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Complaints Insights from AFCA

About this event

As the superannuation industry increasingly focuses on member service issues, hear what complaints AFCA is seeing, what it identifies as common friction points and better practices in complaint handling, and insights about using complaints data

Key topics to be discussed include:

• AFCA’s superannuation complaints data for 2024-2025
• Themes and trends in superannuation complaints
• Common friction points and better practices AFCA sees in IDR and EDR
• Using complaints data to uplift standards and pinpoint systemic weaknesses

Who should attend?
• Trustees and directors
• CEOs, and senior management staff
• Governance and Company Secretariat staff
• IDR and EDR staff
• Compliance and risk professionals
• Service Providers
• Those who support the board/trustee function

How you’ll learn
One-hour online virtual workshop.
ASFA’s virtual workshops are a live and interactive learning experience. Participants can engage with industry-leading presenters who are experts in their field, together with their peers, just like they would at an ASFA face-to-face workshop. It is a unique opportunity to workshop ideas and concepts in a collaborative online environment facilitated by experts. Virtual workshops are limited to 30 participants to allow for discussion, and to ensure that participants have ample opportunity to ask presenters questions.

Details

21 August, 2025
3:00pm – 4:00pm

Pricing (incl. GST)

Standard

Member: $195
Non-member: $250

Heather Gray

Lead Ombudsman – Superannuation, Australian Financial Complaints Authority

Speaker Bio

Heather is the Lead Ombudsman – Superannuation at the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) where she leads a team of Ombudsmen and Adjudicators in determining a wide range of superannuation complaints.

Prior to joining AFCA in 2020, Heather had more than 30 years’ experience in private practice as a superannuation lawyer.

Heather has a strong interest in superannuation law and policy and has consulted widely to Treasury, ASIC, APRA and the ATO on draft legislation and other instruments, and on the development of policy. She was for many years a member of the Law Council of Australia’s Superannuation Committee, including a term as its Chair, and is Co-Chair of the ATO’s Superannuation Industry Stewardship Group. She is a frequent speaker at superannuation conferences and events.

Ben Norman

Senior Ombudsman – Superannuation, Australian Financial Complaints Authority

Speaker Bio

Ben is a Senior Ombudsman – Superannuation at the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA). He has worked as an Ombudsman for six years. Ben specialises in complex superannuation determinations, especially those involving life insurance and death benefits, or other matters dealing with novel points of law or likely to be subject to appeals or litigation.

Prior to joining AFCA in 2019, Ben worked for the Australian Government Solicitor on significant matters and litigation for the Commonwealth including as a solicitor for the Financial Services Royal Commission. Ben assisted the Commission on a variety of work including investigating instances of misconduct and conduct falling below community standards in the superannuation and banking industries.

Ben has a strong interest in superannuation law and policy. He regularly represents AFCA in discussions with Treasury, Commonwealth regulators, and superannuation consumer and industry bodies.

Daniel Mulino MP

Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services

Sessions

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Born in Brindisi, Italy, Daniel was a young child when he moved with his family to Australia. He grew up in Canberra and completed his first degrees – arts and law – at the ANU. He then completed a Master of Economics (University of Sydney) and a PhD in economics from Yale.

He lectured at Monash University, was an economic adviser in the Gillard government and was a Victorian MP from 2014 to 2018. As Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer of Victoria, Daniel helped deliver major infrastructure projects and developed innovative financing structures for community projects.

In 2018 he was preselected for the new federal seat of Fraser and became its first MP at the 2019 election, re-elected in 2022 and 2025. From 2022 to 2025, Daniel was chair of the House of Representatives’ Standing Economics Committee in which he chaired inquiries; economic dynamism, competition and business formation and insurers’ responses to 2022 major floods claims.

In 2025, he became the Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Financial Services.

In August 2022, Daniel published ‘Safety Net: The Future of Welfare in Australia’, which aims to explore the ways in which an insurance approach can improve the effectiveness of government service delivery.