Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy: Understanding Business Insurance and Risk Management
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About this ebook
Rick Vassar, a certified expert in the commercial insurance arena, writes from a risk manager's perspective as he tackles the often confusing field of commercial insurance with his real numbers, real solutions strategy. Developed not just as an initial learning tool but also as an ongoing resource for experienced managers as well as the uninitiated, this simple guide will help busy executives and business owners reduce expenses in their current programs. Vassar will teach you four distinct steps for controlling your insurance costs: Understand the language and the process Know the players and how to better manage the process Develop a strategy and a plan to maximize coverage for minimal cost Invest the time and gain real financial benefits
With a fresh perspective, this guidebook provides insight into an industry that is constantly evolving, and it shows how you can potentially save your company millions of dollars in insurance costs!
Richard G. Vassar
Rick Vassar, CPCU, ARM, AIS, ARM-P, has been a commercial risk manager for over twenty years and has published several articles on the risk-management process. He has managed risk in small, mid-size and Fortune 100 companies, primarily in the automotive industry. Vassar lives with his wife Carol and two children outside of Washington, DC.
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Book preview
Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy - Richard G. Vassar
HIDE!
HERE COMES THE
INSURANCE GUY
SKU-000068035_TEXT.pdfUnderstanding Business Insurance
and Risk Management
Rick Vassar
CPCU, ARM, AIS, ARM-P
iUniverse, Inc.
New York Bloomington
Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy
Understanding Business Insurance and Risk Management
Copyright © 2008 by Richard G. Vassar
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
www.vassargroup.com
iUniverse Star
an iUniverse, Inc. imprint
iUniverse books may be ordered through booksellers or by contacting:
iUniverse
1663 Liberty Drive
Bloomington, IN 47403
www.iuniverse.com
1-800-Authors (1-800-288-4677)
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any Web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
ISBN: 978-1-60528-020-2 (pbk)
ISBN: 978-0-595-49811-6 (cloth)
ISBN: 978-0-595-61492-9 (ebk)
Printed in the United States of America
Contents
Introduction
Acknowledgments
PART I
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
PART II
9
10
11
12
13
14
PART III
Glossary
To Carol, my one and only
Discretion will protect you, and understanding will guard you.
—Proverbs 2:11
Quotes and Reviews
Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy
Seasoned insurance professionals, especially those who cannot explain policy terms to clients without using dizzying industry lingo, will find Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy
particularly digestible, detailed and delightful.
- David Dankwa, Senior Associate Editor, BestWeek
I found this book to be an excellent tool for the insurance novice and expert alike, and I would recommend it for both consumers and the business community. The insights Vassar offers into the risk management process are invaluable, and the material is written in an easy-to-read, approachable format.
- Dr. George L. Head Ph.D., CPCU, ARM, CSP, CLU, Director Emeritus, American Institute for Chartered Property Casualty Underwriters (Ret.)
...Vassar’s focus is practical and hands-on, leavened with a self-deprecating sense of humor. Did I say humor
? Yes, though few comedy clubs are likely to feature an Open Mike night for insurance reps, Vassar takes the human antipathy toward insurance and turns it into a source of mirth and amusement.
- Kevin M. Quinley CPCU, ARM, AIC, Are, AIM, Author, Business At Risk
If you’re going to get past being small service business owner, you have to learn the basics of how insurance works. You probably won’t have time to become an expert on insurance (although I tried) but Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy and Rick Vassar will give you the basic understanding that you need.
- Jeffery T. Valcourt, Chairman, Valcourt Building Services
This book is highly recommended for any business owner or executive responsible for procuring insurance or managing claims or litigation for the business. Almost as good as the fact that it packs a great deal of information into a readable format is that this book is actually funny.
- Eric Kaidanow, Esq., Frontier Risk Management
The Envelope, please … the Top Risk Management Book of the Year …
By Kevin M. Quinley CPCU, ARM AIC, AIM, ARe
Olly olly oxen free! Come out, come out, wherever you are!
Reviewed by Kevin Quinley
Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy by Rick Vassar, iUniverse, 2006, 196 pp., $17.95
Somebody once said that a New York accent was the most effective form of birth control known to man. Others might nominate as an effective contraceptive any tendency to talk about insurance… or risk management, for that matter.
Author, risk manager and consultant Rick Vassar has penned an illuminating primer on insurance and risk management in his book, Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy.
The title is a take-off on the notion that, for most people, meeting with an insurance person or discussing coverage is as much fun as a root canal or proctological exam. The author – a CPCU and an ARM -- lives a dual existence. By day, he is a mild-mannered risk manager for a company in the Washington D.C. area. In his spare time, he writes and consults on risk management topics (check out http://www.vassargroup.com ). Vassar tries (successfully) to cushion the blow and counter the stereotype by presenting insurance and risk management principles in a straightforward way that can profit any business professional.
Part of his theme is that most companies have risks that are overseen by someone whose title is not Risk Manager.
Most companies do not have risk managers; you need to have a pretty big insurance budget to justify that as a full-time position. No company vies to be paying so much in insurance premium that they spotlight the problem by having a full-time individual to tend to it. Nevertheless, all companies have risks and need to manage it. For these risk managers without title or formal portfolio, Vassar’s book – perhaps the best risk management book of the year even without that phrase in the title -- is an indispensable primer and guide. Reading and heeding his advice will save businesses much money, frustration and Excedrin-consumption.
Vassar divides his book into three main sections. Part I discusses business strategies to even the playing field between policyholders and insurance companies. Part II walks through the major basic forms of insurance coverage for most any business. Part III rounds out with a useful; glossary and index.
Vassar’s target audience is likely not the Fortune 500 or Fortune 1000 risk pro who attends the annual RIMS Conference. There is no highfalutin discussion of enterprise risk management or views from 50,000 feet above ground level. If you are seeking information on Sarbanes-Oxley compliance or the risk management implications of global warming, look elsewhere. The storefront risk manager, though, will find a wellspring of effective tips and tricks between these covers.
Vassar’s focus is practical and hands-on, leavened with a self-deprecating sense of humor. Did I say humor
? Yes, though few comedy clubs are likely to feature an Open Mike night for insurance reps, Vassar takes the human antipathy toward insurance and turns it into a source of mirth and amusement. (Some end-of-chapter checklists would have been a nice addition to the text, but this is a minor quibble.)
So run -- but don’t hide - and get your copy of Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy.
Get out from under the desk. Leave the closet and face your fears. Insurance and risk management may not be fun (though they are occasionally funny), but Rick Vassar has come as close to anyone in blending sharp wit with moneysaving risk management insights.
Kevin Quinley CPCU ARM is the author of over 500 published articles and nine books. His articles have appeared in publications including Business Insurance, The National Underwriter, Risk Management, Occupational Safety & Health, Best’s Review, CPCU Journal, Insurance Settlement Journal, The Risk Report and For the Defense. He is the author of Time Management for Claim Professionals, Claim Management, The Quality Plan, Litigation Management and Winning Strategies for Negotiating Claims and Managing Product Liability Risks. His seventh book, Bulletproofing Your Medical Practice: Risk Management Strategies that Work, was published in October of 2000. His eighth book, Well-Adjusted: 185 Career Tips for Adjuster Success was published in mid-2001. The ninth book – coauthored with Don Schmidt -- Business at Risk: Risk Managing the Terrorist Threat was published in 2002.
Book Review: Hide, Here Comes the Insurance Guy
Written by MaryAnna Clemons
Published August 22, 2007
Rick Vassar has found a niche subject (business risk insurance) that was lacking in coverage, so he wrote the book on it. And he did a great job doing it. The book, Hide, Here Comes the Insurance Guy; A Practical Guide to Understanding Business Insurance and Risk Management, is a job well done.
We all have to buy insurance for our cars, our homes, even our lives. But business insurance is a totally different animal. If you run a business, you have to have insurance. It’s that simple.
Rick spells out what that insurance is, why you need it and why you’ll be sorry if you don’t have it. He has demystified more than a few insurance terms, opened up the world of risk (and the risk is all yours without insurance) and given compelling case scenarios to show what can happen without insurance.
If I had to pick on something to critique, I’d say that some of his headlines don’t seem to match his later words, for example Why people hate insurance
is the headline and then the anecdote that follows is about algebra. I would argue that people hate insurance because they pay and pay and pay and pay, and then finally, they submit a claim and they get hassled and hassled and hassled, until they finally settle for less than they should be getting from an insurance company. To me, that’s why people hate insurance.
I think, though, that Rick was tying Algebra — the subject everyone thinks they’ll never need --- into insurance, because at some point in life you’ll need both. That is a pretty picky critique on my part, because nothing is perfect.
Back to the good stuff, I really like the way Rick has broken it down for you on the ins and outs of the insurance game. For one, he tells you to get more than one quote - at first that seems like common sense, but when was the last time you got a quote?
I had to think about it and for my car insurance, it’s been at least four years. How would I know if I’m getting the best rate if I haven’t bothered to shop around in four years? Nice reminder to me.
The same applies for business insurance and going through a broker. The broker is in business for himself or his company, not you. You are the payee and if you aren’t paying, they don’t make money, which is just part of the reason your insurance rates tend to go up every year, instead of down.
The book breaks down the claims process, defines your risk criteria, gives you the difference between self-insurance and no-insurance (personal alternative risk financing), brokers, lawyers and more.
When you are done reading this book you are going to understand:
The language of insurance
The insurance players who want your money
How to develop a sound insurance strategy
How to invest your time and efforts regarding insurance
And whether you are properly insured or not
Part two of the book is worth the cover price alone: Insurance 101. In this section Rick breaks down the different insurance policies, from cars to homes to worker’s compensation: what is covered, what isn’t, what you can expect from your insurance, time periods, and more.
Worker’s Compensation 101: worker’s compensation is mandatory in all states, but Rick explains that small businesses, based on the number of employees, can file for exemptions. He then goes on to explain why you may not want to do that. After all, even if you have two employees, if both of those employees get hurt, you aren’t covered (let the lawsuits begin). Even if you think that your cousin Fred would never sue you, or that he won’t get hurt because he’s super-athletic, think again. Accidents (and fraud) do happen, even with friends and family.
Rick’s enduring message through the whole book (174 pages, including Index) is to protect yourself and your business with insurance, while protecting your pocketbook from the insurance man. It’s a great book and I’m glad I have it on my business reference shelf.
Since the book is published by iUniverse, I’ll take moment to point out that it’s very well edited. The book has a great binding that I’ve been bending, pulling and adjusting on and it’s stuck together wonderfully. I would not be surprised to find this book as required reading in future business courses in colleges throughout the U.S. and for new insurance agents to give to their clients (smart marketing in action: educate the customer). The layout is professional and easy on the eyes.
As an avid book reader and buyer, I tend to shy away from self-published work - I’m glad I did not in this case. It’s a well done book that hands you information to make your life easier.
MaryAnna Clemons is a freelance journalist based out of Colorado Springs, Colo., with three children, five horses, five cats, five dogs and one husband. Writing about removing chemicals from our daily lives, the dangers of aspartame and vaccines, as well as book reviews, she is continually trying to cram as much writing into her day as she can.
In New Book, Risk Manager Explains ‘Commercial Insurance’ in Plain Language
OLDWICK, N.J. November 13 (BestWire) — If I had grown up in Wisconsin, I would know cheese; Georgia, peaches; Florida, AARP,
writes risk manager and author Rick Vassar.
As fate would have it, Vassar was raised in a suburb of Hartford, Conn., the insurance capital of the world, where folks gather at the local diner in the center of town and discuss such compelling subjects as the necessity of waiver of subrogation and additional insured status or the effects the new insurance commissioner would have on the local economy.
This is where the insurance curse began in my family,
he writes.
In his book, Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy,
described as a practical guide to understanding business insurance and risk management, Vassar shares the wealth of information he’s gathered over several decades in what he calls plain speaking
insurance language.
There aren’t any books available that address the needs of the business insurance consumer, and second, many business professionals refuse to enlighten themselves on the nuances of the insurance trade, he says. As such, the insurance guy
Vassar describes in his book is a lonely person, something of a corporate outcast. He is the type of co-worker people steer away from in the hallways, afraid that he’d work insurance into a conversation.
Using humor, Vassar, also founder and president of Virginia-based Vassar Group, provides insight into the commercial insurance industry from a risk manager’s perspective, offering practical advice on the insurance purchasing process. As he describes how terrorism insurance works, how to value one’s property when considering property coverage, and workers’ compensation strategies, he also picks on attorneys in a section called The Skinny on Attorneys
and on adjusters in Anatomy of an Insurance Adjuster.
Vassar discusses in depth the selection of an insurance broker and argues that bigger isn’t always better. The difference between a big, national broker and a local or regional broker is like Advil and Ibuprofen, he writes. You’re only paying extra for the name.
Vassar says if a company is in tune with what’s going on in the marketplace, it can get the same pricing from a small local broker that would from a midsize, regional broker or Marsh & McLennan.
Also, from a service standpoint, Vassar says he prefers a midsize broker to handle his company’s midsize account. Currently, we have a good bit of premium but it wouldn’t be a big number for a national broker, like Marsh. For a midsize broker, it’s a significant portion of their overall book of business. So, we’re more of a big fish in a small pond, whereas with a bigger national firm, we wouldn’t get the same level of service,
he says.
He frowns on the practice of corporate insureds assigning brokers to shop specific markets, often at the urging of the incumbent broker who insists that the underwriter only wants to work with one broker per account.
Vassar writes that assigning markets defeats the purpose of a free-market system.
He writes also about the role of lawyers in claims processing. If you’re an organization, especially in a self-insured or self-funding situation and you’re going to make a decision that’s going to have a financial impact on your company, then it needs to be the company that is making the decision as to the financial viability of either settling the case or taking it to trial. Many companies just hand it off to lawyers as soon as they get a lawsuit.
Vassar cites the McDonald’s hot coffee case, where there was an opportunity to settle the case as a medical claim, and they ignored it. Well, the issues in that case were that there was a legitimate injury, a legitimate burn, and eventually they did work to improve the cups and they lowered the temperature of the coffee that they were serving. They also later settled the claim for a much higher amount.
While the book targets buyers of insurance, Vassar says the insurance community also can learn a lot from it. I believe the book will give valuable insight to the insurance community as to how risk managers and businesses process their information concerning risk and insurance. If a broker or insurer has a better understanding of the needs and concerns of the insured, they will be better able to market products that will meet these needs.
And what do businesses need? Vassar says it is: The best price and the comfort of knowing that what they are buying will cover an event that creates a financial uncertainty which could prevent them from opening their doors tomorrow, or could close their doors forever.
By David Dankwa, associate editor, BestWeek: David.Dankwa@ambest.com
Introduction
The first thing people ask me about this book is: Why a book on insurance? And business insurance, to boot?
To me, this question really means: You’re kidding, right?
In fact, when I initially pitched this idea to the publisher, I was met with an uncomfortable silence on the other end of the line. Fortunately, being in the insurance end of business, I’m pretty accustomed to stunned silence.
After about five seconds of this, I gave it my best marketing effort:
Sounds kind of like death, doesn’t it?
The reason for this book is simple. There are too few insurance professionals who work outside of the insurance industry. The insurance industry is a wonderful career choice for those who pursue it and stay with it. Most who go into this line of business stay in the business until they retire—or die.
I am an anomaly in the insurance industry. I have spent my entire career in business and not in insurance. I am not a purveyor of insurance; I am a consumer of insurance.
I am a risk manager.
A risk manager determines the financing needs of an organization, provides coverage for the company, and works the insurance program on behalf of his or her employer.
I am a buyer, not a seller. I look out for the needs of the commercial consumer, and I have no ties