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Business Owners Policy (BOP) Commercial Auto Coworking Spaces Cyber Insurance Liability Insurance Workers' Compensation

Coworking Spaces for Small Business Owners

Dude, where’s my office! There’s been a fundamental shift in where people are working today. The water cooler is still there, but the people around it don’t all work at the same company. With this shift in where we are all working, it begs the question – Do I have business insurance for that? We all think of insurance needs based on fire or flood events. But business insurance is so much more than that regarding coworking spaces for small business owners. At this point, you may be asking yourself: “What business insurance coverage does my business need at coworking spaces?”

Insurance Coverage Needs for Coworking Spaces for Small Business:

  • General Liability – Does your business use contracts to provide its services or sell products? Operating from a flexible office space won’t save your business from the risks associated with those business activities! Obligations under client contracts or the risks of selling a product, do not disappear just because your business utilizes a coworking space. General liability a foundational business insurance coverage for any business typically provides product and contractual coverage. So, whether your business operates out of a brick and mortar or at coworking spaces, general liability is where all business owners start thinking about business insurance.
  • Business Owners Policy – Picture this, you are at your coworking space having a productive day. You get up to go grab a cup of coffee and when you return your laptop is missing! If your business does not have property coverage, the costs to replace that laptop will have to come out of your pocket. Combine the coverages of general liability and property and make life a bit easier by purchasing a business owners policy (BOP).
  • Worker’s Compensation – Now that business owners can work anywhere, the people they hire can too! Technology has allowed us to have video chats and be connected as seamlessly as if we were sitting beside one another. If you have employees or hire 1099 contractors to do work on your behalf, worker’s compensation is a must have coverage. Worker’s compensation is mandatory in most states, even if your employees operate remotely or in a coworking space.
  • Professional Liability/Errors & Omissions – Don’t think that the possibility of a missed deadline leading to a dissatisfied client only happens if you own the building. If advice or expertise is your job, then professional liability is an essential coverage!

What Other Business Insurance Does My Business Need?

  • Cyber Insurance – Free WIFI at coworking spaces may be a great amenity, but it is not without risks. A shared or public network may increase your business’ Cyber Insurance can provide you with coverage in the event of a breach. Data security losses can be extremely expensive. Many victims are often forced to consider paying a ransom to regain access to their systems and/or information. Cyber coverage can be purchased on its own. But often times, it can be added in a cost-effective manner to a business owners policy.
  • Hired Non-Owned Auto – Do you hire or rent cars for your business? If you have employees, do you ever have them run an errand for the business in their personal vehicles? This is a common ask of small business owners who do not have owned business autos. Non-Owned Auto is the coverage needed to help protect your business in the event that employee running the errand has an accident.

As you can see there are many insurance coverages that will be needed no matter where you work. Go enjoy that view at your local coworking space. Drink the free coffee and put the cup in the sink without washing it. But before going tomorrow, make sure you have the proper insurance coverage to protect you against things that could happen. At Gild Insurance, we can help you with that!

To learn more about coworking risks, check out:

Considering a Coworking Space?

The Highlights of Business Insurance For Remote or Hybrid Businesses.

Take care of your business insurance needs by booking time with a Gild Agent or receiving a digital quote!

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Business Owners Policy (BOP) Liability Insurance Pet Shop Workers' Compensation

6 Must-Have Business Pet Store Insurance Policies

Running a pet store can be as rewarding as winning a puppy cuddle contest. As exhilarating as transferring a four-foot viper to a new habitat! Owning a pet store comes with a set of wildly unique risks.  But what business insurance does your pet retail store need? You should consider these 6 essential insurance policies:  

1. General Liability Pet Store Insurance: Your Everyday Mishap Shield

Imagine this: a playful puppy gets overexcited and has an accident on the floor. Then an unwitting customer doesn’t see the puddle and slips and falls. What-if a startled hamster escapes his cage? And a terrified climbs the shelving to get away and falls? How many customers were injured by these wild possibilities that are unique to Pet stores?!

These might seem like unlikely scenarios, but in the world of pet retail, they can happen. General liability insurance is your first line of defense! General liability covers medical expenses and legal fees of your injured customers.

2. Property Pet Store Insurance: Protecting Your Fur-ocious Fortress 

Pet stores are full of wild stories of unpredictable animals doing the unpredictable. Damage to your property is just one chaotic day away. Property insurance acts as your knight in shining armor. Therefore, it protects your building, inventory, and equipment from unexpected events. This includes fires or storms.

3. Product Liability Insurance: Your Safety Net for Paw-fully Worrisome Products 

While you carefully select healthy and high-quality products, sometimes things happen beyond your control. Product liability insurance protects against harm to customers caused by the products your pet store sells. Don’t take the risk of a customer’s pet getting sick after consuming a product from your store!

4. Workers’ Compensation Insurance: Taking Care of Your Pack

Employees face risks at work too. Like lifting heavy bags of food or stocking shelves. Worker’s compensation insurance provides medical care and lost wages for injuries on the job. Think of it as a “get well soon” fund that keeps your team happy and healthy.!

5. Crime Insurance: Guarding Against Unwanted Visitors 

Unfortunately, a pet store has a ton of easily concealed items for sale. They are a perfect target for thieves. Generally, with margins already tight any inventory lost can be painful. Crime insurance covers losses in your store for theft or fraud.  

6. Business Interruption Insurance: Weathering the Storm When You Have to Close 

A covered property claims, and payment issued is not the end. What do you do if your business has to shut down while repairing the damage? You can’t earn money because customers cannot come in! Business interruption insurance helps you cover lost income. It keeps your business afloat by paying your bills and payroll. Additionally, with this protection, you’ll reopen your doors and welcome back your furry friends with one less item on your plate.

Let’s get a business insurance policy tailored to your specific needs! Talk to Gild insurance agent. We understand the pet retail industry. Your business deserves a customized plan that protects your business from head to tail. Overall, don’t let insurance be a bone of contention! Get covered and focus on what you do best: making pets and their humans happy! 

To learn more pet business insurance check out: 

Cyber Insurance For Pet Retail

The Gild Guide: Most Common Small Business Insurance Questions

If you need help with your pet retail business, your friends at Gild Insurance are only a click away!

We combine the latest technology with experience to provide business insurance options that fit your business! We help pet business owners like you find the insurance coverages they need!

Categories
Business Owners Policy (BOP) Coffee Shop Liability Insurance Workers' Compensation

Sip with Confidence: Navigating the World of Coffee Shop Insurance

Welcome, coffee entrepreneurs! You’ve built a bustling coffee shop. Therefore, it’s essential to safeguard your passion and hard work. In this blog post, we’re diving into the world of coffee shop insurance. So, grab your favorite brew. Let’s explore how you can sip with confidence and keep your business protected.

Understanding Coffee Shop Insurance:

Running a coffee shop involves lots of activities! It is serving up delightful latte and it is managing a team of baristas. Also, with the joy of entrepreneurship comes the responsibility of addressing potential risks. Below, we are sharing the three main areas to explore with the basics of coffee shop insurance:

General Liability Insurance

Business Owner’s Insurance

Worker’s Compensation Insurance

General Liability Insurance: A Cornerstone of Protection

Firstly, general liability insurance provides coverage for three main topics. These are bodily injury, property damage, and personal injury of customers. Basically, the usual accidents in a coffee shop are what you might guess! Some examples are a customer slipping on a spilled latte or a claim related to the quality of your product. Overall, having this coverage in place is crucial for safeguarding your business.

Business Owner’s Insurance: A Full Bodied Approach

Most coffee shop owners invest lots of time, effort, and money into the equipment and inventory of your business. Accordingly, upgrade to a business owner’s policy to protect that property!

Secondly, business owner’s insurance provides the protections of general liability with property protections! But, it is important to remember that property doesn’t just mean a building. This could include coffee machines, cups, syrups, and even the beans!

Worker’s Compensation Insurance: Brew Peace Of Mind

Thirdly, workers’ compensation insurance provides benefits to employees injured on the job. These benefits may cover medical expenses, lost wages, and even disability. Additionally, it is often a legally REQUIRED, coverage for your coffee shop.

Why Coffee Shop Insurance Matters:

  • Peace of Mind: with the right insurance coverage, you can focus on the perfect espresso shots. Consequently, spend more your time on your shop, not your risks!
  • Financial Protection: insurance helps lessen the financial impact of liability claims, property damage, or other unforeseen circumstances.
  • Perfected Business Practices: many landlords may require proof of insurance. Also, having the right coverage ensures you’re meeting contractual obligations.
  • Legal Compliance: having the right coverages keeps your business legal.

To learn more about coffee shop insurance, check out:

“The Most Common Liability Claims for Coffee Shop Owners”.

“The Gild Guide: Most Common Small Business Insurance Questions”.

If you need help, your friends at Gild Insurance are a click away! We combine the latest technology with experience to provide business insurance options that fit your business.

We help coffee shop owners like you find the insurance coverages they need!

Categories
Business Owners Policy (BOP) Liability Insurance Small Business General Workers' Compensation

The Highlights of Remote or Hybrid Small Business:

As your business grows, so do its risks, making it crucial to ensure your business insurance fundamentals are solid. While your risk advisors may have mentioned business insurance and you’ve purchased policies, has anyone ever broken down the basics in plain language? Below are key policies every business should review and consider based on its specific needs. So, your remote or hybrid small business is prepared for the next step without missing a beat.

General Liability Insurance

Compared to other types of insurance, general liability insurance is the most familiar to business owners. General liability is a foundational policy and the minimum any business should consider. As its name suggests, this insurance coverage provides general protection against the common risks that nearly any business may encounter when engaging with the public and their clients. This type of coverage typically focuses around the risks and expenses related to the bodily injuries and property damage of others.

Business Owner’s Insurance

If your business is like most and has a remote or hybrid footprint, it has additional risk factors, especially when it:

  • Employs multiple people, especially across state lines
  • Has invested in computers and other business equipment for those employees
  • Owns the building the business operates in

Owners of these more complex businesses may be wise to pursue coverage that mitigates this wider risk. In fact, many general liability policies lack the property protections that your business needs. 
These businesses might consider a business owner’s policy, commonly referred to as a “BOP.” A BOP is a combination coverage. It provides general liability policy offerings, with additional property protections. The additional property protections in a BOP mainly focus on protecting your business’ property, moving beyond the typical coverage of a general liability policy.

Worker’s Compensation Insurance

At this point, you’ve taken the time to understand the coverage required to protect both others and your business property. You may now be asking how your employees or even your LLC’s members will be covered.

This brings us to worker’s compensation insurance. Workers’ compensation insurance provides benefits to your employees if an injury or illness occurs in the course of employment. 

You might also wonder whether worker’s compensation insurance is required by law. Unsurprisingly, the answer is, “It depends.”

The world of worker’s compensation is a vast array of state regulatory requirements which trigger based on several factors, such as your company’s legal structure, number of employees, and industry. Like any other state compliance requirements, worker’s compensation rules (and your business’s situation) are subject to change. 

Despite the inherent complexity of worker’s compensation laws, businesses should always at least consider coverage, even if the only people working for your business are LLC members. 

Ultimately, the law may not require your business to purchase this type of insurance. But, you should actively analyze your compliance risks and obligations.

Professional Liability Insurance

Finally, if the expertise and skill of you and your employees is your business, you may want to consider professional liability coverage, otherwise known as an E&O policy. Professional liability coverage protects you against the specialized exposures of the services provided by your business.

Professional liability insurance protects you and your business against claims of errors, omissions, or misrepresentation. A professional liability policy may provide protections not only in drastic scenarios, such as lawsuits arising out allegations of discriminatory behavior, but also, from the risks of errors associated with the administration of grant monies or endowments.

The coverages outlined above are just the highlights of business insurance. Your particular company may need additional other insurance options to protect your day-to-day operations and safeguard you from catastrophic risks.

Take care of your business insurance needs by booking time with a Gild Agent or receiving a digital quote!

Categories
Bookkeeper Business Owners Policy (BOP) Liability Insurance

The Insurance Essentials of a Bookkeeping Business

Whether you are just starting out with a new business or have been doing this for years, small business ownership can be overwhelming. This can be especially true when searching to find insurance policies that suit your business. The good news is that business insurance doesn’t need to be complicated. Today, we will discuss the insurance essentials of a bookkeeping business.

General Liability Policy

General liability is perhaps the business insurance coverage that people are most familiar with. It is a foundational policy, the minimum any practice should consider. Essentially, general liability insurance is just what it sounds like. It provides general protection against common business risks when engaging with the public and clients. This type of policy mainly focuses on the risks and expenses related to the bodily injuries and property damage of others.

While more and more businesses transition to the all-digital remote operating realm, accounting is one of those industries where in-person interactions are still prevalent. Many accounting firms are still conducting business in physical locations. Though, it tends to be more hybrid in nature these days. And if your business is one of them, general liability is a coverage you definitely should consider.

Perhaps you’re sitting in your company’s office at this very moment. Maybe you are looking around and thinking that an accident would be impossible. What’s the likelihood that any of your clients would be injured? Or their property damaged, during their annual in-person tax review? But take a closer look. Any loose rugs in the office? Dim lighting? Any snow being tracked inside? What’s the average age of your clients? Accidents can—and will—happen. You certainly do not want to be caught without insurance when they do. 

Business Owner’s Policy

The next insurance essentials of a bookkeeping business is a business owner’s policy, commonly referred to as a “BOP”. A BOP is a combination coverage. It provides general liability policy offerings, with additional property protections. 

Simply put. . .

General Liability + Property Liability = BOP

The additional property protections in a BOP mainly focuses on protecting your business’ property, moving beyond a general liability policy, which typically focuses on the property of others. For accounting practices, a BOP becomes important when one considers the office furniture, business equipment, and commercial property holdings of the business. If your practice has invested in these types of items, then a BOP, rather than a general liability policy, may be more appropriate for your business.

Another unique feature of a BOP is business income interruption offerings. In the chance that your practice has to temporarily close its doors due to a covered cause outlined in your policy, such as a fire, business income protections will help cover your business’ operating expenses like payroll and monthly bills, as well as, assist in replacing lost income.

So naturally, the question now becomes, does my business need a general liability policy or a BOP? Because truly, you should start with one of them. Remember, general liability is the floor. . the foundational policy. . .the minimum level of coverage for your business. 

But, a general liability policy may not be enough coverage for your business’ day-to-day operations. Your practice may be ready to upgrade to a BOP if it employs multiple people, has invested in computers and other business equipment for those employees, or owns the building it operates out of. If your risks are broader, then so too should be your policy selection.

Professional Liability Policy

After you’ve selected a policy to cover your everyday business exposures, as outlined above, it’s time to address those risks inherent to tax preparation, bookkeeping, and accounting professions themselves. Professional liability insurance, also referred to as errors and omissions insurance or E&O insurance, protects you and your practice against claims of inaccuracy, omissions, or misrepresentation. When the expertise and skill of you and your employees is your business, an E&O policy should be highly considered. 

A professional liability policy may provide protections not only in drastic scenarios, such as lawsuits arising out of mathematical errors, but also, from the risks of client dissatisfaction, namely, issues surrounding missed deadlines or inaccurate projections. To believe that you or anyone in your practice is impervious to mistakes is wishful thinking. Even if you, or someone on your team, makes an unintentional mistake, it doesn’t change the fact that your clients may have the right to sue you for damages they incurred.

Factors In Pricing

First, the size of your company plays a role in determining what these insurance premiums will cost. It’s seemingly straightforward: the more people you have working for you, the more business generated, and therefore, the more risk exposures, whether professional or physical, are created.

Also, the physical location of your practice and the types of services performed are also important factors. As you might have guessed, firms located in coastal cities like San Diego or Boston likely cost more to insure than firms residing further inland. As for services, if your practice provides tax advice for companies on the S&P 500, with their numerous regulatory requirements, rather than servicing small business owners or private citizens, the risk exposures and the likelihood of claims, increases.

In addition, your business’s history of claims may have an effect on your premium costs.  Let’s use car insurance as an example. If a person has a history of auto accidents, that person should expect to pay higher premiums because auto insurance providers classify them as high-risk. If your business has a history of lawsuits, you can expect a similar scenario for the pricing on your business insurance.

At the same time, if you want to have the most comprehensive insurance impossible with higher limits, you will pay more. Again, from an insurance provider’s standpoint, it’s seemingly straightforward: the greater the potential for them having to pay out large sums of monies, the higher your cost will be. 

What Do I Do Next?

We have explained the insurance essentials of a bookkeeping business. Now, you are ready to start shopping for an insurance policy. But finding the right one is almost as tricky as buying a new home. There are so many companies to choose from that the deciding factor often comes down to sheer exhaustion rather than settling on a company that is the best fit. The good news is that this doesn’t need to be your experience. 

Insurance may not be the most exciting topic (and that’s coming from people who work in the industry), but at the very least, finding the right insurance can be a more pleasant experience. Head to our site and meet Gildber (that’s our adorable husky digital assistant). He’ll help get you started with personalized information that you can then use to take your business to the next level. If want additional information other than the insurance essentials of a bookkeeping business, head on over to the Gild Insurance site.

We’ll see you there!

Sources: 

  1. Boop, Gregory. “Do I Have to Buy Workers Compensation Insurance?” The Balance Small Business. The Balance Small Business, December 19, 2019. https://www.thebalancesmb.com/how-does-workers-compensation-operate-in-my-state-462786#:~:text=Texas%20and%20Oklahoma,are%20obligated%20to%20buy%20insurance.).
  2. “Safety Topics”, National Safety Council, Accessed August 5, 2022. https://www.nsc.org/work-safety/safety-topics/slips-trips-falls
  3. “Business Owners Playbook”, The Hartford, Accessed, August 5, 2022. https://www.thehartford.com/sites/playbook/smallbusiness/files/DemystifyingInsurance.pdf
  4. Frankenfield, Jake. “Errors and Omissions Insurance (E&O).” Investopedia. Investopedia, June 29, 2022. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/errors-omissions-insurance.asp.
  5. “Professional Liability Insurance | the Hartford.” Accessed August 5, 2022. https://www.thehartford.com/professional-liability-insurance.
  6. “General Liability For Accountants.” Accessed August 5, 2022. https://www.hiscox.com/small-business-insurance/professional-business-insurance/accountant-insurance
  7. “What Is a Businessowners Policy (BOP).” Nationwide. Accessed August 5, 2022. https://www.nationwide.com/lc/resources/small-business/articles/what-is-a-business-owners-policy.