After several consecutive years of double-digit commercial property insurance rate increases, there is still no end in sight to the challenging insurance buyer marketplace or the factors contributing to it. As a result, you may be thinking it’s impossible to have any control over your school’s rising property insurance costs. However, at AssuredPartners, we believe you can regain power over your premiums by taking a property risk management approach.
This approach requires schools to think proactively and purposefully about how they plan to construct, maintain, and repair their campus buildings for sustainability in the face of a wide array of threats. By establishing a property risk management process that is endorsed by a cross-functional team of stakeholders, a school can demonstrate to its insurance carriers a strong commitment to:
Just the due diligence required to create the process can pay off for a school, making it a more attractive risk to insurance carriers. On the other hand, educational institutions that don’t invest time and resources in a property resiliency and sustainability effort may find their insurance company, as well as other carriers, reluctant to work with them.
All schools, no matter their size or resources, can adopt and adapt a property resilience approach to their specific needs. The most critical factor for success is a belief and conviction in its importance. In other words, do the key stakeholders at the institution believe in and understand the need to reduce the potential for property losses on the campus? Once that buy-in is secured, any school should be able to implement this process and customize it to fit its specific time frames, budget, and capacity.
To help guide you through this process, we want to share a “Road Map for Enhancing Property Resilience.” This approach should be an ongoing cycle that includes the following four main phases:
Engage: Involving all the right people from the beginning of the process is crucial. From our experience this means forming a committee consisting of representatives from a variety of campus departments that have a vested interest in property resilience. This could include:
In addition, your insurance broker, your current insurance carrier, and any third-party vendors that may need to be consulted during the process, such as contractors or consultants, should all participate in this project from the beginning.
Assess: In this phase, your committee identifies your school’s existing and emerging property risks and vulnerabilities, as well as the conditions that might affect the ability of your institution and its physical assets to adapt to, withstand, or recover from these threats. This part of the process is likely to take some time and requires all hands on deck because it involves:
Prioritize: It’s unlikely any school, no matter the size, has the funding or capacity to check off every item on its list of risks all at once. We recommend considering criteria like the following as you prioritize your concerns:
Strategize: From priority No. 1 to the last risk on your list, you must create a directive on how and when each risk will be addressed, monitored, reviewed, and regularly reassessed. For example, if the exposure is repairing a roof, some of the discussion points for a plan to address it might be:
If you repair/replace it now, what is the expected life span of the roof, and how can you make sure you have funding to replace it at that point in the future??
Of course, step four is not the end of this journey. All stakeholders must convene regularly to review the status of projects aimed at improving previously known exposures and any new ones that have been uncovered. These meetings are also important to take stock of your sustainability objectives to ensure you stay ahead of trending property risks.
Establishing a property risk management process is not generally done in a few days, weeks, or even months, so there’s no better time to get going on it than today. At a minimum, though, we recommend you start down the road map we’ve shared at least six months prior to your upcoming insurance policy renewal date. Why this timing? Many insurance companies visit campuses during the renewal period to get a first-hand look at the condition of the properties they are insuring. Having your property resilience framework in place puts you in the driver’s seat if they do an on-site inspection because you’ll already know about any risks they identify and potentially already have a plan and budget to address them.
Please know that AssuredPartners is available to support you in navigating the road map for enhancing property resilience and adjusting it to your specific campus and its buildings. As experienced risk management professionals, our participation may help you better understand your school’s exposures and make more informed decisions about how to improve your risk profile by managing, transferring, and/or mitigating these hazards. We invite you to reach out to our Education Practice Group for more information
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