Professional Lines Insurance

Through our expertise, market access and proprietary products, Amwins' professional lines insurance specialists find solutions for accounts of all sizes and complexities.

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When it comes to expertise and efficiency, we've got you covered.

Professional lines placements often require in-depth knowledge and relationships in a myriad of product lines and classes. As a trusted partner and extension of your team, our #1 priority is to secure the best solution for you and your clients as efficiently as possible. 

We tap into our broad market access, including limited distribution and wholesale-only markets, as well as exclusive products to get deals done. We package the quotes for you, making you look good to your clients and freeing you up to grow your business.

Expertise

Through decades of experience, our specialists tailor policy forms to meet the insured’s unique needs with negotiated enhancements and manuscript wording where applicable.

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Collaboration

When you work with Amwins, you’re accessing the expertise of 650 professional lines specialists across our practice. Our combined scale with our market partners helps secure the best terms for your clients.

Strategic Approach

Our proprietary account management technology ensures we’re tapping the right markets for your account – giving us an efficient and strategic approach to marketing

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International capacity

With boots on the ground in London and Bermuda, our colleagues at Amwins Global Risks and Amwins Bermuda have direct access and strong relationships within these key international marketplaces.

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$3B

annual premium placements

190K

submissions received annually


700

dedicated professionals

Professional lines areas of specialty

Management Liability

From alleged wrongful acts, violations of employment laws, breaches of fiduciary and more – exposures faced by those involved in running a company are vast. Amwins' areas of expertise span Directors & Offices Liability (D&O), Employment Practices Liability (EPL), Fiduciary, Crime, and more.

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Healthcare

Healthcare organizations face a wide range of professional liability risks. We have expertise in various segments of the healthcare industry including long-term care, hospitals, physicians, allied healthcare, and social services.

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Cyber Liability 

From ransomware and phishing scams to social engineering, cyber-crime is constantly evolving. Our cyber specialists are entrenched in this business – leveraging their expertise, market relationships, and resources to place cyber coverage for a wide array of insureds.

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Professional Liability (E&O)

Anyone who provides a service to others for compensation is at risk for a professional liability or errors & omissions (E&O) claim. Our specialists ensure your client's policy is designed to cover the specific service being performed. Our expertise includes coverage for accountants, architects & engineers, contractors, lawyers, medical professionals, and much more. 

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Financial Institutions

Claims alleging errors or omissions can span numerous industries and licensed professionals. We have expertise in placing E&O coverage for contractors, real estate agents, manufacturers, architects & engineers, lawyers, technology suppliers, and investment advisors & brokers/dealers, among others. Whatever segment your insureds operate in, we've got your back.

Other Specialty Coverages

We help our clients with solutions across crime, FI bonds, fiduciary, kidnap & ransom, reps & warranties, abuse & molestation, mortgage impairment, patent infringement, educators legal liability and general partnership liability. 

 

Amwins InstantQuote provides firm, bindable quotes from up to 13 carriers within minutes. Targeting small and middle market businesses, our digital solutions combine the ease and convenience of online quoting with the scale of the nation’s largest wholesaler.


 

In-house professional lines products + programs

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Partnerships with industry-leading cyber security service providers

Amwins offers our clients discounts with industry-leading cyber security service providers who can help insureds improve their risk profile.

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Data & Analytics + Benchmarking

Our proprietary cyber benchmarking tool analyzes data from thousands of cyber liability placements, then determines a reasonable policy limit and premium relative to those in similar industries and revenue ranges.

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Claims advocacy

In-house claim advocates that help resolve coverage disputes, service issues, valuation discrepancies, and payment challenges.

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Professional Lines resources + insights

Stay up to date on emerging liability insurance trends and topics

The Cost of a Data Breach

Nov 17, 2020, 02:23 AM
There is a tremendous potential risk for merchants when it comes to the fines and penalties associated with data breaches – not to mention the public relations nightmare that could follow. Many insurers are hesitant to provide the capacity that is needed for the exposure that exists. Are your clients aware of the Cyberliability solutions that will cover them in the event of a breach?
Title : The Cost of a Data Breach
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Date : Jan 15, 2015, 05:00 AM
In recent years, we’ve seen data breaches at the likes of Target, Hope Depot, Dairy Queen, Staples and Neiman Marcus, and there have been countless others at lesser known retailers around the U.S. Many of these breaches involve the theft of debit or credit card information. While there is much focus on the consumer in these situations, in reality they have a relatively painless experience. Because of a variety of state and federal laws, consumers are made aware of the breach and are often provided with free credit monitoring for a year. Further, their credit or debit card is replaced and, in general, consumers aren’t held accountable for any fraudulent charges. 

Retailers, on the other hand, not only suffer a public relations nightmare, but are susceptible to fines, penalties, and additional costs related to the loss of payment card data. In 2006, American Express, Discover Financial Services, JCB International, MasterCard, and Visa Inc. formed the Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council (PCI SSC). According to their website, the PCI SSC “develops, maintains, and manages the PCI Security Standards, which include the Data Security Standard (DSS), Payment Application Data Security Standard (PA-DSS), and PIN Transaction Security (PTS) Requirements.” However, penalties for noncompliance are not imposed by the PCI SSC, but rather by the “payment brands and their partners.” 

Essentially, you have a council that cannot legally make a retail merchant be (or stay) compliant and, in the end, has no legislative authority to order reconciliatory action. So why is the PCI SSC of concern to retailers? Merchants that want to accept payment from the member companies must comply with the standards of the five organizations and, increasingly, merchants have to adapt to a market space that is increasingly driven by the use of credit and debit cards. According to the Federal Reserve Board, in 2012 there were an estimated 122.8 billion non-cash transactions, excluding wire transfers, with a value of $79 trillion. Now imagine not having the ability to accept the five major credit card brands.  

However, PCI SSC compliance doesn’t alleviate all concern. If a breach occurs, the retailer can be held responsible for fraud losses, the cost to reissue cards, and any additional fraud prevention and detection costs incurred by credit or debit card issuers. These costs will impact large, financially sound retailers, but they can cripple a smaller merchant. 

Traditional insurance policies are triggered by a legal action against an insured and usually exclude the breach of a contract the insured has entered into – an obvious conflict as contracts are the building blocks of the payment card industry.  Basically, a merchant contracts with a payment processor or bank which allows the merchant to accept payments via a credit or debit card. This contract is a Merchant Service Agreement (MSA).  When a sale occurs, the transaction is reconciled by the consumer’s card issuing bank or brand and funds are deposited into the merchant’s account. With a breach, it is common for card brands and banks to reconcile fraudulent charges back to the event and push associated costs back to the retailer.  When the charges are pushed back on the merchant as the source of the breach, there is a contractual obligation defined by the terms of the MSA, which can include significant fines depending on the particular credit card company or other financial remedies paid back to the merchant bank. Claims made insurance policies are generally triggered by demands for damages or lawsuits; these charges don’t necessarily fit that definition of claim.

How can retailers insure against the financial burden of an assessment and fines/penalties that accompany a breach and the theft of credit or debit card information?  Many carriers are at a crossroads. Underwriters recognize a systemic exposure across retail merchants accepting payment cards, but providing a solution means:
  1. amending the form to get around a breach of contract exclusion inherent in most policies,
  2. amending the definition of claim to respond to PCI DSS actions, and
  3. providing affirmative coverage for an indefensible punishment from a quasi-regulatory authority.
Further, the coverage grant is often made on the reliance that insureds are PCI compliant, yet the compliance model offers them no protection in the event of a breach.  In other words, there’s no immunity from punishment even if a retailer demonstrates that they are following the standards set by PCI.  

Understandably, many insurers are hesitant to provide the capacity that is needed in the retail space.  While there are solutions available, only a handful of markets offer full limits with coverage for most PCI-related costs.  More often, carriers limit their liability by providing small limits, only picking up certain portions of the exposure, providing defense only coverage, or only covering certain types of fines.  

It is increasingly important to know the costs associated with payment card breaches and be sure to find the right Cyberliability insurance solutions that will cover your client in the event of a breach.  Members of the AmWINS Financial Services Practice are available to help you find and understand the solutions available in the insurance marketplace.


 
This article was authored by Marc Lysse, an AmWINS Financial Services Practice Member in our Atlanta, GA office.
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