FD Capital
Welcome to today's episode, where we're discussing one of the most significant regulatory developments in UK financial services – Consumer Duty. Since its introduction, Consumer Duty has transformed the way the FCA expects firms to operate. What started as a compliance implementation programme has evolved into something much bigger: an ongoing requirement for firms to demonstrate and evidence good customer outcomes. Today, we're exploring what firms have learned since implementation, where many organisations are still struggling, and why the people leading Consumer Duty programmes have become some of the most sought-after professionals in the UK financial services sector. This episode is inspired by the excellent Consumer Duty Outcomes Guide published by FD Capital, specialists in senior compliance, risk and regulatory recruitment for FCA-regulated firms. The Shift from Rules to Outcomes Historically, many firms approached regulation through a process-driven lens. The key question was often: "Did we follow the required procedures?" Consumer Duty changes that question entirely. The FCA now expects firms to demonstrate that customers are actually achieving good outcomes. Following a process alone is no longer enough. Firms must be able to evidence that products, services, communications and support arrangements are delivering positive results for consumers. This represents a fundamental shift in regulatory philosophy. It's no longer about ticking boxes. It's about outcomes. Understanding the Four Consumer Duty Outcomes At the heart of Consumer Duty sit four key outcomes. Products and Services Firms must ensure products are designed for a clearly identified target market and distributed appropriately. This requires ongoing product governance, regular reviews and evidence that products continue to meet customer needs. Price and Value The FCA expects firms to demonstrate that customers receive fair value. This doesn't mean products must be the cheapest available. It means the benefits received should be proportionate to the price being paid. Fair value assessments have become a major supervisory focus and remain one of the most scrutinised areas of Consumer Duty compliance. Consumer Understanding Communications must be clear, understandable and support informed decision-making. The FCA increasingly expects firms to test communications and demonstrate that customers genuinely understand what they're buying and the risks involved. Consumer Support Customers must receive appropriate support throughout the product lifecycle. This includes accessible service channels, complaint handling, vulnerable customer support and removing unreasonable barriers that prevent customers from achieving their financial objectives. Why Many Firms Are Still Struggling One of the most interesting observations highlighted in the FD Capital guide is that many firms viewed Consumer Duty as a one-time implementation project. The reality is very different. The initial implementation phase may be complete, but the ongoing challenge is proving compliance every day. Many firms continue to face difficulties around: * Outcomes monitoring * Fair value assessments * Data collection and reporting * Vulnerable customer frameworks * Distribution chain oversight * Board reporting and governance The FCA's recent supervisory communications suggest firms are improving, but there is still significant focus on evidence, accountability and measurable customer outcomes. The Growing Importance of Compliance Leadership Perhaps one of the biggest consequences of Consumer Duty has been the growing demand for senior compliance professionals. We're seeing increasing demand for: * Chief Compliance Officers * Heads of Consumer Duty * Chief Risk Officers * Compliance Directors * Consumer Duty Analysts * Regulatory Reporting Specialists These roles have evolved significantly. Today's compliance leaders need much more than regulatory knowledge. They need commercial awareness, data literacy, governance expertise and the ability to influence stakeholders across the organisation. Consumer Duty has become a business-wide responsibility rather than a compliance department responsibility. What Good Looks Like So what separates firms that are succeeding from those that continue to face challenges? According to the patterns identified by FD Capital, successful firms tend to have: * Strong board engagement * Clear ownership and accountability * Effective outcomes monitoring * Robust management information * Well-resourced compliance functions * Genuine customer-focused cultures Most importantly, they recognise that Consumer Duty is not a document. It's an operating model. It's embedded into product design, pricing decisions, customer communications and support processes. And that requires the right people. Final Thoughts Consumer Duty continues to reshape the UK financial services landscape. As the FCA's expectations mature, firms will increasingly be judged not on what policies they have written, but on the outcomes they can demonstrate. For many organisations, the question is no longer: "Have we implemented Consumer Duty?" It's: "Can we prove we're delivering good outcomes today?" If you'd like a deeper understanding of the regulatory framework, practical implementation challenges, ongoing governance requirements and the specialist roles firms are hiring to support Consumer Duty programmes, we strongly recommend reading FD Capital's comprehensive Consumer Duty Outcomes Guide. You can find it here: https://www.fdcapital.co.uk/consumer-duty-outcomes-guide/ [https://www.fdcapital.co.uk/consumer-duty-outcomes-guide/] and https://www.fdcapital.co.uk/consumer-duty-guide/ [https://www.fdcapital.co.uk/consumer-duty-guide/]
255 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de FD Capital!