If you manage a small business
you'll dread the possibility of a member of your team being be taken
seriously ill or dieing. Apart from the personal upset, your
business would be hit hard. Sales or production could take a dive,
key skills could be lost and the general pace of the business could
fall. All this costs the business money.
Insurance is available to offset
those financial risks, risks that can be especially serious for
smaller businesses. After all in smaller businesses other employees
can't be moved across to fill the gap - there's simply no one spare.
So the problem remains until the person either returns to work or is
replaced.
If the person is off sick with a
serious illness such as a stroke or a heart attack you simply don't
know when, or if, they'll return to work. It could be a month, six
months even a year or more. Management is then caught in a cleft
stick. Do you take on a temporary employee, contract out or recruit
a permanent employee? Or are you forced to tread water and wait for
matters resolve themselves? That's risky. And how much will all this
cost the business in terms of extra overheads, lost sales and
profit?
Keyman Insurance has traditionally
absorbed these very real financial risks but nine out of ten small
businesses still don't carry that insurance. It's either because
they haven't addressed the problem or they've found Keyman Insurance
to be too costly.
A Simon Briault, a spokesperson for
the Federation of Small Businesses said, “In an ideal world, small
firms would be insured against everything, but reality demands the
businesses prioritise threats and occasionally take risks”.
But there is a cheaper alternative.
It's called Group Critical Illness Insurance. And it's about half
the price of normal Keyman Insurance!
With Group Critical Illness
Insurance, the management decides which employees to insure and how
much to insure them for. The business then pays the premiums and
receives any lump sum payout. A claim can be made as soon as any of
the insured employees are diagnosed with any critical illness which
is scheduled within the insurance policy. As you would expect heart
attacks, strokes and cancer are the biggest three biggest reasons
for a claim but the full list of insured critical illnesses is much
longer. For example, kidney failure, meningitis, paralysis and even
blindness.
The important point to realise is
that to make a claim, the insured employee must survive at least 28
days after their critical illness is diagnosed. (Some insurance
companies have now reduced this to 14 days so please check before
you buy.) Therefore, if the employee were to die before the end of
the survival period, any claim would be invalid. In that context,
it's not as comprehensive as full Keyman Insurance – but at around
half the price of there has to be some compromise!
Simon Burgess, the MD of British
Insurance says: “Group Critical Illness Insurance is a real
alternative to full Keyman Insurance - and at around half the cost,
it's great value for money. If managers find Keyman Insurance too
expensive there's little excuse for not covering the biggest part of
the risk with Group Critical Illness Insurance. Don't pay the price
for apathy”.
By About Michael Challiner
Express life insurance specialise in providing
life insurance
quotes along with providing a huge resource of
life insurance information