Most people get a kick out of Halloween, frightening ghost stories, glowing jack-o-lanterns, and little ghouls and goblins trick-or-treating on October 31st. Some of us also enjoy feeling the jitters while watching a scary movie. It’s all in good fun, after all.
But for small business owners, independent professionals, and sole proprietors, Halloween and chilling movies aren’t as terrifying as real-life claims, accidents, and incidents that can destroy their businesses.
We can give you eight examples of things far more spine-chilling to business owners than witches, vampires, and werewolves:
Download Our FREE Insurance Guide
Learn everything you need to protect your small business.
Whitepaper download
"*" indicates required fields
Your email address will be used by Zensurance to provide latest news, offers and tips.
You can unsubscribe at any time.
1. A Customer Lawsuit for Professional Errors
Mistakes happen to everyone. However, for professional service organizations, consultants, accountants, and other independent professionals, making a mistake (even unintentionally) or neglecting to do something as promised to a customer can lead to an expensive lawsuit.
Professional liability insurance (or errors and omissions insurance) is essential protection for those providing professional services.
2. Cyber-Attacks and Data Breaches
A cyber-attack or data breach that compromises your business’s and customers’ confidential information can destroy your business and reputation, gut your finances, and lead to legal liabilities.
Cyber insurance is vital coverage every small business owner in any industry should have as part of their overall policy to help manage the fallout of cyber incidents, protect their finances, and restore their compromised systems.
3. Not Having Enough Coverage to Pay For a Loss
Having commercial insurance to protect your business from damages and losses is critical. Equally important is making sure you have adequate coverage limits to account for the risks you face. As a policyholder, you get to choose the coverage your policy contains. But if you choose a low coverage limit to save on the premium and then suffer an expensive loss like a fire that destroys your business property, contents, and inventory, and those damages cost more than your policy’s coverage limit, you’ll be out-of-pocket to pay the balance.
Moreover, if a tragedy such as this happens to your business and you’re forced to close for weeks or months for repairs, and you didn’t include business interruption insurance in your policy, you won’t be covered for lost income, lease and loan payments, employee payroll, and more.
4. Customer Injuries on Your Premises
Here’s another frightening thought: Imagine a customer who is injured on your business property from a trip and fall, requires medical attention, and is unable to work because of the injury. You can be held liable for their medical and rehabilitation expenses and lost income.
General liability insurance is what covers third-party bodily injury and third-party property damage claims against your company.
5. Natural Disasters
Wildfires, floods, tornadoes, ice storms and other natural disasters can easily wipe out small businesses and force them to close. Natural disasters and severe weather events are increasing across Canada. According to the Insurance Bureau of Canada, severe weather and natural disasters caused over $3.1 billion in insured damage in 2023.
Commercial property insurance covers damages to business properties, their contents and inventories caused by natural disasters.
6. Theft or Vandalism
Theft, shoplifting, and property vandalism are alarming problems that most businesses face. According to the Retail Council of Canada, retail crime accounts for about $5 billion in losses in Canada annually.
Commercial property insurance also covers damages to businesses caused by theft and vandalism.
7. A Product Liability Claim
Speaking of retail, a product liability claim against a retailer, online seller, or e-commerce business can also trigger expensive lawsuits. Any business or online seller selling products (including food) can be liable if that product injures a customer or damages their property, even if you didn’t manufacture or create the product yourself.
Product liability insurance is a must for any individual or small business selling, distributing, or manufacturing products sold to the public to protect against this type of claim.
8. Not Having Business Insurance
Inarguably, not having business liability insurance at all is the grand bull moose of horrors for sole proprietors and business owners if something – anything – goes wrong.
A fire or water damage to your business property, theft of products, tools or equipment, a cyber incident, an accidental injury to a customer or damage to third-party property; you’re on your own to pay for damages and losses like these without business insurance.
In a recent Zensurance survey of Canadian small business owners, we asked respondents without liability insurance how they would pay for expensive damages or losses without coverage. Some of the answers those uninsured business owners gave were:
- They’d try to get a loan
- They don’t know what they’d do
- They don’t believe anything bad will happen to them
- They’d try to borrow money from family and friends
- They’d declare bankruptcy
Now, those answers are scary!
Get the Right Liability Insurance for Your Business and Be Unafraid
Here’s a far better option: Get low-cost business insurance from Zensurance, and don’t worry about things that go bump in the night (or day).
Fill out our online application for a free quote in less than five minutes.
Our licensed, knowledgeable team of brokers know the ins and outs of small business insurance. We’ll take the hassle of shopping for liability coverage off your hands, tell you what you need and what you don’t, and customize the right policy to suit your needs.
Recent Posts
Why November Is the Perfect Time for Bookkeepers to Review Their Insurance
As we inch toward the end of another year, bookkeepers are busy preparing for the end of their clients’ financial year. But now is the ideal time for bookkeepers to review and assess their insurance. We’ll give you 10 reasons why.
Is Your Salon Ready for the Holidays? Insurance Tips for Beauticians
Salon owners and independent beauticians need to stock up on the products they need to make their clients shine over the holidays. But ensuring they're adequately covered with customized insurance is also critical. Here's what to know.
10 Tips for Closing Your Small Business for the Winter
Are you closing up shop for the winter? Ensuring your property is prepared for winter and your valuable contents and inventory are safely stored is vital. See our tips for how small business owners can shut down operations and keep their assets safe.
Sign Up for ZenMail
"*" indicates required fields