The broker should treat the renewal as a full exposure review, not a simple repeat of the previous policy. First, the two new offices must be added to the insurance program. The broker should confirm addresses, occupancy, property values, equipment, lease obligations, security, employees, and any change in revenue or professional activity at those locations. If the new offices are not disclosed properly, the firm may have uninsured property or liability exposures.
Second, the broker should review the break-in claim. This requires checking property, crime, burglary, security safeguards, alarm systems, locks, access controls, and any insurer recommendations. A recent theft loss may affect deductibles, terms, or underwriting attitude.
Third, the legal action involving a structural mistake is a major professional liability issue. The broker must review the architects’ errors and omissions policy, claim reporting, retroactive date, limits, deductibles, engineers’ involvement, and whether the claim has been properly notified.
Because the market is stable and the client is cooperative, renewal negotiations should be manageable. However, the broker must update all material facts and recommend coverage changes where exposures have changed. Course topic reference: Monitoring and Modifying the Risk Management Plan; Liability; Professional Liability; Renewal Review; Architects’ E & O .
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