As his company begins celebrating the 150th anniversary of its founding, Guardian Life's CEO Dennis Manning likes the view from where he sits atop one of the industry's largest mutual life insurers.
In an early-January interview in his downtown office, Manning said the company had developed a new strategic focus after a period a few years back where it "drifted into being all things to all people."
The result of that strategic work, he said, was to focus on small business owners and their needs, with an emphasis on markets which the company has not been in before.
Thus, Guardian has been selling corporate-owned life insurance to companies with 200 lives or less.
It's also been selling multi-life disability insurance to this market. "This is a growing part of the DI market," Manning said. "It's DI but a different version of DI."
Another area that has Guardian's attention is the asset management business, which, Manning said, "can be very profitable for policyholders."
This reference to policyholders goes to the core of Manning's and Guardian's guiding philosophy in which, he said, "the overriding criteria is what is in the best interests of the policyholders."
When asked if he saw a time when Guardian might give up its mutuality, Manning granted that this was a topic that came up periodically, but said, "Looking at the landscape today, nothing I see would cause me to recommend to the board to demutualize."
But what about the continuing consolidation in the life insurance business, where Guardian might be regarded as a large niche player in a land of giants?
His answer: "We think we have scale in the life insurance business and the non-medical benefits business. We're very cautious about the variable annuity business; and are looking to build scale in asset management."
As part of its foray into asset management, Guardian in August 2006 purchased a majority interest in RS Investment Management LLC. It has since retooled its mutual fund distribution system and added 3 new fixed funds to the product mix it offers.
Last fall the company issued a surplus note and part of the reason for it was "to give us acquisition currency," Manning said. "We're looking for small firms to buy" to build up this business, he added.
In what has become something of an anomaly nowadays in terms of life insurer CEOs, Manning comes out of sales. Back in the 1980s he built up a general agency in Houston for Guardian that in short time was one of the company's top 10 GAs.
When asked how this sales background has shaped his thinking as a CEO, Manning said he's always considered himself "an entrepreneur at heart."
While he was growing the operation in Houston he said he thought "that someday he might want to do something in a bigger environment."