Do I Need Business Interruption Insurance?

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I wish I heard this question more often: Do I need business interruption insurance?

The answer is simple: No, unless you can’t afford to lose all your key employees, go indefinitely without income, pay all your ongoing expenses when your business isn’t making any money and go out of business as you wait for repair or reconstruction of your business premises. Otherwise, the answer is yes, you do need business interruption insurance.

Business interruption insurance (also known as business income insurance) is a form of property insurance. In this case, we’re referring to the property more affectionately known as your business revenues and expenses. As a concept this type of insurance is pretty straightforward. The main idea is to provide money for net income and ongoing expenses when your business can’t, usually because some form of covered loss makes it impossible.

For example, let’s say you operate a candle shop. One morning that temp you hired for the holidays moves a cinnamon-apple pillar candle beneath a silk bamboo plant that catches fire, which spreads to a nearby tapestry and quickly converts your entire business to a wax works before you can say, “Did someone burn an apple pie in here?”

Fortunately, your property insurance will pay to replace the tapestry, the silk bamboo plant, your inventory of candles as well as the cost of needed repairs and reconstruction. Your liability insurance will pay for incidental damage to nearby persons and property. But you’re still looking at an extended period of time during which you have no source of revenue to make your monthly loan installment, pay utility bills, equipment leases, your own salary and other expenses that don’t go away just because your business is down. That’s where business interruption insurance comes in.

Where all of this gets confusing, even for insurance representatives, is where you decide how much business interruption insurance you need. The answer really depends on your business financials. In fact, you might even want to consult a CPA before you decide. But the limit of coverage and the deductible are always expressed both in terms of time and money. For example, you could purchase a quarter of your annual qualified expenses to be paid over a period of 90 days with a deductible of three days.

Most insurance reps will carefully avoid suggesting or speculating about whether any given limit of coverage is “enough.” First, unless they’ve seen your books, they really don’t know. Second, plaintiffs lawyers make their bones on mistakes like that. What we can do is provide you with a worksheet that’s designed to help you separate qualified expenses from costs that don’t continue, such as non-essential services and payroll.

Here’s another question: Do I need business interruption insurance in Florida? The answer is the same. Yes, but if your property insurance does not cover losses caused by wind and hail (also known as hurricane coverage) your business interruption insurance won’t either. In other words, you get exactly nada if a Cat 3 forces you out of business for a while. Keep that in mind when your representative asks about “ex-wind” property insurance.

Keep this in mind, too. Business interruption insurance kicks in when your business premises goes down, as a result of a covered cause of loss, and takes your business with it. What happens if your business premises aren’t damaged but access is severely restricted or denied to a point where the material affect on your business is the same? For example, let’s say a flood cuts off all the roads to your shop. In that case, you will want to have made sure your policy included so-called civil authority coverage and ingress/egress coverage.

Be sure to ask your representative for details. And while you’re at it, ask about extra-expense insurance, too. This is especially true for service businesses, such as dentists and lawyers, which can operate from a different location as they wait for their original premises to come back on line. Extra-expense coverage pays the costs of relocating to a temporary location.

Give me a call (727-916-7429) if I can help. Meantime, keep those candles away from the silk plants, please.

 

 

 

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PACE Reprise on Patch.com

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If you have a little time on your hands and absolutely, positively nothing else to do, you could peruse the archives of this blog and find at least one or two posts praising PACE as trade winds to our economic doldrums.

Well, I’m back at it but this time it’s on my new blog at New Port Richey Patch.com. I’m the new small-business blogger over there and I’m pretty excited about it. No pay but lots of glory (or gory as my writing goes now and then).

Patch.com is the hyper-local news outfit, which is reported to have already cost AOL $130 million and counting. There’s plenty of speculation that it will go the same way as earlier hyper-local online sites, which is to say oblivion.

So, I might not be a long-tenured blogger at New Port Richey Patch.com but you never know. Either way, I’m excited about it as long as it lasts, and I sincerely hope that will be a long time. Check it out. Read my posts and leave comments.

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Quirky, not kooky

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Who among us hasn’t fantasized about inventing the next Frisbee and watching it go viral? We all want to be the guy whose friends tell their friends, “I know the dude who invented the Thing-a-Ma-Bop, and he just bought a 50-foot yacht.”

Maybe you’ve had a multi-million dollar epiphany only to see someone else launch the same idea and make it really happen. Or maybe you’re sitting on a brilliant concept, wondering how the heck to make it happen.

If that’s you, meet Quirky, the crowdsourcing site for inventive people who lack capital, knowledge, time and courage to go it alone in the world of product development.

Quirky might be the first social media site that actually produces stuff, other than countless terabytes of glorified navel gazing, chit chat and all-about-me hyperbole.

The concept is very democratic and elegantly ingenious for its simplicity. Anyone can join for free. If you’ve got a winning idea, you can submit it. Don’t worry about pages of specs and precise blueprints. A couple of paragraphs and a back-of-a-napkin diagram will do just fine.

Once you’ve submitted your idea other members of the community (called “influencers”) review it and ultimately determine whether it has potential to succeed in the market by casting votes for or against your idea.

Even if they spit you out, chances are you’ll learn something in the process that might help you improve the idea. If so, you’re always welcome to try it again.

Winning ideas move into a pipeline of promising concepts that feed Quirky’s own team of engineers and designers. These people work to refine concepts and develop prototypes in cooperation with Quirky’s community of influencers.

Eventually, if enough members of the community commit to purchase the product, it goes into production and finds its way to the larger mass market. And everyone gets paid, both inventors and influencers.

The only down side I see is that Quirky charges you $10 to submit an idea. But that’s a small price to pay, really, especially if you’re confident in your brainchild. If not, it’s just enough to discourage a lot of harebrained stuff from getting tossed in the hopper for the hell of it.

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