Frequently Asked Questions

285 frequently asked questions
What insurance adjustments should I make when profitability improves?

Improved profitability changes your insurance calculus in subtle but important ways. You have more to protect, more to lose, and potentially more resources to invest in comprehensive coverage.

How profitability affects insurance decisions:

Asset protection: Higher profitability typically generates retained earnings that increase your net worth, and your exposure in liability claims.

Coverage adequacy: Limits that seemed extravagant during lean years may now be barely adequate given your business’s increased value.

Premium capacity: Improved cash flow may allow you to purchase coverages or limits you previously couldn’t afford.

Risk tolerance: You may now be able to accept higher deductibles, trading premium savings for retained risk you can afford to absorb.

An annual insurance review should include discussion of your financial trajectory. Coverage appropriate for a struggling startup is rarely appropriate for an established, profitable operation.

What insurance changes occur when converting from partnership to LLC?

Converting from a general partnership to an LLC changes your legal structure in ways that affect insurance coverage. The LLC provides liability protection that partnerships don’t, but insurance remains essential.

Insurance implications of conversion:

Named insured change: All policies must be updated to name the LLC as the insured entity rather than the partnership or individual partners.

Coverage continuity: Ensure no gap exists between partnership coverage ending and LLC coverage beginning. Claims from partnership-era activities need protection.

Workers’ compensation: LLC members may be treated differently than general partners for workers’ comp purposes. State rules vary on whether members can opt out of coverage.

Professional liability: If you provide professional services, ensure E&O coverage transfers properly and covers both partnership and LLC periods.

Why insurance still matters with LLC protection:

LLC limits: LLC liability protection isn’t absolute. Courts can pierce the LLC veil in certain circumstances.

Professional liability: LLCs don’t protect members from their own professional malpractice.

Personal guarantees: If you’ve personally guaranteed obligations, LLC structure doesn’t protect against those.

Adequate capitalization: Underfunded LLCs may lose liability protection. Insurance helps demonstrate adequate resources.

Conversion process for insurance:

Early notification: Inform your agent before the legal conversion occurs.

Coordinate timing: Align insurance changes with legal entity change dates.

Document everything: Keep records of the conversion and corresponding insurance updates.

Review all policies: Check every policy, not just liability coverage, for entity naming issues.

The conversion is an opportunity for comprehensive coverage review beyond just changing the named insured.

What insurance considerations apply when buying another business?

Acquiring another business is one of the most complex transactions your company will undertake, and insurance is a critical component of due diligence and integration planning.

Pre-acquisition insurance due diligence:

Claims history: Review the target’s claims history for patterns suggesting operational problems or hidden liabilities.

Coverage adequacy: Evaluate whether the target has appropriate coverages and limits for its operations.

Policy review: Examine actual policies for exclusions, conditions, and terms that could affect claims.

Uninsured exposures: Identify gaps between the target’s exposures and its coverage.

Workers’ comp experience mod: The target’s EMR affects future premium costs.

Representations and warranties insurance:

What it covers: R&W insurance covers losses from breaches of seller representations in the purchase agreement.

When it’s used: Common in private equity transactions and competitive bidding situations.

Cost and structure: Buyer-side policies are more common. Premiums typically run 2-4% of coverage limits.

Negotiating leverage: R&W insurance can facilitate deals by reducing escrow requirements.

Post-acquisition insurance integration:

Coverage consolidation: Decide whether to merge onto your policies or maintain separate coverage.

Timing: Ensure no coverage gaps during transition.

Retroactive coverage: Address pre-acquisition occurrences that may result in post-closing claims.

Workers’ comp coordination: Combine experience mods and payroll appropriately.

Notification: Inform insurers of the acquisition and its impact on your risk profile.

Engage your insurance advisor early in the acquisition process, not after the deal closes.

What insurance considerations apply when creating a holding company structure?

Restructuring into a holding company with operating subsidiaries creates insurance complexity requiring careful planning to ensure all entities are appropriately protected.

Why companies create holding structures:

Liability isolation: Separating risky operations from valuable assets.

Tax planning: Achieving more favorable tax treatment.

Acquisition readiness: Facilitating future acquisitions or divestitures.

Investment separation: Isolating investments from operating business risks.

Succession planning: Creating structure supporting ownership transitions.

Insurance structure for holding companies:

Holding company coverage: The holding company needs its own D&O and potentially other coverages.

Operating subsidiary coverage: Each subsidiary needs coverage appropriate to its activities.

Coordinated vs. separate: Coverage can be combined or separate depending on goals.

Upstream liability: Ensure holding company is protected from subsidiary activities.

Downstream protection: Subsidiaries need protection from holding company decisions.

D&O considerations:

Multiple boards: Holding company and subsidiary boards may need coordinated coverage.

Interlocking directors: Directors serving on multiple boards need clarity on which coverage applies.

Side A priority: In multi-entity structures, dedicated Side A coverage becomes more important.

Allocation: How claims involving multiple entities are allocated between policies.

Operational insurance:

Subsidiary activities: GL, property, workers’ comp, and other coverage for subsidiary operations.

Holding company activities: May be minimal but still need coverage.

Inter-company transactions: Coverage for activities between related entities.

Shared services: If holding company provides services to subsidiaries, coverage should address this.

Implementation:

Transition planning: Plan insurance structure before implementing holding company.

Day-one coverage: Ensure coverage effective when new structure begins.

Documentation: Clear records of which entities are covered where.

What insurance considerations apply when expanding service areas?

Geographic expansion changes your risk profile even without opening new physical locations. The areas where you perform work affect your exposure, your compliance obligations, and potentially your insurability for certain coverage types.

Key considerations for service area expansion:

Distance from base: Some policies include mileage limitations. Work performed far from your primary location may need specific authorization.

Jurisdiction: Different cities, counties, and states have different legal environments. Some areas have reputations for plaintiff-friendly juries that affect liability costs.

Environmental variations: Coastal work, high-altitude operations, or services in extreme weather zones may face exclusions or require endorsements.

Before marketing to a new territory or accepting a contract outside your established service area, verify that your coverage travels with you. What’s covered in San Antonio may not be covered in Houston or Dallas without policy adjustments.

What insurance considerations apply when promoting someone to a management role?

Promoting an employee to management changes their relationship to the company and potentially your insurance exposures. Managers make decisions that affect other employees, creating liability that didn’t exist when they were individual contributors.

Insurance implications of management roles:

EPLI exposure: Managers make hiring, firing, promotion, discipline, and compensation decisions. These decisions are the source of most employment claims. Ensure your EPLI policy covers management actions and the individuals in management roles.

Directors and Officers: If the promotion is to an officer position (VP, director-level, C-suite), D&O insurance may become relevant, especially if the company has outside investors or a formal board.

Training and documentation: Managers need training on employment law, harassment prevention, and documentation practices. Proper training reduces claims; lack of training increases them.

Workers’ comp classification: Management roles typically have different (usually lower) classification codes than hands-on roles. Ensure the promoted employee’s classification is updated.

Review your EPLI policy to understand how it covers management decisions and whether individual managers are protected.

What insurance considerations apply when purchasing business real estate?

Buying commercial real estate involves insurance considerations beyond what you’ve dealt with as a tenant. Property ownership brings both building coverage responsibilities and liability exposures.

Property coverage for owned real estate:

Building coverage: The structure itself, including foundations, walls, roof, and permanently installed fixtures.

Valuation: Insure at full replacement cost. Construction costs, not purchase price or market value, determine what it costs to rebuild.

Coinsurance compliance: Ensure coverage meets coinsurance requirements (typically 80-100% of replacement cost) to avoid penalties.

Business personal property: Contents and equipment inside the building.

Business interruption: Lost income and continuing expenses if the building is damaged.

Building-specific coverages:

Ordinance or law: Covers increased costs when rebuilding must meet current building codes.

Equipment breakdown: Mechanical and electrical systems in the building.

Flood insurance: Standard policies exclude flood. Evaluate flood exposure and obtain separate coverage if needed.

Earthquake: Also excluded from standard policies in most areas.

Sewer backup: Often requires a specific endorsement.

Liability considerations:

Premises liability: As property owner, you’re responsible for injuries occurring on the property.

Tenant activities: If you lease space to tenants, require them to carry liability insurance naming you as additional insured.

Contractors: Require insurance from contractors performing work on the property.

Umbrella coverage: Real estate ownership may increase your liability exposure, warranting higher limits.

Timing:

Coverage at closing: Insurance should be in place at closing. Lenders require proof of coverage.

Policy structure: Consider whether the property should be on your existing policy or a separate property policy.

What insurance considerations apply when spinning off a business unit?

Spinning off a business unit into a separate company creates insurance complexity during the transition and requires establishing independent coverage for the new entity.

Pre-spin insurance planning:

Coverage separation: Determine which policies will remain with the parent and which will go with the spin-off.

Claims allocation: Clarify responsibility for pre-spin claims and how coverage applies.

Shared history: The spin-off’s risk profile includes its history as part of the parent.

Contractual obligations: Review contracts for insurance requirements that may complicate separation.

Establishing spin-off coverage:

New program: The spin-off typically needs its own complete insurance program.

Historical coverage: Ensure the spin-off has coverage for activities during its time as part of the parent.

Retroactive dates: Claims-made policies need appropriate retroactive dates reflecting pre-spin activities.

Experience rating: The spin-off’s workers’ comp and other experience-rated coverage will be affected by its history.

Transition period:

Day-one coverage: The spin-off needs coverage effective on the separation date.

Transition services: If the parent provides services during transition, coverage should address these activities.

Shared facilities: Temporary facility sharing requires appropriate coverage arrangements.

Employee transitions: Workers’ comp and benefits coverage must transfer seamlessly.

Parent company considerations:

Retained liability: The parent may retain some liability for pre-spin activities.

Coverage adjustments: With reduced operations, the parent should adjust its coverage.

Indemnification: Cross-indemnification provisions in the separation agreement interact with insurance.

Run-off coverage: May be needed for discontinued activities related to the spin-off.

Spin-offs are major transactions requiring careful insurance planning integrated with legal and financial planning.

What insurance covers intellectual property infringement claims?

Intellectual property claims, both those made against you and those you need to make against others, present coverage challenges because standard business policies often exclude or limit IP coverage.

Claims against you (defensive coverage):

Advertising injury: General liability policies include limited coverage for certain IP claims under ‘advertising injury,’ particularly trademark infringement in advertising.

Professional liability: Some E&O policies cover IP claims arising from professional services, such as a designer accused of copying someone’s work.

Technology E&O: Often includes broader IP coverage for technology companies, including software patent claims.

Media liability: Covers copyright claims related to content creation.

Standalone IP insurance: Dedicated policies for IP defense, particularly useful for businesses with significant IP exposure.

Enforcing your own IP (offensive coverage):

IP abatement insurance: Covers legal costs to pursue infringers of your patents, trademarks, or copyrights.

Patent enforcement insurance: Specifically for patent litigation, which can be extremely expensive.

Coverage triggers: Some policies require you to demonstrate the validity of your IP before coverage applies.

Coverage limitations:

Prior knowledge: Claims based on situations you knew about before buying coverage may be excluded.

Willful infringement: Intentional infringement may not be covered.

Contractual obligations: IP warranties and indemnities in contracts may exceed policy coverage.

If IP is significant to your business, whether as an asset you’re protecting or an exposure you’re managing, discuss IP-specific coverage with a knowledgeable broker.

What insurance do I need before expanding into a new state?

Expanding across state lines introduces regulatory complexity that catches many business owners off guard. Each state has its own insurance requirements, and what works in Texas may not satisfy obligations in California or New York.

Critical factors to address before interstate expansion:

Workers’ compensation rules: Some states require coverage from state-run funds; others allow private insurance. Rates and classification codes vary significantly.

Auto insurance requirements: Commercial vehicle coverage minimums differ by state, and some states have no-fault systems that affect how claims are handled.

Professional licensing: Many licensed professions require proof of state-specific coverage before you can operate legally.

The compliance landscape is too complex to navigate alone. Before hiring your first out-of-state employee or signing your first out-of-state contract, work with an insurance professional who understands multi-state operations.

What insurance do I need before hiring my first employee?

That first hire transforms your insurance requirements dramatically. As an employer, you take on legal obligations and liability exposures that didn’t exist when you worked alone.

Minimum coverage for employers:

Workers’ compensation: Required in Texas for many employers and practically essential for all. Covers employee injuries regardless of fault.

Employment practices liability: Protects against claims of discrimination, harassment, wrongful termination, and other employment-related allegations.

Increased general liability: Your liability exposure increases when employees interact with the public on your behalf.

Even before hiring, begin conversations with your insurance agent about employer coverage. Some policies require application and underwriting that takes time. Starting early ensures coverage is in place on day one of employment.

What insurance do I need before licensing my intellectual property?

Licensing intellectual property creates exposures distinct from selling products or services directly. The licensing arrangement and what you’re licensing both affect insurance needs.

IP licensing exposures:

Infringement claims: If your licensed IP allegedly infringes others’ patents, copyrights, or trademarks, you may face claims from both IP owners and licensees.

Breach of warranty: Licenses typically include warranties about ownership and non-infringement. Breaching these warranties creates liability.

Indemnification obligations: Many license agreements require you to indemnify licensees against IP infringement claims.

Royalty disputes: Disagreements about royalty calculations or payments can lead to litigation.

Coverage options:

IP insurance: Specialized coverage for IP infringement, both defense of claims that you infringed and enforcement of your own IP rights.

Professional liability: Some E&O policies cover IP-related claims, though coverage varies significantly.

Media liability: If licensing involves content, media liability may be relevant.

Representations and warranties insurance: Available for significant transactions where warranty breaches could be costly.

Licensing agreement considerations:

Indemnification scope: Understand what you’re agreeing to indemnify before signing.

Insurance requirements: Licensees may require specific coverage types and limits.

Notice provisions: License agreements may require prompt notice of claims; ensure your insurance allows compliance.

Work with both legal counsel and insurance professionals when structuring IP licensing arrangements.