Even when your client has solid safety programs in place, accidents still happen. And they always cost money. It comes with the territory.
That’s the reality your clients face: one bad claim every five to six years is inevitable. The real question is whether they’re financially and operationally prepared when it hits.
At Captive Coalition, we work with independent agents who want to help their clients who want to do more than just “being safe.” We help them think strategically about the financial impact of workplace incidents and how to mitigate that impact before it spirals.
This article covers:
When a workplace accident happens, the cost is more than just the claim. It’s what comes after:
If your client is in a captive, a bad claims year can wipe out their underwriting profit, trigger assessments, and weaken risk-sharing performance. If they’re still in the traditional market, they could face steep premium hikes or get dropped altogether.
Clients also need to understand what kind of claims they can hit.
Here’s how to frame that:
And even when the claim wasn’t truly their fault, your client still owns the fallout.
“An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” There’s a reason this expression exists
When your client invests in safety, it’s not just about doing the right thing. They need to protect their margins, stabilize their renewals, and keep control over their insurance future.
Here’s how to frame it for them:
And here’s the loop that can make or break them:
Break that loop, and your clients become more profitable.
One simple move? Ask employees how safe they feel. When businesses do this honestly (and anonymously), the feedback is gold and often eye-opening.
Spoiler alert: Employees generally see training as a positive, especially when it means they and those around them are less likely to get hurt.
If your client is serious about reducing risk, this is where it starts.
Every client says they “care about safety.” But the ones who invest in prevention and containment are the ones who actually see results.
Here’s what that looks like:
Even with strong programs, your client will likely face a serious claim every 5–6 years. Prevention and containment don’t eliminate risk, but they absolutely limit financial exposure when that moment comes.
And if they’re in a captive, this approach is what protects their underwriting profit and their long-term ROI.
If your client isn’t documenting their safety efforts, the programs may as well not exist.
Here’s why it matters:
Remind your clients to:
-Document the training.
-Document the procedures.
-Document the incident responses.
As a bonus, encourage them to rotate their training content. The same stale slide deck repeated every six months doesn’t count.
This level of discipline proves to carriers (and captives) that they’re serious about risk.
Even with excellent safety and documentation, accidents happen. Your clients need to prepare for the financial side, too.
Here’s what you can advise:
These safeguards give clients breathing room when things go wrong. They also signal to underwriters or risk-sharing groups that they’re stable, long-term thinkers.
Even if your client is exploring captives or high-retention plans, these foundational coverages still play a critical role in protecting their business:
Read our article on six ways to help your clients cut workers' comp costs.
Read our article on five ways to help clients reduce business auto insurance costs.
These aren’t just boxes to check. They’re key to managing exposure—and if your client is in a captive, they’re the lines that drive claims performance and underwriting results.
Also, suggest building employee safety committees. They foster buy-in and surface issues before they become losses. Plus, their employees will be more involved in the workplace.
If your client is doing the hard work that involves building a culture of safety, documenting everything, and investing in prevention, then captive ownership could be a smart next move.
Captives reward exactly that kind of discipline.
They:
But they’re not for everyone. That’s why your role is to help clients evaluate both the upside and the commitment.
Read our articles on how captives help with cash flow and another on the financial pros and cons of ownership. That way, you can understand how captives work and confidently bring them up as an option to your best clients.
Become a member of Captive Coalition for FREE to access additional resources, tools, webinars, and training to better help your clients and maintain your book of business.