative Analysis

A security analysis that uses financial information derived from company annual reports and income statements to evaluate an investment decision.

Notes:
, then he's got to convince the likes of Mike Giacobbe. More on Morrell and holistic risk management on Page 72.

Giacobbe, a director in the Chicago offices of Aon, speaks about ERM in categorical terms that are the opposite of Morrell's: "The idea of enterprise risk management is an approach to quantify all risks," said Giacobbe.

Go figure. Two risk and insurance innovators with diametrically di·a·met·ri·cal   also di·a·met·ric
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or along a diameter.

2. Exactly opposite; contrary.



di
 opposed strategies about how to approach enterprise risk management. Is it any surprise that there's nary nar·y  
adj.
Not one: "Frequently, measures of major import . . . glide through these chambers with nary a whisper of debate" George B. Merry.
 a consensus about ERM, or that it's been a slow climb penetrating the upper ranks of corporate leadership?

You can read more on Giacobbe's innovative contributions to quantitative risk management on Page 30.

Innovators in risk management and insurance win in part because of the sheer strength of their willpower, coupled of course with their knowledge of the industry, their contacts and, oftentimes, their intellect.

Meet Fred Pachon, the vice president of risk management and insurance for Santa Barbara Santa Barbara (săn'tə bär`brə, –bərə), city (1990 pop. 85,571), seat of Santa Barbara co., S Calif., on the Pacific Ocean; inc. 1850. , Calif.,-based Select Staffing. Pachon works as a risk manager for a temp agency that has workers spread out all over the country, many of them in harsh, dangerous industrial environments.

Pachon works in a business where margins and companies can be wiped out by even a minor workers' comp claim. So what has he done about it? He's created ratings systems for the attorneys that handle his claims. If you close your cases quickly and for reasonable amounts, you get more cases. But if you don't, don't let the door slam you in the backside.

"It doesn't matter if you send me a bottle of wine or whatever, it is all about performance," said Pachon, who appears on Page 60.

Looking to keep an eye on to watch.
- Shak.

See also: Eye
 his company's risk management contractors, Pachon's even gone so far as to put workers in the offices of his TPA (Transient Program Area) See transient area.

TPA - Transient Program Area
 and his carrier that report to him. Can you imagine the silence in the room when Pachon had the audacity to mention that idea? Call it "hardball innovation." We'll drink to that.

For Grace M. Crickette, chief risk officer for the University of California at Berkeley (body, education) University of California at Berkeley - (UCB)

See also Berzerkley, BSD.

http://berkeley.edu/.

Note to British and Commonwealth readers: that's /berk'lee/, not /bark'lee/ as in British Received Pronunciation.
, looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 and obtaining money from the U.C. system to fund the Be Smart About Safety program was deserving of a master's degree master's degree
n.
An academic degree conferred by a college or university upon those who complete at least one year of prescribed study beyond the bachelor's degree.

Noun 1.
 in political science.

Cash-strapped senior managers weren't about to hand Crickette a blank cheek to be used on safety. "We had to gamble on ourselves," she said. Even when top university executives were presented with positive return on investment figures, it was still a difficult sell.

With a deficit in the workers' comp program at the 10-campus U.C. system when Crickette first arrived, the schools returned $37 million last year and $57 million this year thanks to better loss control measures.

"We need to sell safety like Madison Avenue Madison Avenue, celebrated street of Manhattan, borough of New York City. It runs from Madison Square (23d St.) to the Madison Bridge over the Harlem River (138th St.). In the 1940s and 50s, some of the major U.S.  sells soda," said Crickette. Now, there's an idea every risk manager in the country would find worth toasting. Crickette is profiled on Page 52.

Let's not Let's Not is a science fiction short story by Isaac Asimov. It was first published in Boston University Graduate Journal in December 1954. It was written for no payment as a favour to the journal, and later appeared in the collection Buy Jupiter.  forget about Jeff Davies, former risk manager at the Indiana Blood Center. He came up with an elegant and revolutionary solution that eliminated the risk associated with storing donor Social Security numbers on his employer's database.

Instead of using Social Security numbers to identify donors, Davies proposed the idea of using fingerprint scans. Donors simply place each of their index fingers on a low-cost sensor that is connected to a Web browser The program that serves as your front end to the Web on the Internet. In order to view a site, you type its address (URL) into the browser's Location field; for example, www.computerlanguage.com, and the home page of that site is downloaded to you. , and they are identified out of the more than 500,000 donors the Blood Center has on record.

Software developed by BIO-key International uses that fingerprint data to develop a unique mathematical template, something like a bar code.

"This lets them stop storing Social Security numbers, which is a liability risk," said Jim Sullivan For other persons named Jim Sullivan, see Jim Sullivan (disambiguation).
Jim Sullivan was a Welsh rugby league player. The Wigan full-back, a prodigious goalkicker, scored 6,022 points in a career that spanned 25 years.
, director of sales at Wall, N.J.-based BIO-Key. "This is a great solution to a big problem. It was the first time it was done in a blood center," he said.

The fingerprint, always a unique identifier With reference to a given (possibly implicit) set of objects, a unique identifier is any identifier which is guaranteed to be unique among all identifiers used for those objects and for a specific purpose. , can't be lost like a donor ID card. For donors, the fingerprint scan eliminates the hassle of having to carry around another card in order to be able to donate blood. The Red Cross is now interested in using the technology, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Sullivan.

Davies' profile appears on Page 50

Then there are the company men, executives in massive corporations that work on every continent except the one where the Emperor Penguins march. They're innovators of the quieter sort less the individualist in·di·vid·u·al·ist  
n.
1. One that asserts individuality by independence of thought and action.

2. An advocate of individualism.



in
 superstars and more the work-from-the-inside insiders carrying unwieldy titles but highly skilled at weaving through bureaucracies capable of immense good yet so often calcified Calcified
Hardened by calcium deposits.

Mentioned in: Heart Valve Repair
 by entrenched en·trench   also in·trench
v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es

v.tr.
1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending.

2.
 interests.

Enter Janine Nicholson, director of workers' compensation--janitorial, and her colleague, Mark Poyadue, national director of workers' compensation workers' compensation, payment by employers for some part of the cost of injuries, or in some cases of occupational diseases, received by employees in the course of their work.  for ABM Industries ABM Industries Incorporated NYSE: ABM is an American corporation involved in outsourced, building maintenance. Divisions include ABM Janitorial, Ampco System Parking, ABM Engineering, American Commercial Security (ACSS), Security Services of America (SSA), Amtech Lighting, and  Inc.

They flew in from the company's West Coast offices and showed the corporate brass how to slash the company's comp claims filed in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, where the vested interests vested interest
n.
1. Law A right or title, as to present or future possession of an estate, that can be conveyed to another.

2. A fixed right granted to an employee under a pension plan.

3.
 in lifetime pension payments for disabilities exposed the company to some very. long-tail risks indeed.

"Let's see Let's See was a Canadian television series broadcast on CBC Television between September 6, 1952 to July 4, 1953. The segment, which had a running time of 15 minutes, was a puppet show with a character named Uncle Chichimus (voice of John Conway), which presented each , 8125,000 up front or $800,000 in the rear. Yeah, we're going to start dosing these claims," said Nicholson, recalling her experience. Characteristic plain talk from the "California girl" helped move claims along. The New York Settlement Program, begun more than two years ago, has cut ABM's net incurred by $20 million.

A profile of Nicholson and Poyadue appear on Page 58.

No issue on innovation in risk management would be complete without the mention of FM Global, the stalwart of stalwarts in the property/casualty sector, a company that cares deeply for and measures the precise rate of return delivered by such mundane items as rivets hammered into a roof. In this inaugural issue, the company man and risk innovator is Weston Baker, senior engineering technical specialist for FM Global.

Baker's an expert on fire research, and all you need to do to ignite Baker's passion is to broach broach (broch) a fine barbed instrument for dressing a tooth canal or extracting the pulp.

broach
n.
A dental instrument for removing the pulp of a tooth or exploring its canal.
 the subject of sprinklers: exactly where they're positioned on ceilings, when they should go off, why they failed to operate, how much they cost, and a building's precise chances of survival when protected by a given number of sprinklers.

His innovations, if not quite apparent to the expert eye even of veteran sprinkler specialists, soon should be. He's modifying many of the existing sprinkler guidelines that are more than 40 years old. As a result, he expects to come up with tar cheaper and simpler engineering solutions to fight fires indoors than in the past.

Baker's profile appears on Page 55.

EXECUTABLE CREATIVITY

If there's a thread that binds the risk innovators featured in the following pages, it is that they are all committed to providing solutions--for themselves, their clients and their employers.

Not only have the innovators shown creativity and resourcefulness in their endeavors, but they've distinguished themselves with their ability to execute, proving that their ideas are not ones to be relegated to the inside pages of a consulting report.

We suspect that many of the innovations came from plain-old elbow grease--hard work and long hours. Most striking was the fact that many of the innovations didn't rely on complicated software or involved processes. More often than not, the innovations were incremental in nature: a faster way to process a claim, a deeper way to analyze the data. Few innovators mentioned that their ideas came to them courtesy of the proverbial lightning bolt Lightning bolt may refer to
  • Lightning discharge, electrical discharge within clouds or between clouds and the ground
  • Thunderbolt, a traditional expression for a discharge of lightning or a symbolic representation thereof
, via a eureka moment, a sudden revelation.

Rather, the innovators spoke of quiet toil and long discussions with colleagues, bosses and clients. They thought about their corporate processes on their commutes home, mulled over the results, and tossed and turned in hopes of finding a better way to deliver a product or a service palatable to the multitude of politico/corporate interests within the corporate environment.

Have these innovators in risk management and insurance made their employers more efficient? Their workers more content? Slashed claims costs? Improved benefits distribution? We hope so.

Changes take place so fast in the 21st century that by the time a new product or business process comes to market, there's no telling whether the improvements will be obsolete in a week. At the very least, the risk innovators have earned the personal satisfaction of having made a contribution. And for that we should all be grateful.

How the Search was Conducted

For the Risk Innovator awards, the editors screened hundreds of applications to identify a group of finalists in each industry category that the editors felt were initially worthy of recognition. The group of finalists was then subject to a rigorous due diligence Research; analysis; your homework. This term has caught on in all industries, because it sounds so "wired." Who would want to do analysis or research when they can do due diligence. See wired.  and interview process.

Finalists had to provide at least two references and all the references were also interviewed. In addition, we also gathered feedback from different panels of industry experts. With all that information, the editors made the final decision on which innovators to honor.

In the course of the interviews and the reference checks, we were also looking for examples how the impact of the winners went beyond a particular project. We sought to identify risk innovators who had an impact beyond their own workplace--who, because of their efforts, benefited employees, their own corporate culture or the community at large with their commitment and innovation.

For the risk responsibility leader awards we looked for innovators who were willing to do what is right over what is easy in order to overcome any obstacles to successfully implementing their solutions.

Responsibility Leaders were required to go above and beyond the call of duty to employer, client and industry by showing that they had:

* Developed a unique and practical risk solution.

* Benefited not only their employer or industry but other employees, the community and family.

* Done the right thing to overcome obstacles.

After interviewing all the innovators and the references, the editors were able to identify seven innovators who we are also designating risk "Responsibility Leaders."

The project was sponsored by Liberty Mutual. In no way did our sponsor influence our selection process or our ultimate picks for responsibility leader.

The Responsible Seven

Call them the responsible seven, those individuals who stood out among those who stand out. They work 25 hours a day, travel from one company site to the next to a conference and a meeting with their broker and underwriter in London, yet find the time for a family, two pets and five hobbies.

Hokey hok·ey  
adj. hok·i·er, hok·i·est Slang
1. Mawkishly sentimental; corny.

2. Noticeably contrived; artificial.



hok
? Yes. But true.

Millions of people eat or work at the brand-name casual dining spots owned by Darden Restaurants Darden Restaurants, Inc. is a multi-brand restaurant operator. The firm owns several casual dining chain store, most notably Red Lobster and Olive Garden. Today, Darden owns and operates more than 1,300 restaurant locations throughout North America and has more than 150,000 , like Olive Garden This article or section is written like an .
Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view.
Mark blatant advertising for , using .
 and Red Lobster. Tom Cipollone has made all of their experiences safer, thanks to years spent aligning his corporation's ethos with his brand of nitty-gritty, risk management. His profile appears on Page 39.

Or how about our Summitteer? Jennifer Christian launched her "60 Summits Project" to tackle the return-to-work and stay-at-work process for all of us--how to get workers back on the job after an injury. Read more about Christian on Page 48.

One return-to-work model that could benefit our community could be the one designed by Susan Shemanski of Spherion Corp. Find out more on Page 62.

Allen Bova, profiled on Page 54, earns cum laude cum lau·de  
adv. & adj.
With honor. Used to express academic distinction: graduated cum laude; 25 cum laude graduates.
 honors for university risk managers, giving all an example on how to honor campus traditions without putting up with the risks of blurry-eyed students.

After all, risk managers are members of their community too, with children in schools and Little Leagues. Dan Thomas Danny Lee Thomas (May 9, 1951 - June 12, 1980) was a Major League Baseball player who played for the Milwaukee Brewers in 1976 and 1977.

Born in Birmingham, Alabama, Thomas attended Southern Illinois University and was the 6th pick overall in the 1972 amateur draft.
 gets this. While this public risk manager makes sure the 37,000 students in his school district make it to and from school safe every day, he has also taken it upon himself to be a principal driver of emergency planning in his hometown. See Page 63 for more.

Turn to Page 71 to read how Bruce Moeller lead DriveCam to monitor fleet drivers and deliver a service that will make drivers more careful and conscientious.

And praise for Janette Ament-pierce. This hotel VIP, featured on Page 36, is proof that dynamic, enterprisewide risk management is no just for the Fortune 500, and that risk managers can have a life despite working 25 hours a day.

--By Jack Roberts Jack Roberts (September 27, 1910 - October 1981) was an American football running back in the NFL for the Boston Redskins, Staten Island Stapletons, Philadelphia Eagles, and the Pittsburgh Pirates. He played college football at the University of Georgia.  and Matthew Brodsky

Editor's note Editor's Note (foaled in 1993 in Kentucky) is an American thoroughbred Stallion racehorse. He was sired by 1992 U.S. Champion 2 YO Colt Forty Niner, who in turn was a son of Champion sire Mr. Prospector and out of the mare, Beware Of The Cat.

Trained by D.
: Over the past two years, we've circled the country speaking with readers, advertisers and sources, asking them what they would like to see more of in Risk & Insurance[R] magazine. An overwhelming number of you responded by saying you'd like to see more stories about innovation. We've known this for some time, and we've written about innovation in risk and insurance in piecemeal fashion in our feature pages. Now, after traveling widely, attending trade shows, hosting seminars and considering hundreds of e-mail survey responses, we've answered with our first Risk Innovator issue.

The profiles in the pages that follow highlight the achievements of the men and women with the responsibility for risk, who work across a variety of industry sectors for a plethora of companies, or at times just work for themselves. You're unlikely to see splashy splash·y  
adj. splash·i·er, splash·i·est
1. Making or likely to make splashes.

2. Covered with splashes of color.

3. Showy; ostentatious. See Synonyms at showy.
 cover stories written about the innovators that appear in these pages. They're not the kind of people who travel to Jackson Hole Jackson Hole, fertile Rocky Mt. valley, c.50 mi (80 km) long and 6 to 8 mi (9.6–12.8 km) wide, NW Wyo., partly in Grand Teton National Park. Jackson Lake, 39 sq mi (101 sq km), a natural lake through which the Snake River flows, was dammed in 1916 to control , Wyo., or Davos, Switzerland, for fireside chats The fireside chats were a series of thirty evening radio talks given by United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt between 1933 and 1944. Origin of radio address  with Bill Gates (person) Bill Gates - William Henry Gates III, Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft, which he co-founded in 1975 with Paul Allen. In 1994 Gates is a billionaire, worth $9.35b and Microsoft is worth about $27b.  at the World Economic Forum. You're more likely to run into a risk innovator on the bus or flying across the country in coach gazing at spreadsheets on company-owned laptops.

In addition to featuring the people behind the innovations that move the risk management industry forward, we've bestowed a supplemental award for some of the innovators. The Responsibility Leader designation, sponsored by Liberty Mutual, recognizes innovators who've helped the community beyond risk management and insurance.

As always, readers are welcome to e-mail us at riskletters@lrp.com for future ideas on how to improve this issue, which will be published every year in mid-September.

@ On the Web

* Full listing of Risk Innovator and Responsibility Leader winners.

* How insurance innovation measures up in the Real World.

* CROs: The new powerhouses.

www.riskandinsurance.com

Jack Roberts, editor in chief

Matthew Kahn, publisher

DAN REYNOLDS is senior editor of Risk & Insurance[R]. He can be reached at dreynolds@lrp.com. CYRIL TUOHY is managing editor of Risk & Insurance[R]. He can be reached at ctuohy@lrp.com.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Axon Group
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Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

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Author:Reynolds, Dan; Tuohy, Cyril
Publication:Risk & Insurance
Article Type:Cover story
Date:Sep 15, 2008
Words:3393
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