WTW business Willis has introduced its Global Risk Engineering team as part of the company’s Global Risk & Analytics (R&A) operations.
The new team will deliver risk assessments at both single-site and portfolio levels. According to the company, these services are designed to help clients gain deeper insights into their risks, improve resilience, and achieve measurable changes in their total cost of risk (TCOR).
Willis’s Global Risk Engineering team consists of nearly 200 risk engineers working in 30 countries. The team’s reach covers North America, Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Asia Pacific, and Latin America.
This structure combines global expertise with local market knowledge, supporting multinational and large organisations through a mix of property and casualty risk control, data science, and industry-specific insights.
By leveraging proprietary data and specialised capabilities, the team aims to provide tailored, data-enabled solutions that support clients’ risk management strategies and investment returns.
Marc Hindman (pictured above), head of risk control & claims advocacy, risk and analytics at Willis, said the launch marks a significant step in how the company delivers value to clients.
“By combining multidisciplinary expertise with proprietary data, technology, and advanced analytics, we can offer clients solutions that are not only customised to their sector, but also future-focused—helping them navigate emerging risks, ESG and climate goals, and the broader strategic challenges they face,” Hindman said.
He also noted that the initiative demonstrates Willis’s commitment to providing technology-driven risk engineering solutions.
“Through this launch, Willis reinforces its commitment to providing differentiated, technology-driven risk engineering solutions that strengthen resilience, lowers TCOR, improves risk quality and empowers organisations to make smarter, data-led decisions with confidence,” Hindman said.
In addition to the Global Risk Engineering launch, WTW has made several notable appointments this year. In August, the company named Nicholas Carbo as senior director in its Insurance Consulting & Technology (ICT) business. Carbo, who previously served as chief financial actuary at Corebridge Financial, will focus on annuity product development and pricing, modelling, and M&A activity.
This appointment is part of a broader leadership refresh in the ICT division, which also saw the addition of Gary Finkelstein, Poojan Shah, and Erika Dochney in senior roles.
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