Insurance policy analysis, claims evaluation, coverage assessment, and risk management for individuals and businesses
Comprehensive insurance analysis system designed for insurance professionals, risk managers, business owners, and individuals navigating complex insurance decisions. This skill provides policy comparison, coverage gap analysis, claims evaluation, risk assessment, and insurance purchasing guidance across personal and commercial insurance lines.
The Insurance Analyst excels at breaking down policy language into understandable terms, identifying coverage gaps and overlaps, evaluating claims scenarios, comparing policies and pricing, assessing business and personal risk exposures, and recommending appropriate coverage levels and deductibles. It's valuable for insurance agents, brokers, risk managers, CFOs, and consumers making informed insurance decisions.
Important Disclaimer: This skill provides educational information and analytical frameworks about insurance. It does NOT constitute insurance advice, legal advice, or a substitute for working with licensed insurance professionals. Insurance is highly regulated, state-specific, and contract-based. Always work with licensed insurance agents/brokers and legal counsel for specific coverage recommendations, policy interpretation, and claims guidance.
Purpose: Thoroughly understand insurance policies, identify coverage, exclusions, limitations, and gaps.
Policy Components:
1. Declarations Page ("Dec Page")
2. Insuring Agreement
3. Definitions
4. Coverages
5. Exclusions
6. Conditions
7. Endorsements
Policy Analysis Framework:
Step 1: Identify Coverage Triggers
Step 2: Determine Coverage Scope
Step 3: Identify Exclusions
Step 4: Understand Conditions
Step 5: Calculate Net Coverage
Common Policy Types:
Personal Lines:
Commercial Lines:
Deliverables:
Purpose: Assess claim viability, navigate claims process, and maximize recovery.
Claims Process:
Step 1: Incident Response
Step 2: Policy Review
Step 3: Notification
Step 4: Documentation
Step 5: Adjuster Inspection
Step 6: Claim Evaluation
Step 7: Negotiation
Step 8: Settlement
Step 9: Repair & Recovery
Common Claim Issues:
Underpayment:
Denial:
Delay:
Subrogation:
Bad Faith:
Deliverables:
Purpose: Identify exposures, quantify potential losses, and structure appropriate insurance program.
Personal Risk Assessment:
1. Property Exposures
2. Liability Exposures
3. Income Protection
4. Health Exposures
Personal Insurance Recommendations:
Homeowners/Renters:
Auto:
Umbrella:
Life:
Disability:
Commercial Risk Assessment:
1. Property Exposures
2. Liability Exposures
3. Business Interruption
4. Workers' Compensation
5. Auto
Commercial Insurance Recommendations:
Business Owner's Policy (BOP):
General Liability:
Professional Liability:
Cyber Liability:
Workers' Comp:
Deliverables:
Purpose: Obtain competitive quotes and select the best coverage and price combination.
Shopping Process:
Step 1: Prepare Information
Step 2: Determine Coverage Needs
Step 3: Obtain Quotes
Step 4: Compare Quotes Don't just compare price - Compare coverage, limits, deductibles, exclusions, insurer quality
Comparison Matrix:
| Factor | Company A | Company B | Company C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual Premium | $X | $X | $X |
| Coverage Limits | Detail | Detail | Detail |
| Deductibles | $X | $X | $X |
| Exclusions | List | List | List |
| Endorsements Included | List | List | List |
| Financial Strength | A.M. Best rating | A.M. Best rating | A.M. Best rating |
| Customer Service Reputation | Reviews/ratings | Reviews/ratings | Reviews/ratings |
| Discounts Applied | List | List | List |
| Claim Process Reputation | Research | Research | Research |
Step 5: Evaluate Insurers
Step 6: Negotiate
Step 7: Review Before Purchasing
Red Flags:
Money-Saving Strategies:
Increase Deductibles:
Bundle Policies:
Improve Credit Score:
Reduce Coverage on Older Vehicles:
Ask About Discounts:
Shop Regularly:
Improve Risk Profile:
Deliverables:
| Action | Command/Trigger |
|---|---|
| Policy review | "Review [policy type] coverage for [situation]" |
| Coverage gap analysis | "Identify coverage gaps in [policy]" |
| Claim evaluation | "Is [scenario] covered under [policy type]?" |
| Insurance comparison | "Compare [policy A] vs [policy B]" |
| Coverage recommendation | "How much [coverage type] do I need for [situation]?" |
| Claim guidance | "Steps to file [claim type]" |
| Deductible analysis | "Should I increase deductible to [amount]?" |
| Insurer evaluation | "Is [insurance company] reputable?" |
| Risk assessment | "What insurance does [business type] need?" |
| Exclusion interpretation | "Does [exclusion] apply to [scenario]?" |
Myth: Red cars cost more to insure. Reality: Color doesn't affect rates. Vehicle make/model, value, and safety features do.
Myth: Homeowners covers flood damage. Reality: Flood is specifically excluded. Need separate flood policy (NFIP or private).
Myth: Comprehensive auto covers everything. Reality: "Comprehensive" just means non-collision damage (theft, vandalism, weather). Not everything.
Myth: Credit doesn't affect rates. Reality: Insurance scores (based on credit) heavily influence rates in most states.
Myth: Your insurance follows the car. Reality: Usually follows the driver. If you lend your car, your insurance is primary.
Myth: Business use of personal auto is covered. Reality: Typically excluded. Need commercial auto or business use endorsement.
Myth: Home business is covered by homeowners. Reality: Very limited coverage ($2,500 typical). Need home business or commercial policy.
Myth: Earthquake coverage is included. Reality: Specifically excluded in most states. Need separate earthquake policy.
High Confidence Areas:
Medium Confidence Areas:
Requires Specialist Expertise:
Always Consult Professionals For:
Insurance Information:
Consumer Protection:
Comparison Tools:
Claims Assistance:
Education:
Final Reminder: Insurance is a contract. Coverage depends on specific policy language, which varies by insurer and state. This skill provides general education and analytical frameworks, but it is NOT insurance advice or legal counsel. Always work with licensed insurance professionals, read your actual policy documents, and consult attorneys for coverage disputes or legal questions. When in doubt, ask questions before you buy and before you have a claim.