What a New CFO or Operations Hire Usually Finds Wrong with the Existing Insurance Program
Why fresh eyes on your insurance program almost always find problems your current broker missed.

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Gordon B. Coyle
CEO, The Coyle Group
845-474-2924
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There is a pattern we see regularly. A business owner hires a new CFO, controller, or operations director. The new person starts reviewing vendors, contracts, and costs. They get to insurance and start asking questions. And what they find is almost never good.
This is not because the business owner made bad decisions. It is because insurance is one of those areas where most companies set it and forget it. The broker handles the renewal every year, the premium goes up a little, everyone signs off, and nobody looks under the hood.
If your broker markets your account every two to three years, proactively flags gaps, and can tell you the last time your property values were independently verified, you may be in better shape than most.
What fresh eyes on an insurance program almost always find:
Real-World Example: The $150,000 Account
Coverage Limits That Have Not Been Revisited in Years
The most direct answer to the question “Is my business underinsured?” almost always lives in the property schedule. Values were set years ago and bumped by a small index at each renewal without anyone verifying whether those numbers still reflect what it would actually cost to rebuild. When a new executive asks how those figures were developed, the answer is almost always a blank stare. The real gap is usually significant.
This is the most common finding. Property values were established years ago and have been bumped by a small percentage annually without anyone questioning whether those numbers still make sense. Liability limits were set when the company was half its current size and never adjusted. Business income coverage was calculated based on revenue figures that are five or six years old.
The Insurance Information Institute recommends that business owners review coverage amounts and limits regularly to ensure they still reflect current values, noting that needs change as businesses grow and that inadequate limits are among the most consequential gaps a buyer can overlook.
What inadequate coverage limits look like in practice:

Premium Costs Are Out of Line with the Market
When a new CFO starts asking whether the company’s insurance premiums are competitive, the answer often reveals a deeper problem: nobody has been shopping the account. A program that was competitively priced three years ago may not be today, and a business owner who has never pushed back on renewal figures may be overpaying for coverage that is also inadequate.
Signs your premiums may be out of line with the market:
Carrier Relationships Are Stale and Renewal Is on Autopilot
There is a difference between a renewal and a real renewal. A real renewal involves reviewing the entire program, questioning values, updating exposures, identifying gaps, and going to market when it makes sense.
What most mid-market companies get is the other kind: the broker sends the current information to the incumbent carrier, the carrier sends back a number, the broker passes it along with maybe a brief summary, and everyone signs off.
A new CFO or operations director who has come from a larger company, or who has been through a rigorous insurance review before, will spot this immediately. They will ask when the account was last marketed. They will ask what other options were considered. And when the answer is that nothing has changed in four or five years, they will know exactly what they are dealing with.
You can read more about how often your program should be reviewed and what that process should actually include.
Autopilot renewal red flags:

Risk Management Is Reactive, Not Proactive
Most mid-market companies do not have a risk management strategy. They have insurance. Those are not the same thing.
A new executive often finds that there is no loss prevention program, no regular safety audits, no protocol for when a claim occurs, and no one tracking the total cost of risk, which includes not just the insurance payout but the downtime, the wasted materials, the overtime, the retraining, the hiring, and the administrative burden that follow any significant loss.
Risk professionals use the term total cost of risk to describe the full financial impact of an organization’s risk exposure: not just premiums and deductibles, but retained losses, operational downtime, retraining, and administrative burden. The Risk and Insurance Management Society recognizes TCOR as the standard for measuring whether a risk program is actually working. For companies that only track premiums, the true cost is consistently underestimated.
What a proactive risk management program includes:
Documentation Is Scattered and Nobody Knows What Is Actually Covered
This one is almost universal. A new executive asks to see the company’s insurance policies. What they get is a stack of declaration pages from different years, some PDF files that may or may not be current, and a certificate of insurance that was issued for a specific contract request and does not represent the full program.
Documentation gaps a new executive typically finds:

Management Liability Coverage Is Weak or Missing
Business owners who have been asking whether their business is underinsured tend to think first about property. But the more dangerous exposure is almost always in management liability, specifically the coverages that are missing entirely. We regularly find mid-market companies that have some form of employment practices liability insurance but no directors and officers coverage and no fiduciary liability coverage.
On the EPLI side
A common problem we encounter involves companies that use a professional employer organization. The owner or CFO will say they do not need standalone EPLI because it is included in what they pay the PEO. When we ask to see that policy, we almost always find gaps.
PEO-provided EPLI is almost never enough on its own. The coverage typically does not include third-party liability. That means a customer or vendor who alleges discrimination by an employee is not covered. It only covers employees on the plan, not temporary hires, contract employees, or staffing agency workers.
And here is the part that usually shocks them:
there is a $50,000 or $100,000 deductible or retention that nobody told them about. They had no idea they were on the hook for $100,000 out of pocket before coverage kicks in on an employment claim. That is a significant exposure for a small to mid-size business, and the old broker just accepted the PEO coverage at face value without questioning it or challenging it.
On fiduciary liability
The pattern is even more consistent. Nobody in this market segment has ever explained what fiduciary liability insurance does.
But that does not insulate the business owner and the trustees from liability for benefit plan administration decisions. When we tell them the cost of fiduciary liability insurance is typically five to 10% of their total management liability spend, the response is always the same: “Why did nobody tell me about this before?”
Directors and officers coverage follows a similar pattern
Some companies have it, some do not. When we explain that D&O protects the personal assets of business owners and company leaders from lawsuits alleging mismanagement, and that without it they could be personally liable, the conversation changes quickly. Nobody wants to learn after the fact that they could have been protected for a relatively small cost.
Key Exclusions Before You Assume You Are Covered
Standard EPLI policies do not cover wage and hour claims in most forms. When wage and hour defense is available, it typically covers defense costs only, not settlements.
D&O policies contain an insured versus insured exclusion, meaning one officer suing another is generally not covered.
The Employee Benefit Liability endorsement in your BOP is not the same as fiduciary liability. EBL only covers administrative errors, not breach-of-duty claims. If your broker told you your BOP covers your 401(k) obligations, ask them to show you the policy language.
Management liability gaps new executives find most often:
The Claims Reporting Mindset Is Backwards
Sitting on incidents to avoid a premium increase is one of the most dangerous things a business can do. For claims-made policies like EPLI, D&O, and cyber liability, late reporting can result in full coverage denial. The financial risk of not reporting almost always exceeds the cost of the premium adjustment that follows a reported claim.
This finding does not come from a document review. It comes from conversations. And it is one of the most dangerous patterns we see.
Business owners and CFOs are often reluctant to report claims because they believe doing so will automatically increase their premiums. So they sit on incidents. They wait. They hope the problem goes away. And by the time they do report, the situation has gotten significantly worse.
The risk here is real. Failure to report a claim on a timely basis can lead to a coverage denial. This is especially true with claims-made policies like EPLI, D&O, and cyber liability, where the timing of the report is a policy condition. But it happens with general liability and property claims as well. A small incident that could have been handled cleanly becomes a six-figure problem because nobody reported it when it first surfaced.
The Broker Relationship Is Transactional, Not Advisory
All of the findings above trace back to the same root cause: the broker is processing transactions, not managing risk. They are handling renewals, issuing certificates, and responding to questions when asked. They are not proactively reviewing the program, educating the client, identifying gaps, or pushing the business owner to address exposures that need attention.
Frankly, you do not know if a better alternative exists until someone does the work to find out. That work is what your broker should be doing. If it is not being done, you are not getting what you are paying for. There is also the question of whether your brokerage has simply outgrown its ability to serve you. That is a structural problem, not a personal one.
We work with mid-market companies across many industries including wholesalers, distributors, importers, and manufacturers. The patterns described here appear in programs across all of them.
Why This Is an Opportunity, Not a Threat
If you are a business owner who has ever asked “is my business underinsured” and then got a report from your new CFO or operations director confirming that it is, your first instinct might be to push back. You have had this broker for years. The relationship is comfortable. And it feels like the new hire is criticizing decisions you made.
The problems your new executive found are not your fault. They are your broker’s fault. And the right response is not to get defensive. It is to welcome the findings, get an independent second opinion, and make sure the program actually reflects where your company is today, not where it was five years ago.
When we do that well, there is no defensive posture. There is just clarity.

Questions about Is My Business Underinsured?
Get a Second Opinion on Your Insurance Program
If your new hire is raising questions about the insurance program, or if you have been wondering whether your current broker is keeping up with your company’s growth, a conversation costs nothing and can tell you a lot.
Let’s connect to talk about what a real insurance program review looks like for a company of your size. No obligation, no pressure. Just a clear picture of where you are and where you should be.
We work with mid-market companies across a range of industries, including wholesalers, distributors, manufacturers, and importers, that have outgrown one-size-fits-all coverage and need a specialist who understands the nuances of complex, multi-line programs.

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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