Captive Coalition Blog

Why Safety is Essential for Success in Captive Insurance

Written by Jerrett Phinney | Nov 21, 2024 3:24:16 PM

Discussing workplace safety may not be the most thrilling topic for your clients. However, it can be crucial to their bottom line, especially if they’re considering a captive insurance model. Strong safety and risk management practices directly impact their claims, premiums, and overall success in a captive.  

Why is this important? Because improved safety practices see practical benefits such as fewer claims and lower premiums. This approach can keep your clients from being frustrated by rising costs when they’re in charge of their insurance future when implementing these best practices. Knowing this information as an independent agent allows you to deliver the best advice for your clients.

In this article, you’ll learn why safety and risk management are essential for success in a captive, how to discuss those benefits with your clients, and how to present captives as an option for businesses looking to have more control and cut costs in their insurance approach.

Understanding Captive Insurance and Risk Management

The whole point of captive insurance is to put more control in the hands of business owners. Traditional insurance makes it so clients pay premiums to cover unknown risks. Captives allow businesses to set up their own insurance company to cover specific risks. This means they control the process, see exactly where the dollars go, and improve safety and risk reduction. 

The more a business commits to risk management, the better the results in a captive. By reducing claims, businesses save money, boost profits, and improve safety—a win for everyone. However, getting clients comfortable with this requires showing them how strong safety protocols and risk management make captives worthwhile. 

Benefits of Safety and Risk Management with Captive Insurers

With captive insurance being so safety and risk management focused, here are three benefits business owners will see when making their programs more robust:

1. Fewer Claims, More Savings


In captives, every claim impacts the bottom line. In the traditional market, claim frequency might not affect premiums as visibly (though a business owner can likely expect an increase in their premiums. Captives tie premium costs to the business’s safety performance. Clients need to know that having a robust safety program means more control and potentially lower premiums over time. 

2. Ownership and Accountability Drive Results


Clients own their captive insurer, so they have skin in the game. Businesses will be encouraged to invest more in safety, training, and proactive risk management to keep claims low and profits high. When clients focus on reducing risks, they often see benefits like improved employee morale and increased profitability.

3. Transparency in Insurance Costs


Many clients feel frustrated by the lack of transparency in traditional insurance models. With a captive, clients can see where their premiums go and how they fund their claims. By investing in risk management upfront, they know exactly how much is saved or spent on claims, making them feel more in control of their insurance costs. 

You might wonder if your client would work well as a captive owner. Use the captive assessment tool to get the results.

Common Challenges and Solutions in Captive Risk Management

Even when clients understand the benefits of a captive, they might be nervous about potential challenges. Here are common issues and practical ways to help your clients:

Challenge: Fear of Unknown Risks


Clients might be worried about discovering hidden risks in their operations, which might overwhelm them. Encourage them to see this as a proactive way to protect their business long-term. 

A good risk management program, backed by the resources in a captive, can help them tackle issues early, reducing claims and costly surprises.

Challenge: Lacking a Written Safety Plan


For many clients, risk management policies might exist only in their heads. They’re vulnerable to claims, fines, and regulatory scrutiny without formal, written policies. 

Captives require documentation of safety practices, which helps businesses formalize processes and demonstrate accountability to regulatory bodies. Explain that having these policies in writing isn’t just a requirement—it’s essential for minimizing risks and protecting their business.

Challenge: Building a Safety Culture


A culture of safety doesn’t happen overnight, and clients might struggle to get everyone on board. However, captives provide access to safety and risk management experts who can help businesses develop strong safety cultures and comprehensive training programs. This reduces claims and makes employees feel more secure and valued, improving morale and productivity. 

How to Present Safety and Risk Management Benefits to Clients

When introducing captives to clients, agents can focus on how safety and risk management contribute to overall cost savings, transparency, and a safer work environment. Here are some strategies to make these points clear and compelling:

Make It Personal


Connect safety programs and claims reductions to the client’s specific industry and risks. For example, in construction, fewer claims might mean the difference between landing or losing a contract. Make sure what you talk about shows you understand their world and how captives provide control they wouldn’t get from a traditional insurance plan. 

Emphasize Long-Term Savings


Explain how a well-run captive insurer can reduce premiums by as much as 28% within a few years of joining. In traditional insurance, these types of savings are almost unheard of. In a captive, it’s achievable because clients are investing in their risk management. 

Discuss Potential for Profit and Growth


For businesses that consistently manage risks well, captives create opportunities for growth. The business might gain enough financial strength to consider acquiring a competitor who isn’t well-prepared in safety. Additionally, this increase in financial stability can make the business an attractive acquisition target, boosting its overall value. 

Explain Upfront Costs as an Investment


Captives require an upfront investment in safety and risk audits, but this is often recouped in the form of lower premiums and fewer claims over time. Let clients know that the initial investment is a fraction of the potential long-term gains they’ll see with a safer, more efficient operation. 

Helping Clients Feel Comfortable with Captive Safety Programs

Safety and risk management are more than a “nice-to-have” in a captive; they’re the engine that drives the benefits clients expect. Here’s what agents can do to make sure clients understand this:

  • Be Transparent of the Process: Focus on the straightforward nature of captives—transparent costs, clear returns on risk reduction, and control over their insurance.
  • Be Direct About the Commitment: Captives require responsibility. Clients who prioritize safety see the best results, so highlight that commitment upfront.
  • Showcase Proven Results: Share examples or case studies where risk management in captives led to significant savings, if possible. Numbers speak; clients often need to see the math to understand the payoffs.

Helping Clients See the Value in Safety-Driven Captives

In captive insurance, safety and risk management aren’t just added benefits—they’re pivotal to being effective with a captive insurer. As an independent agent, you’ll be able to explain how captives reduce claims, lower costs, and let your client control their insurance. Clients who understand that investing in safety impacts their bottom line directly are more likely to move to a captive. 

Next, read our article on five conversations you need to have about captive insurance for practical tips on addressing client concerns and what they can expect.

Our sole purpose at Captive Coalition is to help educate agents on all things captive insurance. We have a solid understanding of captive insurance, including the critical role safety and risk management play in the success of your best clients. When agents explain how improved safety and risk management can lead to fewer claims and actual cost savings, clients will likely see the value of the captive approach.

If you want to see how much your client can save with captives, use the captive insurance calculator to see the cost savings.