One of the big topics we cover in the NxLevel Course is being properly insured. When you need it, you are certainly glad you have it. Having adequate insurance is an important part of the "risk management" of your business. I just came across this Inc.com article today. David Young, an SBDC Advisor in Seattle was a contributor.
How To: Buy the Right Business Insurance
The coverage you need and (because no one likes to waste money) don't need.
By: Inc. Staff
Published September 2008
Your business faces plenty of threats -- from fire to fraud, from dishonest employees to
discontented customers to disconnected utilities. And yet for nearly every peril, some insurance
company somewhere is willing to underwrite protection. Therein lies your dilemma: You can go
broke keeping your company secure.
The agents, risk managers, and small-business consultants Inc. spoke with warned that
insurance purchases can be driven by exaggerated fears, particularly of litigation. So before
shopping for coverage, investigate what perils a company in your industry is most likely to face -
- and which could threaten your company's survival. "It's not the run-of-the-mill loss you should
be thinking about, but the home run, out-of-the-park catastrophe," says David Young, a former
insurance broker and risk manager now advising at the Small Business Development Center in
Seattle. Belinda Pillow, who runs the SBDC in Waco, Texas, and who used to sell insurance,
recommends a call to your trade association. "Ask for any risk assessment tools for, papers on,
or expert opinions about your particular industry," she suggests.
These pages will walk you through some of the most common types of coverage. You probably
won't need them all; some you likely already have. Even if you think you're covered, however,
you may be mistaken. Companies much larger than yours have gone to the mat with their
insurers and come up empty-handed. Your task when buying insurance is to steel yourself for
the mind-numbing language of the policy -- and to know precisely what's covered and what's
not. If you don't see the coverage you're looking for, or you don't understand some of the terms,
seek clarification from your agent.
Insuring Your Business
1. What Everyone Needs
Workers' compensation insurance is required virtually everywhere. (The requirement kicks in at different employee counts in different states.) For injuries sustained on the job, workers' comp covers medical expenses, lost income, and rehabilitation. If an employee dies, it pays death
benefits to the heirs. Though it's not mandatory, be sure to cover yourself as well as your
employees, something many owners neglect to do even though, Young says, "the premium for
owners is usually dirt cheap."
Property insurance, which protects buildings and their contents, such as equipment,
furnishings, and inventory, is the most popular kind of protection for small businesses. But it
may also be an area in which you are overinsured: Companies with little invested in premises
and little inventory can sometimes forgo it. For everyone else, it's as essential as homeowner's
coverage (and inevitably required for financing). Be aware that basic policies may exclude
certain perils and limit certain claims; for instance, losses from water, earthquakes, boiler
problems, and utility failures are often excluded unless you add a rider.
General liability coverage is less common than property insurance among small companies
but arguably more important, because a claim for serious injury could easily wipe you out.
Liability (a.k.a. casualty) insurance covers any injury or damage your company might cause
other people, their reputation, or their property. Any company with premises that other people
(customers, suppliers, etc.) can enter, or with a product whose failure could hurt or destroy,
should have it. Most standard policies provide $1 million of coverage per claim. You may need
more to do business with certain companies, and that's typically purchased under an umbrella
policy. An umbrella will often lump together other types of coverage. Insurers price liability
premiums according to a variety of measures; revenue and retail square footage are common
ones.
Business owner's policies combine property and general liability coverage. (Manufacturers
and most construction companies are ineligible for BOPs, however.) Business owner's coverage
is usually available to companies with up to $3 million in revenue, though sometimes larger
companies can get it. It's less expensive than buying separate policies, and insurers usually
throw in other coverage, such as business interruption (see below), for a nominal cost. "I'd say
it's 25 percent or even 50 percent cheaper," says Joshua Smith of Insurance & Risk Managers
in Brookhaven, Mississippi. "And it's less work on our end, so everybody wins."
2. For Growing Companies
Business vehicle insurance can be configured to cover cars and trucks your company owns,
leases, rents, or simply uses. Experts recommend this coverage even when an owner or
employee uses a personal car for work, because while personal auto insurance normally
permits some business use, when an accident occurs, the insurer will defend only the car
owner, not the business. And, Smith says, "any lawyer worth his salt will find out they were
driving on company time and drag you into the lawsuit." (And if you drive a company car on your
off hours, you'll need a rider to cover that.)
Employment practice liability insurance is a relatively new coverage that's widely
recommended. The fact is, behaving decently to employees sometimes isn't enough to avoid a
lawsuit these days. The median jury award in employment suits has grown by half in the past
decade, but the big exposure is the cost of your legal defense. "The underwriter will throw in the
claims for nickels," Young says. Elizabeth Milito, senior executive counsel for the National
Federation of Independent Business, urges this coverage for companies with enough
employees to be subject to state or federal civil rights laws. (It's not, however, a license to be a
jerk. Says Smith: "You might get away with it one time, but if you get a history of that, you'll be
uninsurable.")
Business interruption insurance. Hurricane Katrina taught small companies that it's not just the catastrophe you need to worry about; it's what comes after. Business interruption insurance can solve the problem of seeing you through while you rebuild your business by replacing lost income and paying normal expenses. It will also cover extra expenses you incur in getting back into the market quickly. In practice, however, insurers have successfully defended narrow interpretations of these policies. Among the terms you must negotiate with your agent are the waiting period before you can collect (akin to a deductible, it can be measured in either hours or days) and the period for which you'll be covered after business resumes but before it regains full strength. Most important, unless otherwise agreed, basic business interruption kicks in only after a physical loss of property shuts you down. A business owner's policy usually includes business interruption coverage.
3. For Special Circumstances
Key man insurance pays out when an invaluable team member dies or, more commonly,
becomes disabled. For many small businesses, the only truly indispensable person is the owner
-- in which case it may merely duplicate individual life and disability policies. The exceptions
include partnerships, for which these policies are often used to buy out a member or his heirs,
and companies in which a particular employee possesses technical or highly specialized skills
or knowledge that can't be easily replaced. When you buy it, buy enough to cover the cost of
finding a replacement and maintaining support staff and facilities until the new person begins to
earn his keep. Key man disability is separate from key man life and usually limited to a
percentage of the person's income.
Errors and omissions insurance, or professional liability coverage, is product liability when
the product is a service. (Medical malpractice, for example, is a form of errors and omissions.)
"If you hold yourself out as an expert giving advice, and someone could be financially damaged
in taking that advice, you want to think about professional liability insurance," says Jeff Perlman,
an agent in Lawrenceville, New Jersey. Again, the cost of litigation is at least as great as the
claims paid out, so make sure the legal defense costs coverage is ample.
Directors and officers liability. Most small corporations don't need it: Their leadership is
unlikely to be sued, and when litigation does arise, it's usually covered by another liability policy.
D&O begins to matter when companies have outside investors -- according to one survey,
nearly a third of private companies reported D&O claims from shareholders in the past decade.
Making A Claim
Here are five tips for making sure you come out ahead in any squabbles over how much your
insurer will cover:
Keep Detailed Records. A record of all your transactions, inventories, and assets is key. Store
up-to-date duplicates of these safely off-site.
Be Prompt. If you're slow to inform your insurer that you've been sued, and the insurer can
argue that your delay prejudiced its ability to defend you, you can lose coverage. Timely notice
is especially crucial with so-called claims-made policies, under which coverage is based on
when the claim was made rather than when the event took place, says Jay M. Levin, an
insurance litigator at Reed Smith.
Follow Up. Check in periodically with the insurer on your claim. If your insurer is mounting a
liability defense on your behalf, cooperate with the lawyers the insurer has hired, and keep
current on the case.
Know Your Rights. Most states have a version of a model law known as the Unfair Claims
Settlement Practices Act, which sets standards for handling claims and prohibits policies that,
for example, require you to sue to collect. Read it, and you'll be better equipped to know
whether you are being treated fairly.
Hire a Lawyer. The first sign of trouble might come with a "reservation of rights" letter, in which an insurer informs you that while it will defend you in court, it may not (depending on the
outcome) pay all of your claim.
Where To Buy It
Agent or broker? Agents may be "captive," working for one insurance carrier, or independent
and writing policies on behalf of many companies. A broker is, by definition, independent. It's
commonly said that brokers represent you while agents represent insurers -- but the line
dividing them is blurring. In practice, "a good agent or broker is an impartial matchmaker, finding the right insurer for the client and the right client for the insurer," says Linda Christ of Cryst & Associates Insurance Agency in Fairfax, Virginia.
Find a specialist. Try to find an agent or broker who specializes in your industry. Such a person
knows what risks are paramount to you and has a handle on litigation and settlement trends.
You might find tailored and cheaper coverage through your trade association.
Don't trust the Web. If you're tempted by an attractive online quote, make sure there are live
agents who can talk you through a policy before you buy it.
Resources
The Insurance Information Institute (iii.org/smallbusiness) has links to resources, including
professional organizations, and a detailed guide to small-business insurance.
The National Federation of Independent Business (nfib.com) posts articles on insurance in the
"tools and tips" part of its website.
The Small Business Administration offers helpful publications on insurance at
sba.gov/tools/resourcelibrary/publications.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners has a useful guide
(insureuonline.org/smallbusiness) and links to state insurance department sites.
Monday, September 15, 2008
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