RSS

Towergate: the art of smart buying

Article Date:  Jul 12 2006


in partnership with Ernst & Young

When Peter Cullum and his colleagues first sat around his kitchen table in 1997 to plan the creation of Towergate, they were clear from the outset that acquisition was central to the strategy. What has been remarkable is the speed and intensity of the ambition and execution.

‘We started with a plain sheet of paper,’ Cullum recalls. ‘We thought that we should shoot for a £100 million premium and a £10 million profit and that we could have an enterprise worth up to £140 million in five years. We were clear about what we wanted to achieve, as we had a lot of market knowledge. We took our acquired market knowledge and then identified not just niches, but crevices – they were so small.’

Cullum and his colleagues saw that a classic marketing approach, with its emphasis on focus and product specialisation, could be applied to the non-life insurance market.

‘The received wisdom in the industry was that it had to be commoditised and sold in packaged lots,’ he says. ‘Underwriting for the majority of classes could be done by computers; so long as the data was accurate and available, it was a straightforward process.’

Insurers often outsource their underwriting to specialists with necessary detailed knowledge of very particular sectors (such as caravan parks or golf clubs). For one thing, a caravan park owner isn’t a big enough enterprise to be an attractive customer for a large insurer; and, second, specialist knowledge is required to underwrite a caravan park successfully. These underwriting agencies tend to be small, privately owned businesses, working in isolation. Cullum perceived that the insurers had undervalued these agencies and that a rapid acquisition programme could achieve critical mass in a hitherto fragmented market.

So he sought out these agencies and bought them – by the barrel-load. He has acquired more than 50 in eight years.

It was one thing to buy them; it has been quite another to integrate them in order to gain the benefits of the scale that this rapid acquisition programme generated. In one respect, he was fortunate, as he was creating the corporate culture from scratch rather than having to marry two different cultures. His philosophy was to respect the individual knowledge of the underwriting staff and not impose an overweening management structure on top of them. All the advantages he gained by being fast in his acquisition strategy would be lost if the people working in the newly acquired businesses then felt constrained by committees or uncertainty about their ability to respond and act with authority. Towergate’s ‘head office’ has to be as small as possible.

In 2002 Cullum started to repeat the formula. He saw that the insurance broker market was fragmenting as a number of external factors combined. Insurers were moving to other forms of distribution channel, significantly by going direct or using the internet. Increased regulation of the sector, initially voluntary and then made mandatory by the Financial Services Authority, meanwhile, was introducing complexity and compliance burdens. And there was the fact that many broker principals were over 55.

For these reasons, many commentators had pronounced insurance broking a dying sector. In Cullum’s view, however, the brokers remained a very powerful presence. Roughly two-thirds of commercial insurance lines were maintained by brokers, as were virtually half of personal insurance lines. Brokers, he reasoned, had survived considerable attacks over the past 20 years and still retained loyal customers who valued their advice, interpretation and personal contact. Here, too, was another market ripe for acquisition.

Comments 

There are currently no comments on this article

Sign up and get...

  • Regular GrowthBusiness newsletters
  • Post comments on articles
Sign up

Cut your speed to market and your costs!

FedEx Express has now created an account tailored perfectly for new small businesses. Instant account setup, online shipping, proof of delivery and an immediate discount of up to 15% off standard rates. Speed up your supply chain and gain the edge on your competitors! Visit: www.fedex.com/gb/smallbusiness

Royal Mail can help your business grow

However you’re looking to grow – by finding new customers, developing your existing customers or by saving time and money – Royal Mail can help. Just spend a couple of minutes telling us about your company, and we’ll send you a tailored growth pack, designed specifically to help you grow your business. Get started.

TOTALCARD

The fuel card that gives you more. Be it local account cards or corporate fleet cards that you need, TOTALCARD is the right choice for your business. Apply Today!

Research

  • What is the average AIM company paying its chief executive? Who are AIM’s highest- and lowest-paid chief executives?

Global Technology Review 2008

Who are the world’s 200 most influential IT companies across sales, revenue growth, profits and net margins? Read more in the Global Technology Review 2008

Patent Landscape on AIM 2008

A comprehensive report on those AIM listed companies who have the most patent filings in the last two years.

More

Events Calendar

Investor AllStars 2009

23rd September, London Hilton, Park Lane

The CANACCORD Adams Media Magnate Awards 2009

26th March, Vinopolis, London

Rosenblatt New Energy Awards 2010

25th February, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD

More

More Analysis: Business Leaders

James Caan of Dragons' Den

Breaking down barriers

Go-getters like former Apprentice contestants Saira Khan and Tim Campbell are trying to raise aspirations within the ethnically diverse communities they came from. GrowthBusiness talks to them.

How green was the Budget?

Riccardo Segat, CEO of cleantech-focused investor Amplio Partners, rates the Budget on its commitment to green issues.

Warren Buffett's secrets of success

Alessandro Hatami, MD of payment specialist provider PayPoint.net, reveals what he learned from Buffett's biography.

Advertisement

Poll

Are you seeing green shoots?



Have your vote on current issues

People who read this also read

  • Drive personnified: Toni Mascolo

    Passion matters. It’s why entrepreneurs start businesses. It’s what persuades others to get involved, as employees, customers or suppliers. It’s a sustaining force during bad times. But it’s not necessarily inexhaustible. Successful growth creates plenty of ways that can diminish its force.
  • In a room with Vue

    Vue’s management buy-out positioned the UK’s second largest cinema chain to play a leading role in the transformation of cinematic entertainment.
  • Eric Archambeau: strictly mainstream

    GrowthBusiness interviews Wellington Partners’ Eric Archambeau.
  • Urie calls the shots at Metrodome

    Some people are suited to early retirement. Peter Urie, CEO of independent film distributor Metrodome, is not one of them.
  • Alki David: a man of many parts

    With interests from free diving to filmmaking, billionaire Alki David is now looking to tap the video-on-demand market.

White Papers

15-Minute Guide to Best Practices in Multichannel Correspondence Management

Explore an overview of multichannel correspondence in today's business world as well as what's needed for tomorrow's.

Amplifying the Value of Travel & Expense Automation

Learn how to maximize the value of T&E spend.

Area Development

Is an economic development magazine that provides information on site selection and facility planning to executive readers involved with company plans for expansions or relocation.

More

Take part in our competition and win a laptop

Growthbusiness.co.uk has teamed up with Insurantz.com to find out from you the secret of your business's longevity.

– Is it having a knack for hiring the right people or knowing that if you want something done properly, you need to do it yourself?

– Are you adept at reacting to changing market conditions and going the extra mile for your customers?

– Have you always had a keen eye for the numbers or made sure you have someone on board who does?

If your business has proven itself over a number of years, or if you know of a great local business and think it should be entered, then we want to hear about it!

A judging panel will draw up a shortlist of entrants for you to vote on to decide who will become the Growth Business Local Legend.

The winning company will receive computer equipment worth up to £500, plus £1,000 of business insurance (or free business cover up to an annual premium of £1,000 for larger businesses) all courtesy of our partners at Insurantz.com.

All shortlisted businesses will receive marketing collateral to promote your entry and encourage support from your customers and business associates. Everyone who enters the competition will automatically receive a 10% discount voucher code off insurance products bought from Insurantz.com.

To access the discount voucher code, please complete the survey.

At Insurantz..com, we encourage entrepreneurship, so start-up businesses are not charged extra when other insurers may decline or charge more. Insurantz.com offers a double-the-difference price guarantee on premiums where a better deal is found within 14 days of the cover start date.

Terms and conditions apply

Click here to enter the