Quinley Calls Vassar Book 'Top Risk Management Book of the Year'


The Envelope, please … the Top Risk Management Book of the Year …

By Kevin M. Quinley CPCU, ARM AIC, AIM, ARe

"Olly olly oxen free! Come out, come out, wherever you are!"
Reviewed by Kevin Quinley

Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy by Rick Vassar, iUniverse, 2006, 196 pp., $17.95

Somebody once said that a New York accent was the most effective form of birth control known to man. Others might nominate as an effective contraceptive any tendency to talk about insurance… or risk management, for that matter.

Author, risk manager and consultant Rick Vassar has penned an illuminating primer on insurance and risk management in his book, "Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy." The title is a take-off on the notion that, for most people, meeting with an insurance person or discussing coverage is as much fun as a root canal or proctological exam. The author – a CPCU and an ARM -- lives a dual existence. By day, he is a mild-mannered risk manager for a company in the Washington D.C. area. In his spare time, he writes and consults on risk management topics (check out http://www.vassargroup.com ). Vassar tries (successfully) to cushion the blow and counter the stereotype by presenting insurance and risk management principles in a straightforward way that can profit any business professional.

Part of his theme is that most companies have risks that are overseen by someone whose title is not "Risk Manager." Most companies do not have risk managers; you need to have a pretty big insurance budget to justify that as a full-time position. No company vies to be paying so much in insurance premium that they spotlight the problem by having a full-time individual to tend to it. Nevertheless, all companies have risks and need to manage it. For these risk managers without title or formal portfolio, Vassar's book – perhaps the best risk management book of the year even without that phrase in the title -- is an indispensable primer and guide. Reading and heeding his advice will save businesses much money, frustration and Excedrin-consumption.

Vassar divides his book into three main sections. Part I discusses business strategies to even the playing field between policyholders and insurance companies. Part II walks through the major basic forms of insurance coverage for most any business. Part III rounds out with a useful; glossary and index.

Vassar's target audience is likely not the Fortune 500 or Fortune 1000 risk pro who attends the annual RIMS Conference. There is no highfalutin discussion of enterprise risk management or views from 50,000 feet above ground level. If you are seeking information on Sarbanes-Oxley compliance or the risk management implications of global warming, look elsewhere. The storefront risk manager, though, will find a wellspring of effective tips and tricks between these covers.

Vassar's focus is practical and hands-on, leavened with a self-deprecating sense of humor. Did I say "humor"? Yes, though few comedy clubs are likely to feature an Open Mike night for insurance reps, Vassar takes the human antipathy toward insurance and turns it into a source of mirth and amusement. (Some end-of-chapter checklists would have been a nice addition to the text, but this is a minor quibble.)

So run -- but don't hide - and get your copy of "Hide! Here Comes the Insurance Guy." Get out from under the desk. Leave the closet and face your fears. Insurance and risk management may not be fun (though they are occasionally funny), but Rick Vassar has come as close to anyone in blending sharp wit with moneysaving risk management insights.

Kevin Quinley CPCU ARM is the author of over 500 published articles and nine books. His articles have appeared in publications including Business Insurance, The National Underwriter, Risk Management, Occupational Safety & Health, Best's Review, CPCU Journal, Insurance Settlement Journal, The Risk Report and For the Defense. He is the author of Time Management for Claim Professionals, Claim Management, The Quality Plan, Litigation Management and Winning Strategies for Negotiating Claims and Managing Product Liability Risks. His seventh book, Bulletproofing Your Medical Practice: Risk Management Strategies that Work, was published in October of 2000. His eighth book, Well-Adjusted: 185 Career Tips for Adjuster Success was published in mid-2001. The ninth book – coauthored with Don Schmidt -- Business at Risk: Risk Managing the Terrorist Threat was published in 2002.

Use The Holiday Season to Elevate your "Claims Game"!


Reprinted with permission from The Claims Coach Blog December 10, 2007

Use The Holiday Season to Elevate your "Claims Game"!

by Kevin M. Quinley CPCU, ARM AIC, AIM, ARE
Kevin has written over nene books and over 500 articles on various subjects including claims management, risk management and the insurance industry. He is known throughout the insurance industry as an expert in claims analysis and administration.



Christmas time is one time of year when I’m glad to be a claims person and not an underwriter. With so many insurance renewal dates at 12/31 or 1/1 on the calendar, the underwriters are at peak workload at this time of year, scrambling to address new and renewal business. Underwriters are besieged by the need for insurance quotes or brokers who want to cut deals. In fact, it is downright hard for underwriters to take much time off during the holiday season.

Not so for the claim folks...

If anything, our volume drops this time of year. There are likely many reasons for this. One may relate to the fact that we only handle product liability claims. If we were dealing with personal lines losses – autos or homeowners for example – December might be a busier time. In the world our claims department occupies, though – commercial liability – the folks at insured companies who report claims are often out on vacation themselves. Attorneys who generate much of the paper and activity on litigated cases are in a wind-down mode. Judges do not seem too keen to schedule mediations or trials during the Christmas season, though I have been in a couple of nail-biters during yuletide, worried that the jury was going to turn into a gaggle of twelve Santa Clauses.

For some claim departments, the holiday season marks a ramp-down of the pace of business. Less incoming mail arrives. The phone is quieter. Fewer emails and faxes intrude. (Your mileage may vary, again either due to the types of insurance you write or if you work for a TPA that gets overflow assignments.)

This can be an excellent time for the claim staff to invest time in activities that will boost their productivity and get them off to a running start the next year. For example:
• Purging old materials (both hard copy and files on hard drives) that are no longer needed
• Organizing one’s desk, drawers and reference material
• Writing out professional goals for the next year and embedding ticklers or reminders on the calendar to revisit progress on these periodically through the year
• Networking with other professionals that you had a hard time finding time for earlier in the year

Use any “lull” presented at the end of year to catch your breath, gather yourself, get organized and get focused on what you want to accomplish as a claim professional in 2008!

The Claims Coach may slide down the chimney and appear again before the end of the year but, in any event, he wishes all a happy and fun holiday season!!