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Breaking into the boardroom
The need for an increased role for women in Britain’s insurance industry is clear.
Insurance Business UK’s Elite Women 2025 survey data shows that 96% of respondents feel there is a lack of women leaders for younger women to look up to and aspire to follow in their footsteps.
Feedback from female industry respondents included:
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“Insurance has been dominated by men for a long time, and being a woman in technology within insurance and from an ethnic background makes it difficult. Navigating through unconscious bias is the most difficult thing I have been exposed to.”
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“Having worked in insurance for nearly 20 years, [I find that] there still exists sexist and derogatory comments in open forums. I sometimes wonder as my career and many other women’s careers progress, do we have to assume these misogynistic views will continue or will we need to build a shell of armour to stay in insurance?”
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“I find myself trying to juggle the wants of a family and having to go through fertility treatment. As women, we are own biggest critics, and sometimes, we all have a moment where we don’t feel worthy, or we panic about our personal wants and the impacts they could potentially have on our career. It’s not due to specific companies or individuals. It comes from years of battles women have had to face.”
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“The most challenging aspect is navigating environments where we are often still in the minority. Despite progress, it can be intimidating to find yourself in situations where establishing common ground feels difficult. This lack of representation can also make it challenging to find female role models to seek guidance from.”
Ensuring women are better represented is proven to improve a business across several metrics. For example, gender-diverse companies outperform the least gender-diverse companies by 48%.
The issue of equality is particularly pertinent as women ascend to higher positions where opportunities become fewer, creating an imbalance in leadership.
McKinsey’s Women in the Workplace 2024 report states, “Because of this ‘broken rung’ in the corporate ladder, men significantly outnumber women at the manager level, making it incredibly difficult for companies to support sustained progress at more senior levels.”
The report analysed the issue in the US with 281 participating organisations that collectively employ more than 10 million people, but the same issue is prevalent in the UK industry. A 2022 statistic recorded less than 7% of CEOs and 16% of chief financial officers in the sector being women.
Nicola Maguire of the British Insurance Brokers’ Association echoes this and feels there are no barriers to gaining an entry level role in the industry.
She says, “The issues occur when a woman needs to make specific life choices. The guilt and pressure women put upon themselves to raise a family and manage a senior role can often simply be too much. There is a big difference to having a job and wanting a career. The latter is more complex for women, who still tend to take on a higher percentage of domestic responsibilities.”
For full-time UK employees, the gender pay gap (that is, the difference between the average earnings between men and women excluding overtime) is largest in financial and insurance activities at 25.2%. Whereas it drops in part-time employees, it is still above most other sectors with a gender pay gap of 15.6%.
Government data also shows that women are less likely to be in higher-paying occupations, again pointing to less female involvement among the insurance industry’s senior roles.
All of IBUK’s Elite Women 2025 are bucking this trend and standing out as role models in leadership positions for other women to aspire to. They were selected by a panel of respected industry judges, who examined how each has made a meaningful contribution to the industry.
The hundreds of respondents to IBUK’s nomination process highlighted what they feel defines an outstanding female leader in today’s insurance industry:
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“Being prepared to use influence to speak out in support of others.”
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“Leading in an inspiring and authentic way, leaving lasting impressions and a clear vision for the future. Someone who opens doors for others and leaves the industry in a better place than she found it.”
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“Contributions would include mentorship and being an advocate for diversity and inclusion, as well as being involved with professional bodies and organisations.”
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“Courageously challenging the status quo, advocating for what she believes is right while earning the respect of others through her actions and integrity.”
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“Blends leadership with compassion and innovation with authenticity. A clear vision and the ability to inspire and guide others towards it.”
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“Genuinely seeking to make a positive impact in the lives of others and looking for opportunities to both identify and bring out the light that others possess.”
Donna Scully, joint owner and director of Carpenters Group, is a seven-time Elite Women winner.
After carving out a name as a workplace personal injury lawyer in London, she became part of the firm in 1997, and her leadership has transformed Carpenters from a general law firm into a specialist personal injury business.
“I set up the motor insurance arm of the business, which is now the biggest niche motor practice. The nice thing for me is as a lawyer, to be recognised in insurance, it is hard to break down that barrier sometimes, from being pigeonholed as legal,” she says.
“Insurance has become a bigger part of the business. It is about a third now, and insurance services account for two-thirds, and we’ve grown that over the years as we’ve diversified and tried to be innovative.”
Scully has seen the issue of women unable to assume leadership roles firsthand.
“It was much worse when I was younger and there were fewer women even at entry level. Now we’re seeing lots more women at entry level and mid-management, but the real area where the push needs to be is the C-suite,” she says. “This percentage of C-suite women in insurance is low, in single figures.”


“I’m not afraid to have my voice heard and to talk about things that are sometimes uncomfortable for people. It took hard work to get a seat at the table for me as an older woman, so I take that seriously”
Donna ScullyCarpenters Group
To address this across the industry, Scully has stepped up to mentor women in mid-management, acting as a sounding board and advisor, through her Insurance Breakfast Club.
“Some of their challenges are similar to what I had. Things like, there’s so many men around the table. How do you get your voice heard? How do you balance family and work? How do you assert yourself without getting in the way or upsetting people? There are still quite a lot of challenges for young women and those with families to push forward,” she says.
While progress is being made, there is a desire to see it happen faster.
Scully adds, “It is improving, when we went to events 10–15 years ago, it’d be 80%–90% men, but when you go now, it’s 60%–70%. But there aren’t enough women at the top. Once you get women leadership and women who are real movers and shakers, then that will change things dramatically because we know what the challenges are.”
Sensitive to the issues women face, Scully has implemented a progressive mindset at Carpenters.
The firm has:
“People ask me how we achieved 50/50 between men and women and it’s about open-mindedness. If you’ve got eight men interviewing you, are they really going to have an open mind? We genuinely go for the best person for the job, whatever their sex. If that’s a woman, then she gets the job,” Scully says.
She knows all too well what it’s like to face gender bias, particularly early on in her career when she became part of Carpenters, alongside husband and co-owner, John Carpenter.
“When I joined John as a 50/50 partner, he was an established commercial lawyer, and we’d go to meetings and people would say, ‘Is that your personal assistant?’ or ‘Is she taking notes?,” she reveals.
“There was also that aspect of being taken seriously and being objectified, people looking at what you look like rather than what you’re saying, what you’re contributing, or how hard you’ve worked. That was very frustrating for me as a young lawyer and a young person setting out in insurance.
“It just made me work harder and determined to get my voice heard. When I mentor younger women, I don’t want them to have it as tough as I had it.”
Carpenters employs over 1,500 people in seven locations across the UK, working in partnership with insurers, brokers and MGAs to deliver a variety of outsourced claims.
The company has an executive board featuring women, like CEO Donna Richards and CIO Karen Campbell, in senior roles. This allows Scully and Carpenter to step back from day-to-day operations to focus on strategy and philanthropy.
Scully says, “John chairs the board meetings, and I get involved in the quality stuff that I love in the industry. It’s freed me to do other things but still be massively involved in the business.”
In 2024, Carpenters invested heavily in technology to enhance its operations.
“We’re looking at artificial intelligence, but we’re cautious about it, because we believe in people. We believe artificial and emotional intelligence combined is where the magic is at. We still need our people, but technology takes away the heavy lifting in the background,” Scully comments.
“In insurance, there’s a quite a big momentum for change and innovation, to compete in any market, and I think we have to keep that going as an industry.”
Despite being a successful leader, Scully takes every day as an opportunity to learn something.
“It’s boring if you think you know everything, so I’m an evolving leader. I’m always looking around and listening. For me as a person because I’m self-made, I’ve done every job in the business, from office junior to CEO to owner, so I know how important everyone is,” she says.
“I try to be an inclusive leader and bring people with me. We don’t want to have an environment of fear. People want to come and do their best, but sometimes it just doesn’t work out, and you’re not going to get brave people and innovative people if they’re scared of failure.”
As Carpenters works with insurers and brokers, ever-evolving regulation is a challenge they meet head on.
“Some people feel that it’s over-regulated and it’s regulating people out of business. We’re FCA and SRA regulated, so we have to deal with that regulation red tape. When working with insurers, whatever their trials and tribulations are, we support and help them by looking at solutions for them. Their traumas are our traumas,” Scully says.
“Everything is about the customer that we act for, and because they’re the centre of the universe for us. As an industry, we’re always trying to deliver more for less.”
Growing up in inner-city Dublin, Scully left at age 16 her Catholic convent school, which only offered domestic courses, and completed a secretarial course.
“That was a great result for me because I didn’t get married. A lot of people like me got married young and had kids. But as a secretary, I thought there had to be more than this,” she says.
At age 21, Scully began studying law part-time and qualified as a solicitor nine years later. Now at the helm of one of Britain’s leading insurance firms, Scully is keen to tell her story and support her local community by being a:
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Fans Supporting Foodbanks ambassador
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Football for Change Champion
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Breakfast Club volunteer at the Charles Thompson Mission every Sunday
“I have done a few podcasts in the last 12 months, where I talk about our story in the business. We’re both self-made and very open-minded about equity, diversity and inclusion, and we made our business a company that reflects this,” she says. “We do an outreach schools program in difficult socio-economic areas. We work with charities because we want to try and give people a chance. We want people to have the chances that we got.”
Scully’s mentoring skills aren’t just applied within Carpenters, but she works to encourage younger women through initiatives, such as The Girls Network, where she mentors schoolgirls from disadvantaged areas.
“We should treat each other well. My life motto is, ‘Kindness is free, so spread it everywhere,’” she says.
Meet the judges
- Aileen Mathieson
Group Chief Investment Officer
Aspen - Ailsa Sayers
Head of Marketing and Communications, AZC UK
Allianz Commercial - Allison Carr
Chief Executive Officer
Davies UK and Ireland - Alycia Thomson
Managing Director
PIB Insurance Brokers - Amanda Blanc
Group CEO
Aviva - Amy Brettell
Managing Director, Zurich Municipal
Zurich - Ana Mata
Managing Director and Actuary
MatBlas - Angela Woodhead
Head of Change
Ardonagh Advisory - Antonia Thompson
Chief Operating Officer
RSA Luxembourg SA - Audrey Dadon
Talent Acquisition Manager
Avencia/Convex Insurance - Baljinder Mahil
Head of Distribution Operations
AXA XL - Barbara Rizzi
Chief Claims Officer
Arch Insurance International - Beth Thurston
CEO, Risk Management
Marsh - Carolina Klint
Chief Commercial Officer Europe
Marsh McLennan - Caroline King
Trading and Operations Director, SME and Personal Lines
Pen Underwriting - Chloe Jardine
D&I and Well-being Manager
Lloyd’s - Clare Chin
Controller, Head of Global Controller Centre
Liberty Specialty Markets - Dominica George-Oppong
Risk and Controls Manager
Hiscox - Elena Papoui
Senior Pricing Actuary
Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance - Elisse Penney
Vice President, Human Resources Group
Allied World Assurance Company (Europe) - Emma Francis
Head of Inclusion
Ageas - Farirai Gora
Founder
We Are Eden - Gemma Lines
Chief People Officer
MS Amlin - Hannah Kate Smith
Operations and Engagement Director
Lloyd’s - Hannah Gurga
Director General
ABI - Helene Madell
Head of Property
Aon UK - Jacinda Da Rosa
Global UW Head of Multinational, Financial Lines
Allianz Commercial - Jane Kielty
Chief Executive Officer
Aon UK - Janine Heath
Head of Talent Management and DE&I
CNA Hardy - Janthana Kaenprakhamroy
Founder and Chief Executive Officer
Tapoly - Jen Denby
Global Head of I&D
WTW - Jennifer Quinn
Cyber Underwriting Manager
Liberty Specialty Markets - Jo Steel
Operations Service Director and Interim Director of Underwriting
QBE - Julia Coakley
Chief Operations Officer
Managing General Agents’ Association - Julie Rayson-Flynn
Placement Director
Adler Fairways - Justine Mayhew
CEO, Bowring Marsh UK and Ireland
Marsh - Kajal Pankhania
Director
DA Strategy - Kate Bush
Head of Agriculture
Geo Underwriting - Kaylee Darkins
Chief HR Officer, UK and Lloyd’s
AXA XL - Laura Hancock
Managing Director
Yutree Insurance - Layal AlHarahsha
Commercial Property Adjuster
Sedgwick - Lisa Meigh
Chief People Officer
Covea Insurance - Lorna Anderson
Director of Operational Resilience
Ardonagh Advisory - Louise O’Shea
Group CEO
CFC - Magdalena Baugh
Group Chief Financial Officer
The Innovation Group (EMEA) - Mahak Jhamb
AI Leader
Mercer - Marie-Helene Tyack
Global Inclusion, Diversity and Belonging Manager
Allianz Commercial - Maxine Goddard
SVP, Strategic Distribution
Sompo - Megan Bingham-Walker
Founder and CEO
Anansi - Melissa Collett
Chief Executive Officer
Insurtech UK - Monica Stancu
Senior Diversity and Inclusion Manager
Lloyd’s - Nadia Cote
UK Commercial Managing Director
Allianz - Pamela Thomson-Hall
CEO, International
WTW - Philippa Berry
Head of Portfolio Partnerships
CFC - Reana Bashir
Company Director
Keighley Broking Services T/A Coversure Insurance Services (Keighley and Rotherham) - Rebecca Mason
Head of Wordings
MS Amlin - Rhiannon Seah
Group Head of Reserving and Corporate Actuarial
Canopius - Sarah Brooks
Head of Ranking, Portfolio Optimisation
Convex Insurance - Sarah Denney-Jones
Head of Compliance Acquisitions and MGA
Ardonagh - Sarah Pearson
Head of Enterprise Risk Management
Ecclesiastical Insurance Company - Sarah Robinson
Head of Underwriting Agriculture
Victor – Marsh - Satarupa Ghosh
Head of Personal Lines Conduct and Product Management
Royal Sun Alliance - Selena Kearvell
Regional Sales Director
Marsh Commercial - Sharon Brown
Director
Nutshell Consultancy - Shradha Patel
Head of Regulatory Liaison, Reporting and Financial Crime
AXA UK - Suneeta Paada
Chief Executive Officer
Paada Consulting - Sunita Gaddu
Global Relationship Manager
RSA - Tara Foley
Chief Executive Officer
AXA UK and Ireland - Teniola Tijani
Underwriter
IQUW - Tope Akindoyin
Compliance Manager, Regulatory Affairs and Conduct Risk
Beazley - Tracey Fisher
Archive and Historic Record Director
RSA - Vicky Rowlay
VP, National Director, Business Transformation
Arch Insurance UK - Yvonne Braun
Director of Policy, Long-Term Savings, Health and Protection
The ABI - Zeynep Arantekin
Multinational Lead
Lockton