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Simon English: As a caring, sharing chairman, Aviva's Lord Sharman was an abject failure

Simon English
Thursday 03 May 2012 22:35 BST
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Outlook You seem to have mistaken me for someone who has the slightest interest in your problems. Aviva's chairman, Lord Sharman, didn't say this yesterday, but he seemed to communicate it in every other way.

His job at the annual meeting was to persuade an understandably sceptical audience that Aviva isn't run solely in the interests of a small number of vastly overpaid executives.

That it takes its societal role seriously, that it cares about small investors and policyholders.

On this he was, as someone from the floor noted, an abject failure.

As a caring, sharing chairman he was unpromising right from the start.

"May I remind shareholders that questions must relate to the business of the annual meeting," he pompously began. "Clearly state your name..."

More than once he tetchily objected to the fair comments coming his way. "I have listened!" he insisted. "I am chairing this meeting, not you," he bellowed. "Next question!"

One poor fellow bravely stood up to say he is owed a pension by Aviva of £6,800 a year, an amount of money so puny to the assembled board they must have assumed he meant "a month" or "a week" or "every day".

He isn't getting even this stipend at the moment due to an administrative error at Aviva. He was at his wit's end. "I need that money to keep me in beer and tobacco," he said. Could someone please help him?

In response, Lord Sharman offered him the advice that it was unwise to spend money on tobacco. He doubtless meant this to be light-hearted, but in his hands it just sounded patronising.

Aviva is such an important company in the lives of so many people it really should be more considerate.

By common consent at the meeting, its customer service sucks.

From personal experience, it double sucks with fudge on top.

Aviva's stakeholders presently have every right to assume that since executive pay bears no relation to how happy either investors or customers are, the way in which it is calculated is blatantly inept.

If Aviva were ripping off customers but shareholders were delighted, there would at least be one group of winners outside the very top staff.

Aviva would say that corporate pay is a complicated issue. There is no reason why it should be.

At the moment, this company looks like a fiefdom with little concern for the world around it.

Aviva's customers are prudent, sensible types.

They save diligently. They buy shares for the long term. They want to be self-sufficient. They are the very backbone of Britain, in fact.

All they really expect in return is that life be moderately fair.

Aviva's response to all this was more or less: you're wrong. We are right. Here's a video about how great we are.

Lord Sharman's response to the accusation that the company has dramatically underperformed was to blame the banking crash and the eurozone crisis.

The thing is, if Andrew Moss, the chief executive, is at the mercy of markets, then he can't be a brilliant businessman worth £3m a year (and the rest). Any of us can ride a bull market. He's supposed to make it work in the down times.

Lord Sharman, as he noted more than once, is standing down so won't be at Aviva's next annual meeting.

The chief executive might be, but the incoming chairman has got a serious decision to make.

Mr Moss has had a more than fair crack at running Aviva. Perhaps the question is not, should he go, but why should he stay?

s.english@independent.co.uk

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