MorganAsh enhances MARS tool to manage multiple vulnerabilities

Research by the FCA highlights the compounding effects of multiple vulnerabilities and how this needs to be considered by firms.

Related topics:  Vulnerability,  Technology
Rozi Jones | Editor, Financial Reporter
24th September 2025
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MorganAsh has upgraded the algorithms behind the MorganAsh Resilience System (MARS) to better record, measure and support clients with multiple vulnerabilities.

The new update enables users of the MARS digital vulnerability platform to not only identify, but better manage these multiple characteristics and life events, all while still generating a single, objective Resilience Rating – which is similar to a credit score, but for vulnerability.

It comes as research by the FCA highlights the compounding effects of multiple vulnerabilities and how this needs to be considered by firms. Consumers with multiple vulnerabilities often suffer disproportionately more than those with just single issues, be they financial, health or lifestyle. But most approaches to managing customer vulnerability fail to manage this – and apply a single support need to meet one – or each – specific vulnerability.

While this is relatively easy to do when speaking directly to a consumer, it is much harder to accomplish as part of a digital journey.

One of the key challenges is to understand the compounding effects of issues, and when they have an impact to a consumer. MARS uses a categorisation hierarchy, which itemises each individual circumstance; these are collated into categories of health, wealth, lifestyle, financial capability, engagement capability and support network.

These in turn are summated to a single Resilience Rating. Each circumstance is itself given a severity weighting, to reflect the impact on the consumer. Support needs can be triggered from the individual circumstance – for example,  hearing loss would trigger a different communications method. While a mild health issue may not trigger any support need, the combination of mild health issues, and a life event such as divorce, will affect the total Resilience Rating – which in turn may trigger an intervention, when the individual circumstance did not. 

MARS also accommodates the reality that a lot of financial planning for mortgages, savings and retirement is undertaken on a family basis. MARS therefore calculates the resilience of the family group to better reflect reality and to reduce triggering support needs, when they are already catered for by family members.

Andrew Gething, managing director of MorganAsh, said: “We know from our own work looking after ill people, that having multiple issues has a compounding effect, and while humans are great at recognising this on an individual basis, it is challenging to replicate digitally. The MARS development team has worked incredibly hard to model our algorithms to match reality, over many months, back-testing against real data. I am delighted this has now come to fruition – and is being released for our customers, to further improve customer vulnerability management without increasing costs.” 

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