The Mercury  
Founded 2010
Serving Roseville, Rocklin, Lincoln and Placer County
 
  Home Community Finance Employment Your Home Your Money Your Kids Your Health  
  Business Education Politics Police & Fire Veterans' News Real Estate Consumer News Taxes  
  Church Food Recipes Gardening Car Care Fashion Beauty Pets  
  Lifestyles Sports Feature Writers Entertainment Environment Human Interest Technology Travel  

Your "Local Sunday Newspaper" Seven Days a Week!

Champs SportsLinksynergy
California Job Journal
Mercury and Rainbow Rewards
In Association with Amazon.com

Your Money

Saving A Business When Disruption Strikes

Posted: 10/15/2010

When a disruption strikes, savvy business people know how to protect their companies.

When a disruption strikes, savvy business people know how to protect their companies.

(NAPSI) - You can keep your business going, even when it’s been stifled by a destructive event.

It helps if you remember that when there’s a fire, an explosion or some other physical catastrophe, your insurance coverage against those dangers may not be enough. That kind of coverage only replaces the tangible loss. While the business is regrouping after the blow—and until the firm is physically restored—it may well be out of business. Often, orders must be canceled, no new ones taken and no money comes in. Businesses are hard pressed to survive such downtime.

Other mishaps can devastate a business even when it suffers no physical damage: An oil spill miles away hurts a shrimp wholesaler; a manufacturer’s assembly line is halted by a volcano eruption preventing deliveries of critical parts; a storm can knock out power—and operability—for a long time.

In such circumstances, the critical business need is cash flow-money to maintain profits, meet payroll and pay suppliers. That income can be restored with a business interruption insurance policy. “It is literally a lifesaver—the difference between a business’s survival or its extinction,” says Mary K. Barbieri, CPCU, a nationally known insurance consultant and lecturer. “The wonder is how few business owners buy such policies.”

To be sure, business interruption policies differ significantly. Some cover losses only when there is physical damage to the business. Others—sometimes called “contingent business interruption” policies--cover disruptions to suppliers or even to customers. “Events that knock out cash flow are the focus of all these policies,” adds Barbieri. “But when looking to buy one—to assure that the coverage meets their particular needs--business owners really need to deal with agents or brokers who know what they’re doing.”

To find one with the prestigious CPCU designation—an assurance of advanced professional training and uncompromising ethical standards—visit www.cpcusociety.org, click “Consumers” and then click “Find an Agent/Broker.”

 

Funnies Extra
Messenger Publishing Group

Advertise With Us
Classified Advertising
About the Mercury
Letters to the Editor
Previous Issues

Front Page Sports
MBK Homes

Legal Advertising Hotline
Call Dan Direct at
916-532-2113
dan@carmichaeltimes.com
Legal Advertising Rates

 



Top Stories
 

California News
 



The Mercury | Copyright Notice
The Mercury | Paul V. Scholl, Publisher
7405 Greenback Lane, #129 | Citrus Heights, CA 95610-5603 | Telephone: 916-773-1111 | Fax Line 916-773-2999
Email: publisher@PlacerMercury.com | Site Designed and Hosted by TheSiteBarn.com
ISSN#: 1948-1934

View PDF files of Back Issues