Built to Last: Risk Management and Insurance for Entrepreneurs

Chosen theme: Risk Management and Insurance for Entrepreneurs. Welcome, founders and builders—this is your practical, hopeful space for growing boldly while protecting your downside. Explore stories, strategies, and smarter coverage choices. Subscribe for weekly, founder-tested insights that keep momentum strong and surprises survivable.

Why Risk Management Matters for Entrepreneurs

01

From Uncertainty to Strategy

Entrepreneurs face changing markets, supply hiccups, and human mistakes. Turning uncertainty into strategy means listing likely threats, ranking impact, assigning owners, and rehearsing responses. It’s not about fear—it’s about speed, control, and protecting your ability to keep shipping.
02

A Simple Risk Map You Can Build Today

Grab a whiteboard and plot risks by likelihood and impact. Add rough costs, a prevention step, and a recovery step for each. Invite your team to poke holes, then comment below with one surprise your risk map revealed so we can learn together.
03

A Founder’s Wake-Up Call

A small coffee roaster lost a week when a power surge fried a roaster control panel. After mapping risks, they installed surge protection, added business interruption coverage, and created a spare parts kit. Share your own wake-up moment to help another founder prepare.

Insurance Basics: Policies That Protect Momentum

General liability addresses bodily injury and property damage to others, like a customer slip or onsite accident. Professional liability covers mistakes in services, advice, or design that cause financial loss. Many founders need both, because real life rarely respects neat category lines.

Insurance Basics: Policies That Protect Momentum

Property insurance protects your gear, inventory, and space from covered perils like fire or theft. Business interruption helps replace lost income when operations pause due to covered damage. Ask your broker about realistic revenue assumptions, extra expense coverage, and waiting periods that match your cash cushion.

Cash Flow Resilience: Deductibles, Retentions, and Reserves

The Deductible Dial

Higher deductibles usually mean lower premiums, but only if you can comfortably cover the deductible on a tough day. Model two or three scenarios, including worst case timing, then pick the setting that protects survival, not just short-term savings. Share your model assumptions for feedback.

Self-Insurance and Captives—When They Make Sense

Larger or fast-scaling firms sometimes retain predictable losses and insure catastrophes. Captives require discipline, data, and long-term commitment. For most startups, begin with reserves and good loss control, then revisit as revenue stabilizes. Curious? Tell us your revenue band and we’ll suggest a roadmap.

A Food Truck, A Fender-Bender, A Lesson

A food truck clipped a parked car on day two of a festival. The founder’s chosen deductible was manageable, their auto liability responded, and interruption coverage softened lost sales. Planning ahead turned embarrassment into a minor hiccup instead of a season-ending crisis.

Cyber Risk and Digital Defenses

Turn on multi-factor authentication, use a password manager, back up data offline, and restrict admin rights. Train your team on phishing and invoice fraud. These steps cost little, compound quickly, and dramatically lower the likelihood your insurance ever needs to speak.

Contracts as Risk Tools

Indemnity allocates responsibility when something goes wrong. Narrow obligations to what you actually control, limit to reasonable damages, and align with your insurance. Get mutual terms when possible. A short, fair clause beats a sweeping one nobody can realistically insure or honor.

Contracts as Risk Tools

Becoming an additional insured extends another party’s policy to you for covered work. Certificates prove coverage but are not contracts. Waivers of subrogation reduce finger-pointing after claims. Keep a clean, dated file and automate reminders. Tell us which industry you’re in for a tailored checklist.

Building a Culture of Risk-Aware Growth

Make Pre-Mortems a Habit

Before launches, imagine the project failed and list reasons. Assign owners to address the top three and schedule a quick revisit. This practice surfaces hidden risks without blame and improves outcomes fast. Share your favorite pre-mortem question to inspire other founders.

Celebrate Near Misses, Not Just Wins

A warehouse team caught a sprinkler leak on a Friday night and saved inventory. The company celebrated the alert employee and updated inspections. Recognizing near misses builds psychological safety and encourages speaking up early, when fixes cost minutes instead of months.

Training Rhythms That Stick

Short, frequent refreshers beat annual marathons. Rotate topics—cyber hygiene, incident steps, contract basics—and tie each to a quick story. Keep score, make it fun, and reward participation. Comment with one ritual your team already loves, and we’ll share it with the community.
Seranivolaxonone
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.