The 3 C’s of A&E: Contracts, Communication and Client Documentation
Here are three foundational risk management considerations that agents should know to help improve clients’ insurability in the current architects & engineers liability market.
Here are three foundational risk management considerations that agents should know to help improve clients’ insurability in the current architects & engineers liability market.
As the architects & engineers market hardens in reaction to demand for professional design services, independent agents can play a significant role in helping their clients secure coverage.
The architects & engineers insurance market continues to deal with inflation, climate change-related claims and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The new architects & engineers professional liability policy provides design professionals with professional, pollution and cyber liability coverage, as well as robust risk management services.
In a competitive market, agents can gain an edge on the competition and reel in new business by thinking outside the box when it comes to clients and services.
The last decade in architects & engineers insurance has been highly competitive, but escalating challenges are leading to a hardening of the market in the large account space, which may eventually trickle down.
Sustained and continued growth in real estate and construction means architects & engineers business is booming, and firms are shopping for coverage with ample capacity.
In an underwriting alliance with Huntersure, LLC, QBE brings professional liability coverage to midsize to large architectural, engineering and contractor businesses.
The new structure provides a dedicated limit for every project a firm works on after the retroactive date specified in the professional liability policy—even if the policy aggregate limit is exhausted after a claim.
Some architect & engineer risks are pretty straightforward. But how confident are you that all your A&E clients are properly covered? Here are five common causes of coverage gaps to make sure you discuss at your next meeting.