Spring Has Sprung: How Agents Can Help Clients With Flood Coverage
Even routine seasonal changes can create meaningful exposure in non-flood zones, making proactive education and coverage reviews key in the spring months.
Even routine seasonal changes can create meaningful exposure in non-flood zones, making proactive education and coverage reviews key in the spring months.
By tailoring flood coverage to a client’s actual risk and financial exposure, agents ensure they have the protection they need without the unnecessary costs.
As flood risk becomes more complex and less tied to traditional flood maps, agents play a key role in helping customers understand their real exposure.
Communication is the name of the game in the challenging coastal insurance market—and Kelley Carter, a communication and business major, has applied that wholeheartedly.
The endorsement is designed for homes outside historical high-risk flood zones and provides coverage for damage from flood waters or surface waters.
A new report reveals a troubling disconnect between what homeowners know and what they do to protect their homes. Learn how agents can turn knowledge into action and value.
On this Agency Nation Radio episode, Courtney Jacobs, owner of Insurance Done Right (IDR) in Biloxi, Mississippi, discusses the complexities of business on the Gulf Coast while also serving in the Air National Guard.
Born and raised on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, Courtney Jacobs began her career as a financial adviser.
Proactive conversations with clients about catastrophe risks can surface potential coverage gaps and open the door to more forward-looking planning.
Tees-to-Green flood insurance automatically triggers payments as soon as flooding inundates a golf course.