Business continuity planning can start with arts and science and business professors sitting down and designing a viable curriculum in terms of needs and wants. Leave their guns and swords outside the room. Work together.
After years of an impersonal culture that focused on transaction management, workers’ compensation is often looked at through a negative lens instead of as a benefit — but that is all changing.
COVID-19 forced change. Professors are finding new and better ways to deliver content, evaluate success of learning and respond to changing needs and demands of students and their families.
When professional services firms are sued by clients, the likelihood of an insurance claim increases when the client suffers a significant loss. Now’s the time to get a grip on the claims landscape and prepare risk management tools to assess and address exposures.
A recent ransomware attack on the Colonial Pipeline left much of the Eastern U.S. in fear of serious fuel shortages. This attack highlights inconsistencies and weakness within the U.S. IoT cyber security capabilities.
The vast majority of workplace wellness programs are inadequate to meet the needs of a multicultural workforce. This is particularly concerning given the push by employers to build an inclusive workplace.
With airplanes sitting on the ground, there are two forms of rust that pose significant risks as pilots prepare to take to the skies — pilot recency and equipment corrosion.
COVID-19 has brought forth an influx of business interruption claims as companies shutdown by the pandemic seek retribution. But the courts must determine if actual physical loss has occurred.
The telehealth task at hand for risk managers and their insurance partners is to help preserve the balance of patient privacy with all the good that has come — and will come — from telemedicine.