Signs Your Insurance Broker Isn’t Keeping Up with Your Business
What Happens When You Outgrow Your Insurance Broker
Signs Your Insurance Broker Isn’t Keeping Up with Your Business
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Gordon B. Coyle
CEO, The Coyle Group
845-474-2924
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Maybe it is whether your new warehouse location is covered, or whether your liability limits meet the requirements in a customer contract you just signed.
That moment is usually the first crack. Not a dramatic failure. Not a blown claim.
Just a quiet realization that the person managing one of the most important financial protections in your business might not be keeping pace with where your business is, and that it may be time to switch insurance brokers.
If you run a company doing $25 million to $100 million in revenue, you have probably outgrown at least one professional relationship along the way. Your first accountant. Your original attorney. Your early-stage lender.
The insurance broker relationship is no different, except that the consequences of outgrowing it are invisible until something goes wrong. And by then, the gap between what you have and what you need can be measured in hundreds of thousands of dollars.
This page is for business owners who have a feeling that something is off with their insurance program but are not sure what to look for. Here are the signs.
Your Broker Cannot Answer Coverage Questions on the Spot
This is the one most business owners notice first. You call with a question, and the broker has to “get back to you.” Every time.
A broker who manages your account actively should know the structure of your program, your major coverage limits, your key exclusions, and the exposures that keep you up at night. They should not need to research your own policy to tell you whether your product liability has a designated products exclusion or whether your business income limit covers 12 months or 6.
When your broker cannot answer basic questions about your own coverage confidently and quickly, it usually means one of two things:
Neither is acceptable when you are running a $40 million operation.
Not sure if your broker knows your program? Book a 30-minute call, we will tell you honestly whether your coverage has gaps.
Your Renewal Shows Up Without a Conversation First
This is the most common sign, and it is so normalized that most business owners do not even realize it is a problem. The renewal arrives as a PDF in your inbox. Maybe there is a brief cover email. The premium went up, or it stayed flat, or it went down slightly.
A renewal is not an administrative event. It is the single most important annual checkpoint for your insurance program.
Your broker should be sitting down with you 90 to 120 days before the renewal date to review what has changed in your business, assess whether the current coverage structure still fits, and develop a strategy for how to approach the market. If the first time you hear about your renewal is when the invoice arrives, your program is being processed, not managed.

For a mid-market business, the difference between a processed renewal and a managed renewal can easily be six figures in coverage gaps that no one noticed.
No One Has Asked About Changes to Your Business
Your business three years ago and your business today are not the same entity. You added revenue. You added locations. You brought on new product lines. You signed contracts with new customers who have different insurance requirements. You started importing, expanded your fleet, or hired your first C-suite executive.
If your broker has not asked you about any of this in the last 12 months, your insurance program is almost certainly out of sync with your operations. Insurance is not a static product. It is priced and structured based on what your business actually does, and when what you do changes, but your program does not, gaps form.
When we ask business owners how their property values are developed each year, we usually get a blank stare.
The values were established years ago and never re-examined. Maybe they get bumped by some percentage annually, but no one has actually recalculated what it would cost to replace the building, the equipment, or the inventory at today’s prices.
Take a real example.
We worked with a food products distributor in the Bronx, New York. The company had been in business for about a dozen years, generating over $40 million in sales annually. They had the same broker from the beginning, a local shop on the smaller side.
Nothing inherently wrong with that, except the program had evolved with the business.
When we ran a back-of-the-envelope replacement cost calculation, we came up with $200 to $250 per square foot. That building should have been insured for $9 to $10 million. It was insured for $3 million.
That is not a rounding error. That is a gap that would have devastated the business in a fire. And it was not just the building:
The whole program was a product of never keeping up, never asking the right questions, and never checking.
There is a question we ask business owners when we uncover this kind of problem:
They know it is a pointed question. They smile and say, “Come on, I want the whole thing replaced, of course.” And that is exactly the point. If you want the whole thing replaced, you have to insure it for the actual cost of replacement. There is no shortcut around that conversation.
Correcting undervaluation means premiums go up, sometimes significantly. A building insured at $3 million, which should be at $10 million, will likely see its property premium triple. We understand it’s a difficult conversation.
We are upfront about it from the start
This is not a shopping exercise. We are not trying to drive the price down.
But we cannot leave it where it is.
This is what happens when no one is asking the right questions.

If your property values have not been recalculated in the last two years, contact us for a complimentary review.
Your Business Income Coverage Has Not Been Recalculated
Business income coverage, also called business interruption, is supposed to replace the revenue you lose when a covered event shuts down your operations. The problem is that most business income limits were set years ago based on revenue that no longer reflects reality, and the period of coverage was set based on assumptions about how quickly you could recover that were never pressure-tested.
Here is what we see in practice.
A distributor with $50 million in revenue has a business income limit that was set when they were doing $20 million. The limit covers six months of operations. But if their warehouse is destroyed, the reality is that it takes 12 to 18 months to rebuild, re-equip, and restore customer relationships to the point where revenue returns to normal.
If your broker has not sat down with you and done a business income worksheet, one that maps your actual fixed expenses, projected revenue, and realistic recovery timeline, this number is probably wrong. And if it is wrong, you will not find out until you need it.
You Have Never Seen a Coverage Gap Report
A coverage gap report is exactly what it sounds like. It is a written analysis that compares your current insurance program to your actual operations, your contracts, and your exposure profile, and identifies where the gaps are.
Most business owners we talk to have never received one. They have received proposals, quotes, coverage summaries, and certificates.
But no one has ever handed them a document that says:
The reason this matters is that you cannot fix what you cannot see.
When we produce one for a new client, the reaction is almost always the same: “Why didn’t my last broker do this?”
The answer, usually, is that they did not have the bandwidth, the expertise, or the process to do it. Not because they were negligent, but because the standard of service at most agencies does not include this level of proactive analysis for accounts below a certain size.
Your Contracts Require Coverage Your Program Does Not Have
This is one of the most dangerous gaps because it sits at the intersection of insurance and business operations, and most brokers do not review contracts.
If you are a wholesaler or distributor, your customer contracts almost certainly contain insurance requirements:
If you are an importer selling to big box retailers, the requirements are even more demanding. If you are a food manufacturer or distributor, your co-packer agreements and distribution contracts carry their own set of insurance obligations.
Your broker should be reviewing these contracts and mapping the insurance requirements against your current program. Not once. Annually, or whenever a significant new contract comes in. If this is not happening, you may be in breach of contractual obligations right now and not know it.

Not sure your coverage meets your contract requirements? Contact us and we will map your contracts against your current program at no charge.
Your Broker Does Not Understand Your Industry
There is a meaningful difference between a broker who can place a policy for a distributor and a broker who understands how distribution businesses actually work.
A broker who understands your industry
If your broker cannot explain the specific coverage nuances of your industry without researching it, they are learning on your account.
That is fine for a $5 million business buying a standard package. It is not fine for a $50 million operation with real supply chain complexity, contract obligations, and regulatory exposure. The Insurance Information Institute outlines what finding the right insurance professional actually requires; it is worth comparing that standard against what your current broker does.
You Outgrew Them. That Is Not an Insult. It Is a Pattern.
Here is the thing most business owners do not say out loud:
You outgrew your first accountant. You outgrew your first attorney. You outgrew your first office, your first warehouse, your first everything. The broker relationship follows the same pattern. The only difference is that the consequences of staying too long with the wrong fit are invisible until a claim, a contract dispute, or an investor’s due diligence reveals them.
If you are ready to understand your options, reach out to our team, and we will give you a straight read on where your program stands.
What a Broker Operating at Your Level Actually Does
If the signs above sound familiar, it helps to know what the alternative looks like. A broker operating at the level of a $25 million to $100 million business does the following as standard practice, not as a special request:

If you are reading that list and thinking, “My broker does not do most of this,” you are not alone. Most mid-market businesses we talk to for the first time are getting two or three of these at best.
Not Sure Where Your Program Stands?
If what you have read on this page sounds familiar, a 30-minute conversation will tell you whether your insurance program has gaps or whether you are in better shape than you think. No cost, no obligation, and no pressure. If your current program is solid, I will tell you that.
Should I Switch Insurance Brokers? Questions
Work With a Broker Who Knows Your Business
Gordon B. Coyle has spent over 40 years working with mid-market business owners across the US, identifying coverage gaps that other brokers missed and building insurance programs that hold up when it matters most. The Coyle Group was founded on the premise that business owners deserve expert advocacy, not just policy placement.
The Coyle Group specializes in mid-market businesses, distributors, importers, food and beverage companies, and manufacturers, where the stakes are real, and the consequences of a poorly structured program are measured in millions. If you recognize the signs described on this page, a 30-minute conversation will tell you whether your program needs work or whether you are in better shape than you think.
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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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