https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/ScurichInsuranceServices/3642/Safeguard-Your-Key-PeopleWith-Directors-Officers-Insurance/
In today's increasingly complex and litigious business environment, your corporate officers and board of directors - the brains of the company - need protection against personal financial liability arising from their corporate activities.
These people are highly vulnerable to lawsuits by investors, employees, vendors, competitors, customers, regulators and others, alleging misconduct for a wide variety of activities, such as:
Providing inaccurate or unlawful advice.
Fraud and malfeasance.
Misrepresentation of company assets.
Failure to comply with workplace laws.
Poor hiring decisions. (A Towers Perrin survey found that 40% of all reported D&O claims involved flawed employment practices.)
Directors & Officers Liability (D&O) Insurance will pick up the tab for legal fees, settlements, and other expenses from such litigation. This gives your officers and directors financial peace of mind in carrying out their corporate activities, and provides a valuable incentive for attracting, and keeping quality people who can help grow your business.
There's a widespread need for this coverage. One in six company executives (17%) surveyed by Inc. Magazine believe that their business will experience a D&O-related loss within the next year.
These policies usually offer two types of coverage known as "sides." Side A protects directors and officers from personal financial liability if the company is unable to indemnify them. (For example, during a bankruptcy or dissolution.) Side B coverage reimburses the company if it indemnifies directors and officers. (For example, when shareholders file suit against them.) A third coverage - sometimes known as Side C - comes into play when both the company and individual officers and directors face lawsuits.
To learn more about how D&O Insurance can help minimize the financial risks of litigation for your company and your top people, feel free to get in touch with us at any time.
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/Gladius-Insurance-Services-LLC/5392/Attention-California-P-and-C-Agents-with-Small-book-of-business/
There comes a time when you know you are a Professional Salesperson, no one has to tell you, you just know.
When that day comes, you look around, and say to yourself, what is the next step?
The vast majority of Professional Salespersons decide to open their own shop, which is a good decision for some, but not all.
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/Insurance-Professionals-Blog/418/All-Risks-Ltd-Announces-New-Memphis-Office/
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/ScurichInsuranceServices/1317/Police-Officer-Raises-100-000-After-Tragedy-Proves-Humankind-Really-Does-Care/
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — After 17 years on the force, San Jose Police officer Huan Ngyuen had learned not to get emotionally involved in his work. But then one got through.
On May 6, a road rage slaying in his Little Saigon neighborhood, on the streets where he grew up and now patrols, took the life of a Vietnamese immigrant like himself. The victim was a 37-year-old bus driver who left behind a widow and two young children, one with severe autism.
"We try not to get emotional, but sometimes these things really affect me," Nguyen said. "It kind of hit the soft core of my body."
Ngyuen and his colleagues sent texts to friends and family asking if they could help the widow. Then, at his friends' urging, he launched a website, hoping to raise a few thousand dollars. Word spread quickly: Now, less than three weeks since the murder, nearly $100,000 has poured in from the local Vietnamese community and far beyond, including Houston, Boston, New York, even London.
"I'm very thankful, and I'm very surprised," said widow Dieu Huynh, a limited English speaker whose husband's cremated remains were buried last weekend.
Sinking into her couch with her 4- and 7-year-old sons, she fought back tears, telling Ngyuen in Vietnamese how her youngest son, Steven, keeps asking her to call his father. Her older son, Henry, can't talk, but hugs and kisses her. Unable to function independently, Henry dashes out the door into the street if left unattended, has seizures, and will need a lifetime of constant care.
"When I met this family, I could see they were going to need help," said Ngyuen, himself a father of two. "It really, really got to me."
National Center for Victims of Crime Executive Director Mai Fernandez said online, crowd-sourced fundraisers are increasingly common for crime victims, but usually it's friends or family who launch them.
"I've never heard of a police officer stepping in like this. This sounds like a really special person," she said. "When there's a tragedy out there, there are a lot of heroes who step up. It's amazing to see the outpouring of generosity of the public. Humankind really does care about each other."
Ngyuen, who sought approval before reaching out publicly and has the full support of San Jose Police Chief Larry Esquivel, said he's shy about being in the spotlight.
"But this isn't about me at all," he said. "My job is to help others. No amount of money can replace their dad, but this can help those boys as they grow up."
Ngyuen also is keeping an eye out on his patrols for the suspect who shot Huynh's husband, Phuoc Lam. That morning, with a rare few hours free, Lam and Huynh were doing errands for her upcoming birthday party.
Suddenly Lam slammed on his brakes to avoid hitting two men in a Volkswagen Jetta who pulled out of a mobile home park driveway in front of him, police said. Lam climbed out of the driver's side to survey the scene. Words were exchanged, and as Huynh was stepping out to see what was going on, her husband was shot. Police said she told them she saw Lam fall.
Huynh doesn't speak of it in front of her children. But at that moment her life crumbled.
Read the entire story here.
Content provided by http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/26/san-jose-police-officer-raises-money_n_5393027.html?utm_hp_ref=good-news
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/ScurichInsuranceServices/3595/What%E2%80%99s-more-secure-financial-records-locked-in-a-filing-cabinet-or-financial-records-stored-in-the-cloud/
Pop quiz time. What's more secure; financial records locked in a filing cabinet or financial records stored in the cloud?
If you don't understand how cloud security works, you probably said the filing cabinet. It's time for a little mythbusting about how secure your paperless office could be.
Last week, Cindy Bates posted on the Microsoft SMB Blog about the benefits of a completely paperless office. Like Delta Airlines, who recently switched to the paperless cockpit, it's possible for any office or organization to ditch the dead trees and move entirely into the digital space.
One of the first questions decision makers ask when considering the paperless office is "how
secure is this?" It's a fair question, so let's consider Delta's paperless cockpit example and overall data security.
The problem with paper is that, well, it's paper. Paper gets lost, it burns, it can be misfiled and disappear. It's only as secure as its physical location. If that location is a locked filing cabinet (or a vault under Fort Knox), if someone really wanted to get to it, they could.
A file in the cloud cannot burn, be stolen, accidentally left behind in a restroom, or any other number of things that could affect a hard copy of important information. For a recent example, take a look at the Internet Archive, whose scanning facility in San Francisco recently caught fire. Although no data was stored in their San Francisco office, if it had been, cloud redundancies would have prevented any loss.
But what about a data center, such as what powers Windows Azure or Office 365? Let's start with physical security: data centers are monitored 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. A team of ninjas could, in theory, break in, but they'd still have to know which of the thousand machines contained your exact data—so unless you've upset the cast of Ocean's 11, it's significantly less likely than an office fire that could destroy physical data.
In addition, with Office 365, data transmitted across networks is encrypted—so if some agency (or other villain) happens to tap the wires, they still won't be able to read your files.
While a move to a paperless office does not entirely guarantee data security—there are still those ninjas to think about—it is significantly more secure than leaving your information in paper form, where it could be destroyed or stolen with greater ease.
It's just one more reason to go paperless.
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/ScurichInsuranceServices/3674/What%E2%80%99s-more-secure-financial-records-locked-in-a-filing-cabinet-or-financial-records-stored-in-the-cloud/
Pop quiz time. What's more secure; financial records locked in a filing cabinet or financial records stored in the cloud?
If you don't understand how cloud security works, you probably said the filing cabinet. It's time for a little mythbusting about how secure your paperless office could be.
Last week, Cindy Bates posted on the Microsoft SMB Blog about the benefits of a completely paperless office. Like Delta Airlines, who recently switched to the paperless cockpit, it's possible for any office or organization to ditch the dead trees and move entirely into the digital space.
One of the first questions decision makers ask when considering the paperless office is "how
secure is this?" It's a fair question, so let's consider Delta's paperless cockpit example and overall data security.
The problem with paper is that, well, it's paper. Paper gets lost, it burns, it can be misfiled and disappear. It's only as secure as its physical location. If that location is a locked filing cabinet (or a vault under Fort Knox), if someone really wanted to get to it, they could.
A file in the cloud cannot burn, be stolen, accidentally left behind in a restroom, or any other number of things that could affect a hard copy of important information. For a recent example, take a look at the Internet Archive, whose scanning facility in San Francisco caught fire. Although no data was stored in their San Francisco office, if it had been, cloud redundancies would have prevented any loss.
But what about a data center, such as what powers Windows Azure or Office 365? Let's start with physical security: data centers are monitored 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. A team of ninjas could, in theory, break in, but they'd still have to know which of the thousand machines contained your exact data—so unless you've upset the cast of Ocean's 11, it's significantly less likely than an office fire that could destroy physical data.
In addition, with Office 365, data transmitted across networks is encrypted—so if some agency (or other villain) happens to tap the wires, they still won't be able to read your files.
While a move to a paperless office does not entirely guarantee data security—there are still those ninjas to think about—it is significantly more secure than leaving your information in paper form, where it could be destroyed or stolen with greater ease.
It's just one more reason to go paperless.
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/Insurance-Professionals-Blog/299/All-Risks-Ltd-Hires-Barry-Woltmon-as-Branch-Manager-Seattle-Washington-Office/
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/USG-Insurance-Services-Inc/0/Insurance-Solutions-for-Miscellaneous-Professionals/
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/USG-Insurance-Services-Inc/0/Insurance-Solutions-for-Large-Property/
https://completemarkets.com/Blog/post/USG-Insurance-Services-Inc/0/Excess-Umbrella/