Britam vets executives afresh amid layoff of 138 staff

Britam vets executives afresh amid layoff of 138 staff

Britam new chief executive Tavaziva Madzinga. PHOTO | COURTESY Insurance group Britam Holdings is moving to implement the restructuring of its top executive team, with individuals being assessed for redeployment to other roles or exit under a voluntary early retirement (VER) plan.

Sources familiar with the matter said the long-serving executives started attending the interviews yesterday.

According to leaked documents, the Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed firm has targeted 10 positions in the upcoming shake-up.

These include the principal executive director, chief of staff, group chief operating officer, corporate affairs director, marketing director, commercial director, legal and company secretarial.

Others are the chief executive roles for the insurer’s life, general and asset management businesses.

Elimination of some executive roles is part of a plan to shed an estimated 138 jobs by end of May at a cost of up to Sh700 million, with a consultant hired by the company saying there are too many managers and reporting layers.

“The business appears to be top-heavy, driving operational costs even higher,” the insurer said in a recent statement.

Britam’s corporate restructure appears to be one of the most significant in recent years after the largest one undertaken by KCB Group that led to the scrapping of some 15 executive directors’ posts.

This is the second wave of layoffs at the insurer which spent Sh664 million to let go of 110 employees in 2018.

Britam said the new job cuts had been necessitated by the company’s financial and share price underperformance relative to its peers, adding that its current staff costs remain bloated.

The insurer added that remuneration accounts for half of its operating costs.The company said it could cut 10 to 15 percent of its total workforce which stood at 923 in December 2019, according to the latest available disclosures.This places the estimated job cuts at 138. Most of layoffs will be in the Kenyan operation – its biggest and which employed 624 people or 67.6 percent of the total staff count at the end of 2019.Britam said employees whose roles have been affected by the restructuring are eligible to apply for the voluntary early retirement.The exit package includes compensation for accrued leave days, the balance of medical cover for 2021 and notice pay as per individual contracts.The company also said it would make ex-gratia payments above the statutory minimum of 15 days for each year of service, subject to board approval.A source familiar with the matter said the insurer plans to pay […]

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