The Business Insurance Review Process: Keeping You Out of the Danger Zone

The Business Insurance Review Process

“I renewed my policy last year and honestly have no idea what’s actually in it.” That comment appears in small business forums constantly.

Business owners pay the premium, the policy renews, and the assumption is that everything is fine. The broker is handling it.

But here is what most business owners do not know: their policy probably has at least one flaw in it, and that flaw will not reveal itself until a serious claim occurs.

After performing hundreds of business insurance reviews for companies of every size, I find fatal flaws in commercial insurance policies more than nine out of ten times. That is not an exaggeration.

It happens with small companies spending less than $10,000 per year on insurance and with large companies spending over a million dollars per year. The worst part is that fixing most of these problems is not expensive or complicated. But you have to find them first, and that is exactly what a business insurance review is designed to do.

Your business is responsible for your lifestyle, your net worth, and your legacy. Putting all of that at risk with an insurance program that has hidden gaps is a problem most business owners do not even know they have.

Is your coverage solid, or just familiar?

Most business owners renew their policies year after year without a real review of what they actually have. At The Coyle Group, a business insurance review is a deep-dive analysis of your policies, your exposures to loss, and your claim history. We find what is wrong before a claim does. With 40+ years of commercial insurance expertise, we give you a straight answer on where your program stands.

Why Do 9 Out of 10 Commercial Insurance Policies Have Fatal Flaws?

A business insurance review is necessary because errors are built into how commercial insurance programs are created and maintained. That is not an indictment of any one broker or any one insurer.

Mistakes happen at every level of the industry, from the largest global brokerage firms to the smallest neighborhood agencies, and everyone in between. And mistakes are not always the broker’s fault.

Business owners frequently forget to notify their broker of a change in operations, the purchase of a new machine, the addition of a new location, or any number of other developments that happen during a policy year. Each of those changes can create a gap between what the policy covers and what the business actually does or owns.

Here is the deeper problem: coverage errors do not reveal themselves until something bad happens, like a claim. Most organizations go years without a significant claim. That means a design flaw can sit in your policy for a renewal cycle or two, or ten, without ever surfacing.

The good news is that most businesses do not have frequent large claims. The bad news is exactly the same. You do not know when a claim will occur, how serious it will be, or whether it will land precisely in the gap in your program.

Here is how errors most commonly enter a commercial insurance program:

  • Broker oversight: No two brokers structure programs identically. A less experienced or less specialized broker may miss nuances that matter enormously at claim time.
  • Account fragmentation: When different policies are placed with different brokers or carriers, coordination between coverage layers breaks down and gaps form between them.
  • Renewal autopilot: Policies that are renewed without a fresh review of operations fall out of alignment with a growing or changing business.
  • Insured omissions: Business owners often do not realize that changes in operations, assets, or staffing need to be reported to keep coverage current.
  • Coverage complexity: Commercial insurance is not a simple product. The interaction between primary policies, excess layers, and specialty coverages creates dozens of places where things can go wrong quietly.

The business insurance review exists specifically to find those places before a claim does.

Ready to find out what your policy actually says? Contact The Coyle Group for a confidential conversation. No disruption to your existing broker relationship.

What Does a Business Insurance Review Actually Include?

A thorough business insurance review is a structured, expert-led analysis of your entire commercial insurance program. It is not a price comparison, and it is not a broker shopping your account to competitors.

The goal is to assess whether your coverage is actually designed to protect you, not just whether it is priced competitively.

A complete review covers the following areas:

  • Policy documentation review: Every policy in your program is read and analyzed in full, not just the declarations page. The declarations page rarely tells the whole story.
  • Exposure analysis: Your business operations, assets, revenues, payroll, and risk profile are mapped to your coverage to identify where alignment breaks down.
  • Limits adequacy: Are your property, liability, and business income limits sufficient to actually protect the business in the event of a major loss?
  • Coverage coordination: Do your primary policies, umbrella, and excess layers connect correctly, or are there gaps between them?
  • Named insured verification: Are all the correct entities listed on every policy that should include them? Omitting a named insured is a simple error with serious consequences.
  • Specialty coverage assessment: Do you have cyber, D&O, employment practices, or other specialty policies that your actual exposures require? If you do not, do you understand what you are leaving uninsured?
  • Claim history review: Prior claims can affect both current coverage terms and future renewal strategy in ways that are worth understanding before your next renewal.

The review process at The Coyle Group is completely confidential. We are not going out to market to shop your account for a lower price.

We are performing a deep-dive into what is right and what is wrong with your current program. The initial work does not disrupt your existing broker relationship in any way.

The Three Biggest Problems a Business Insurance Review Uncovers

Based on hundreds of reviews across businesses of every size and industry, three problem areas come up more consistently than any others.

Understanding these three areas will help you recognize where your own program may be at risk, and why a periodic review is not optional.

1. Insufficient Property Insurance and Business Income Limits

Insufficient property insurance limits are one of the most frequently found problems in a commercial insurance review, and business income protection is the most dangerous version of that problem.

When property limits are set too low on buildings, inventory, machinery, or equipment, a business may be able to finance the gap after a major loss. If you underinsured your building by 30%, that is painful and expensive, but it is often possible to finance or refinance your way through reconstruction.

Business income protection is a completely different situation. This coverage, also known as business interruption insurance, is designed to pay ongoing business expenses and replace lost profits when a covered event shuts down your operations. If those limits are set too low, you cannot finance your way through it.

Here is the reason: lenders understand the statistics. Businesses that experience an operational shutdown due to a covered loss are approximately 70% likely not to survive.

When a lender sees that your business has stopped generating revenue because of a claim, extending financing becomes extremely difficult or impossible. The business income limits in your current policy may be the only real barrier between a temporary shutdown and a permanent closure.

If you have not reviewed your business income limits in detail with your broker during the last two renewal cycles, and you have not completed a business income worksheet, there is a strong probability that you are underinsured on this coverage.

What to verify in your own program:

  • Ask your broker to show you your current business income limit and the basis on which it was calculated.
  • Request a business income worksheet and complete it using your current revenue and fixed expense figures, not last year’s numbers.
  • Confirm how many months of coverage your current limit would actually fund, given your realistic recovery timeline.
  • Review whether your property and business income limits have been updated to reflect any changes in your operations or asset values since the last renewal cycle.

Reviewing your overall business insurance structure, including how property and business income work together, is a critical part of any comprehensive risk assessment.

Real-World Example

A mid-size manufacturing company had property insurance that appeared solid on the declarations page. After a fire, they discovered their business income limit had been calculated on prior-year revenue figures that were significantly lower than current operations. The shortfall ran into six figures and nearly forced permanent closure while the building was being rebuilt. Correcting the limit at renewal would have cost a fraction of that gap.

2. Uncoordinated Casualty Layers

The second most common finding in a business insurance review involves how the layers of a liability insurance program are structured and coordinated. This is not just a large-company problem.

It affects small and medium-sized businesses with straightforward programs just as often, even when you only have primary policies and an umbrella policy.

The most common version of this problem looks like this:

A business has a commercial umbrella that only runs excess of its general liability policy, but not excess of its commercial auto policy.

This happens regularly when an account is split between different brokers or carriers. Broker A writes the general liability and places the umbrella, but does not know that Broker B handles the commercial auto. The umbrella is written to sit above general liability only. Auto is excluded.

If a serious accident involving a company vehicle occurs and the damages exceed the auto policy limits, there is no umbrella protection above it. That gap is completely unprotected.

A second version involves hired and non-owned auto coverage. A broker may write umbrella liability on a BOP policy that includes hired and non-owned auto, assuming all the bases are covered.

However, if the business also owns vehicles insured on a separate commercial auto policy, the umbrella will not extend to those owned autos. It only runs over the non-owned exposure. The owned auto exposure above the commercial auto limit is unprotected.

These are exactly the types of gaps that stay invisible until a claim occurs, and they are more common than most business owners realize.

How to identify coordination problems in your current program:

  • List every liability policy you carry, including general liability, commercial auto, umbrella, and any excess layers.
  • Identify which carrier and broker handles each one.
  • Confirm in writing which underlying policies your umbrella or excess policy sits above.
  • Ask your broker to provide a coverage tower diagram showing exactly how your liability layers connect.
  • Verify that your umbrella specifically includes excess protection for commercial autos your business owns.

3. Missing or Undervalued Specialty Coverages

The third major area involves specialty coverages. These are the policies that many small and mid-size business owners assume are only relevant to large companies, or that they will never actually need. That assumption carries real financial exposure.

Specialty coverages that frequently come up in a business insurance review include:

  • Cyber liability insurance: Covers costs from data breaches, ransomware attacks, and network failures. Small businesses are targeted by cybercriminals regularly, often precisely because their defenses are lighter.
  • Directors and Officers (D&O) insurance: Protects executives and board members from personal liability arising from management decisions. Relevant even in privately held companies.
  • Employment Practices Liability (EPLI): Covers claims of discrimination, wrongful termination, sexual harassment, and similar employment-related allegations. Any business with employees has exposure here.
  • Professional liability (E&O): Covers claims arising from professional services, advice, or deliverables. Often overlooked by service-based businesses that do not think of themselves as “professional service firms.”

The objection I hear most often is “no hacker is going to target a small business” or “no one is going to sue me for employment practices.” Both assumptions are wrong, and both can be expensive to learn from firsthand.

Cyber insurance for a small firm can cost as little as $1,000 per year for a standalone policy. If that is not workable, adding a cyber endorsement to a BOP policy is an option, though add-on cyber coverages are significantly narrower than standalone policies. It is better than no coverage, but it is not a complete solution.

The right approach to specialty coverages is not necessarily to purchase every available policy. It is to understand what exposures your business actually has, find out what it would cost to insure them properly, and then make a rational cost-benefit decision with accurate information in front of you.

Most business owners who skip specialty coverages have never been given a quote. They are making a financial decision without the data to support it.

Book a Consultation to review your specialty coverage exposures with an expert.

How Much Does a Business Insurance Review Cost?

The cost of a business insurance review depends on the size and complexity of your account. Some expert brokers will provide the review at no charge if you commit to moving your program to them after the review is complete. Others charge a consulting fee for an independent review, regardless of placement.

Here is a general framework for what to expect:

Account Type

Typical Review Structure

Small business (under $25K annual premium)

Often provided at no charge with a program commitment

Mid-market business ($25K to $250K annual premium)

May involve a modest consulting fee

Large or complex accounts ($250K+ annual premium)

Typically fee-based; fee often offsets against broker commission if placed

Independent consulting review (no placement)

Fee-based regardless of account size

The value of a quality review almost always exceeds whatever it costs. Finding one material gap in your property or liability program can save tens of thousands of dollars or more when a serious claim occurs.

The real question is not whether a review is worth the investment. The question is whether you want to discover your coverage gaps before a claim or during one.

How Often Should You Schedule a Business Insurance Review?

At a minimum, a business insurance review should happen once every two to three years. Certain events should trigger a review immediately, regardless of where you are in the renewal cycle:

  • You have acquired new property, equipment, or vehicles
  • Your business has added a new location or expanded operations
  • Your revenues have grown significantly since your last detailed review
  • You have hired employees in a new state or changed your workforce substantially
  • Your business has added a new product line or service offering that changes your liability profile
  • You have experienced a claim that revealed an unexpected gap in coverage

Renewal season is the obvious trigger, but the review should happen before renewal, not during it. A review conducted under time pressure at renewal rarely catches everything.

A strategic review performed 90 to 120 days before renewal gives you time to act on the findings and implement corrections without rushing.

For a broader look at how coverage structures differ across business types, The Coyle Group‘s insurance by industry resources provide useful context for understanding your specific risk profile.

What Happens After a Business Insurance Review Finds Problems?

Finding problems in a business insurance review does not automatically mean your premiums are going to increase significantly. Most coverage deficiencies can be corrected at renewal, often without a major cost impact.

What happens next depends on what was found:

  • Missing named insureds: Can typically be corrected by endorsement at little or no cost.
  • Underinsured property or business income: May require an increase in limits, which will affect premium, but the cost of proper coverage is almost always far less than the out-of-pocket cost of an underinsured claim.
  • Umbrella or excess coordination gaps: Correcting these requires working with your broker to restructure which policies your umbrella sits above. This can often be done at renewal without a significant premium change, but it does require attention and follow-through.
  • Missing specialty coverages: Depends on what is needed. Cyber liability for a small firm can start under $1,500 per year. EPLI and D&O are priced more affordably than most business owners expect, particularly for smaller firms.

The Coyle Group’s approach is completely confidential. We are not going to market to shop your program for a lower price. We are conducting a professional analysis to give you an expert opinion on where your program actually stands.

That work does not disrupt your current broker relationship during the review process.

For additional industry perspective on the value of independent commercial insurance reviews, the Insurance Information Institute’s resources on commercial property and liability provide useful background on how these coverage structures are designed to function.

If you are not fully confident in your current coverage, contact The Coyle Group to get started.

Frequently Asked Questions About Business Insurance Reviews

A business insurance review is a structured, expert-led analysis of your entire commercial insurance program. It evaluates your policies, coverage limits, and coordination across all lines to identify gaps, errors, and areas where your coverage does not match your actual exposures to loss. A proper review goes well beyond comparing prices or reviewing the declarations page.

For a small to mid-size business, an initial review typically takes one to three weeks, depending on the number of policies and the complexity of the account. A preliminary findings conversation can usually happen within one week of receiving your policy documents. Larger or more complex programs may take longer.

No. A properly conducted review is completely confidential and does not require your current broker’s involvement or notification. The review examines your existing policies and your exposures independently. If changes are recommended, you can discuss how to implement them with your current broker, or you can explore other options at that time.


Yes, and this is important to understand. Mistakes are made by every size and type of brokerage, including the largest global firms. A periodic independent review is not a reflection of distrust toward your broker. It is a professional quality check on a program that protects your entire business, your income, and your legacy. Most trusted brokers welcome an independent review because it gives everyone more confidence in the program.

A business insurance review is focused entirely on quality, not price. When brokers compete for your business, the focus is on finding a lower premium for a similar program structure. A review asks whether your program is actually protecting you correctly, regardless of cost. Those are two very different questions with two very different answers, and confusing them is one of the main reasons businesses end up underinsured.

Every size. After performing hundreds of reviews, the pattern is completely consistent: fatal flaws appear across the full range of account sizes, from small businesses spending under $10,000 per year to large organizations spending over $1 million per year. The scale of potential financial exposure differs. The rate at which problems appear does not.

Gather copies of all current policies in your program, including all endorsements. Prepare a summary of your current business operations, assets, revenues, payroll, and any major changes from the prior year. A list of any open claims or significant claims from the past three to five years is also useful. Your broker or consultant will guide you through the rest.

The three most common findings are: insufficient business income insurance limits, uncoordinated casualty layers (such as an umbrella that does not properly sit above a commercial auto policy), and missing or inadequate specialty coverages such as cyber liability or employment practices liability insurance. Named insured errors also come up frequently.

The Bottom Line on Business Insurance Reviews

Business insurance is complex, and it is also critically important to the financial survival of your organization when a serious claim occurs. Your business is responsible for your lifestyle, your net worth, and your legacy. The wrong insurance program puts all of that at risk, often without you ever knowing it.

A business insurance review is not about finding a lower price. It is about finding out whether the coverage you are paying for will actually work the way you expect it to when you need it most.

According to an independent analysis of commercial insurance program quality, a significant percentage of commercial policies contain coverage gaps that would result in material out-of-pocket losses in the event of a major claim. Finding and correcting those gaps before a claim is almost always less expensive than discovering them during one.

I work with small to middle-market firms as both a broker and consultant. If you are interested in a discussion about a review of your program, contact me and let’s talk. The initial conversation is confidential, costs nothing, and does not disrupt your existing brokerage relationships. Thanks for reading.

This article was written by the CEO of The Coyle Group, Gordon B. Coyle, CPCU, ARM, AMIM, PWCA, who has over 40 years of experience working with business owners of all sizes and industries across the US, solving their insurance challenges.

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