ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
27.07.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


What's the Best Business Insurance Coverage?

Author: James Cochran Author Ranking Blue | Posted: 29-10-2007 | Comments: 0 | Views: 6 | Rating:  (50) Article Popularity - Green (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!

Running a small business is a gamble where, as a small business owner or manager, you try to undertake the least amount of risk you can with an eye toward reaping the greatest gain. Small business insurance is your best tool for keeping your risk level low. Since this isn’t a game for you or your employees, small business insurance isn’t a luxury but an absolute necessity. So finding the best small business insurance coverage for your company becomes your goal.

When considering what the best coverage to have is, you need to start with the basics: general liability insurance, property insurance, and workers' compensation. The purpose and function of the latter two are relatively straightforward.

Workers’ compensation insurance grants monetary awards to employees who are injured or disabled due to job related circumstances. This coverage is often required and may be regulated by state laws.

Property coverage for small business insurance guards against the loss of physical assets due to fire, accident, or theft. It allows you to replace or repair furniture, office equipment and supplies, inventory, and sometimes even the building itself. This type of small business insurance may either cover your loss at the replacement value of lost items or for their depreciated cash value. The best option for you depends on the capital you have on hand. Taking depreciated cash value coverage, also known as actual cast value (ACV), will save you money in the short term from lower premiums but will cost you valuable time in the event of an actual loss. Additionally, the items you need to replace may not be available at the depreciated cost no matter how much time you expend searching for a comparable replacement, and you may end up with substantial out-of-pocket expense. When possible, replacement cost small business insurance coverage is the superior alternative as it transfers a greater degree of risk to the insurance company, which is the purpose of having insurance in the first place.

General Liability small business insurance is a little more complicated. It protects you against legitimate or fraudulent lawsuits brought against your company for:

• Bodily Injury – Harm to a non-employee due to an action or inaction on the part of your company, including a fatal injury. Note that harm to an employee is covered under your small business insurance workers’ compensation plan.
• Personal Injury – Which includes, but is not limited to, libel, slander, wrongful entry, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution carried out by your company or an agent of your company.
• Property Damage – Destruction of privately owned items or real estate by an action of your company or by the action of an employee while carrying out his or her duties for your company.
• Advertising Injury – Harm to an individual or a corporate body due to your company’s advertising activities, including character defamation, plagiarism, and unfair competition.

General liability small business insurance not only covers damages assessed against you, but also your legal fees. Even if you win a lawsuit, a court case can be quite expensive. With a general liability policy, you are compensated for attorney's fees, court costs, witness fees, and loss of earnings while in court.

How much general liability small business insurance should you get? The simple answer is: As much as you can afford. You certainly want enough to cover the dollar amount value of your business. One suggested baseline is a minimum of one million dollars per incident and three million aggregate, but this answer is too simplistic to cover the breadth of eventualities that comprise every small business owner's risk. Individual cases will have different exposure and insurance needs. Does your firm interact extensively with the public? Do you manufacture goods that could be dangerous if handled incorrectly? You should also consider recent court awards for your type of business and in your locale as well as the general liability requirements of companies you may do business with. To determine the best option for you, consult with your small business insurance agent.

In most cases, a business owners policy, or BOP, will be the most affordable option. A BOP combines property and general liability coverage, as well as other useful coverage such as vehicle coverage, into one small business insurance policy. Generally available to companies not engaged in high risk activities, a BOP is simpler for you and more efficient for the insurance company, resulting in lower premiums.

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/insurance-articles/whats-the-best-business-insurance-coverage-246936.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

James Cochran, owner of Techinsurance.com, is a web-based business insurance agent specializing in the IT industry. Over 15 years of insurance experience, he founded Techinsurance in 1997 to provide insurance products for IT professionals. It has grown to become one of America's leading providers of online general liability business insurance and workers’ compensation insurance.

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

Get Covered by Workers’ Compensation Insurance
By: Martin Lukac | 28/04/2007 | Insurance
Workers' compensation insurance, commonly called workers' or workmen's comp, is a form of insurance designed to provide compensation to workers who have been injured while on the job.

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Frequently Asked Questions

Fee schedule
By: jennifer | 14-07-2008
I am a provider that wishes to print a workers comp fee schedule, can i do it without subscrbing to a site?

Can you refer me to an Attorney that handle DC ...
By: ajminkins | 11-06-2008
Can you refer me to an Attorney that handle DC Government injuries/Workmen's Comp

Peace Crop workers and the Earned Income Credit
By: Jumpin'Jack | 23-05-2008
Is a Peace Corp worker considered not living outside the US for the Earned Income Credit just like active duty military members are?

How much can an Ohio workers pay be reduced before ...
By: brewer | 18-05-2008
How much can an Ohio workers pay be reduced before they are eligible for unemployment compensation?

Labor Unions
By: twincitiesmark | 18-05-2008
Are unions good or bad for the workers they represent and why?

What does a office worker use 500 these per year
By: rod | 31-03-2008
what does a office worker use 500 these per year

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Insurance Articles

Thousands Wasted on Pointless Insurance
By: Christian Ward | 27/07/2008
People could be wasting thousand of pounds on useless and expensive insurances, says the new Which? Money Saving Handbook.

The Rising Cost of Car Insurance
By: Christian Ward | 27/07/2008
Most of us will openly admit that our cars are very important to our daily lives. They are useful in getting to work, as well as errand running and even as part of the work itself.

Research Reveals Confusion in the Building Insurance Market
By: Christian Ward | 26/07/2008
Recent research conducted by Sainsbury’s home insurance reveals that confusion abounds in the home insurance marketplace, with 2.94 million people believing that they had to buy their buildings insurance from their mortgage lender in order to secure their mortgage.

One in Five Travels Abroad Without Insurance
By: Christian Ward | 26/07/2008
If you are going on holiday this year you will have to decide whether or not to purchase some travel insurance. A recent report found that one in five adults travelling abroad chooses to travel with no insurance at all. With the risk of theft increasing world wide, hustlers preying on tourists and the usual risks of illness, injury or cancellation it is quite a surprise that many people opt out of this cover.

New Type of Travel Insurance for Independent Travellers
By: Christian Ward | 26/07/2008
AXA launches new Independent Travellers insurance for growing market of 'go-it-alone' holiday makers.

The Best Protection Offers for Critical Illness
By: Clint Jhonson | 26/07/2008
One of the greatest hazards in life is illness. There are lots things you can protect yourself against, but illness can occur without your knowledge. Things like heart attacks, kidney failures, cancer, strokes , the need of transplants and many other can occur at any time, without warning and devastating effects.

The Best Mortgage Deals Found Over the Internet
By: Clint Jhonson | 26/07/2008
Financial institutions have been around for many years. These are companies that provide customers with a significant sum of money at a given time and they get in return monthly payments that include small parts of the loan and interest.

Home Insurance Reduces Heartache
By: Christian Ward | 26/07/2008
It may surprise those of us who are covered, but a massive 20% of home owners in the United Kingdom have decided not to buy home insurance of any kind. These figures are much higher than most would assume, as surely most of us would consider our home to be our most important possession.

More from James Cochran

When Minimum Coverage is not Enough for your Business
By: James Cochran | 29/10/2007 | Insurance
The name of the game in insurance is risk management. As a small information technology business owner or manager, you transfer the risk of loss to an insurance company in exchange for a premium. Of course you don’t want to spend more on that premium than you have to; nobody does.

Business Insurance Over the Internet: What are the Risks?
By: James Cochran | 29/10/2007 | Insurance
It’s a truism that times have changed, and likewise, insurance has changed, too. The era of purchasing your business insurance from Uncle Harold who lives down the street has passed, if it ever existed, and the World Wide Web is your new hometown.

How to of Become a Commercial Insurance Broker
By: James Cochran | 29/10/2007 | Insurance
First, we need to make a distinction between an insurance “broker” and an insurance “agent.” In the insurance business, an agent is in partnership with one or more insurance companies.

How to Purchase Business Insurance for the Specific Needs of an it Company
By: James Cochran | 29/10/2007 | Insurance
Today’s high tech businesses have insurance needs that were impossible to foresee a generation ago, when Internet insurance was unheard of and even inconceivable. The liability risks for an IT firm are particularly complex.

Reporting a Commercial Insurance Claim: Will your Agent be There?
By: James Cochran | 29/10/2007 | Insurance
When you buy a general commercial liability insurance policy, you hope you'll never need to use it. But chances are high that you’ll eventually discover you've gambled correctly and you'll need to submit a claim.

How Verified Liability Insurance Attracts Contractors
By: James Cochran | 29/10/2007 | Insurance
If you are a small information technology (IT) business and finding it hard to get contractors to work with your company, maybe you are overlooking the importance of verified liability insurance.

Protect your Home Based it Business With Internet Insurance
By: James Cochran | 29/10/2007 | Insurance
Recently, home based businesses have been on the rise. The ease of starting up a company in the convenience of the home is an inviting temptation. Not only do you have an instant office, but going to work is literally a step away.

Good Business Owners Should Know Their Contracts, Including it Contracts
By: James Cochran | 19/10/2007 | Law
The contract agreement is essentially the foundation for doing business. Whether it be a verbal negotiation, a handshake deal, or formally written contracts of various natures, a contract establishes duties and obligations for parties doing business with one another and the terms for fulfilling that relationship.

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below