Donation establishes research programme. Read more

Working with Social and Legal Aid in Denmark. Read more

Mark receives prestigious award for volunteering. Read more

Social Legal Aid case study

At the Social Legal Aid office in Århus, Denmark, volunteers provide counselling to debt-ridden Danes who have lost control of their finances. With the support of Experian, the Social Legal Aid helps heavily indebted people arrange realistic repayment solutions. The service is free of charge.

Experian has helped with data, consulting, furniture and office equipment since the opening of the Social Legal Aid in May 2007. While the debt-ridden clients are helped to healthier finances, the creditors achieve an improved dialogue with the individual debtor and thus gain a more realistic impression of the claims they can expect to have repaid.

As a company Experian wants to help people make more informed decisions, which is why we’re happy to support projects like Social Legal Aid that give some of the most disadvantaged people in society a chance to regain control of their life and finances.

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Marc Gaudart receives prestigious Arts and Business Award

Marc Gaudart, Senior Vice President, Experian Decision Analytics, has been working with the Broadway Media Centre for the past two years. The Broadway is Nottingham’s arthouse cinema, and Marc – a self-confessed cineaste – has been lending his considerable experience to provide fresh insight to its marketing, finance and general management, and this has led to a number of major changes.

Marc scooped the coveted ‘Individual of the Year’ at the Arts & Business East Midlands Award and was honoured at a special ceremony held at Kedleston Hall, in Belper, Derbyshire. He said: “It was a brilliant experience, and I did not expect to win, with so many strong contenders, I feel very honoured. I really enjoy working with the creative and inspiring team at Broadway. This is a very vibrant place, focusing on cinema, media and digital arts.
“This award is really a tribute to the success of Broadway and its people. I strongly recommend other business people to take responsibilities in Arts organisations, it is truly a rewarding experience."

Caption: Marc (far right) and Laraine Porter (far left) receive the award from BBC weather presenters Sarah Blizzard and Des Coleman. (© Clickers Photography Ltd).

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Experian Awards University Of California Irvine $200,000 To Establish Research Programme

Experian is working with the University of California Irvine to establish a research programme in the area cyber-fraud detection and prevention. The programme will support basic and applied research and will be housed at the Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences on UC Irvine’s campus in Southern California and was originally made possible with a gift of funds from the GUS Charitable Trust.

“We are very pleased to contribute to the Bren School and build on the gift of funding,” said Chris Callero. “For many years Experian has conducted its own research into this phenomenon and created products which our business clients have used to combat this crime. We are very interested in the work the Bren School is conducting and are confident of its success.”

The research will use computer technology to model fraudulent criminal activity such as identity theft and will be used to support graduate seminars, faculty and industry expert speakers, and visits by research scientists, as well as providing seed funding to initiate new cyber-fraud related research and support graduate and postdoctoral research.

This is a good example of Experian’s ongoing support of UC Irvine where Chris Callero is a member of the Chancellor’s Chief Executive Roundtable, the Dean’s Advisory Board of the Paul Merage School of Business and a member of the Leadership Council at the Bren School.

Caption: Experian Group's President and Chief Operating Officer, Chris Callero, meeting with the University of California, Irvine, Cyber Security Project Research Team (l-r:Arthur Asuncion, PhD candidate-researcher, David Newman, PhD-Research Scientist, Chris Callero, Professor Michael Goodrich).

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Quick summary

To play an active part in social and economic regeneration in our communities, at a local, national and global level.

This year’s message has to be more, not less.

Playing an active part in our communities is in our cultural DNA and so even in a year when trading conditions in some of our geographies have been difficult, we have given more.

We have asked a lot of our employees this year but many of our key achievements in the community are down to them and their continued dedication. Overall our people have raised more funds than ever before and have maintained similar levels of volunteering. And if you add the amazing volunteering achievements of our colleagues in Brazil, who mobilised 2,551 people on a specific ‘Serasa Volunteer Day’ we can certainly say we’re doing more!

We’ve reduced our management costs very slightly but we’ve given more funding direct to community projects, increasing our overall cash giving by over $300,000 from the UK and US businesses, plus more than $700.00 from Experian Group plc.

More has also meant more of our people being engaged: we’ve reached out to new parts of our business, involving new offices in our US Community Involvement Council, expanding our relationship with The University of California, Irvine, and bringing recently acquired companies on board in the UK. For the first time we have also gathered anecdotal data on community involvement in Norway, Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands.

Awards have come our way as a result of more involvement: recognition for encouraging our people to give through payroll giving; ‘Big Tick’ awards from Business in the Community; and awards for individuals who have excelled as volunteers.

And next year we want to achieve more still; we have defined a new global focus for major community projects and have started to look at how we can learn better from each other, for example, duplicating excellence in policies and process in the US and tracking impact and results using methodology from Brazil and the UK.