When it comes to insurance in the snow and ice management industry, we’re not in the same landscape we were even a few years ago. Carriers are walking away from the snow sector, underwriting is tougher, and premiums are skyrocketing. But not every company is treated the same, and not every premium jump is inevitable.
The truth is that many contractors unknowingly send up red flags during the insurance procurement process. Others don’t realize they can actively shape their risk profile — and their desirability as a client — long before they talk to a broker.
This article will walk you through what underwriters really look for, and how every role, from leadership to admin, can contribute to making your company the kind that carriers want to insure.
Before we talk about solutions, it’s important to understand the problem. Insurance carriers are fleeing the snow and ice market for a few reasons:
To a carrier, unpredictability = risk. And risk = higher premiums…or a flat-out refusal to quote. But there’s good news: You can flip the script.
Most contractors assume pricing is based mostly on past claims or loss runs. While that’s one consideration, it’s not the whole picture. Underwriters evaluate:
Think of it this way: Insurance companies are betting on your ability to manage risk. You can’t just say you’re safe. You have to prove it.
Insurance doesn’t have to feel like a gamble. By taking strategic, documented steps throughout the year, your company can sit in the driver’s seat — not just the hot seat — when renewal time comes.
Executives: Tell the right story with the right evidence
Executive leadership plays a critical role in setting the tone and strategy for insurance positioning. Start by asking yourself:
Work with your broker or insurance consultant to prepare a narrative and data package that reflects who you really are — not just what happened last year.
Also, consider engaging with an industry consultant to evaluate your risk profile from a carrier’s point of view. It’s often the missing piece that changes everything.
Operations: Make the invisible visible
Operations staff are the boots on the ground and the linchpins of defensible documentation. But unless your work is recorded, time-stamped and clear, underwriters won’t be able to see it, which won’t help your case.
Ensure your team is:
Ensure your team is NOT:
Carriers love to see predictability and repeatability. Your documentation is proof that your company isn’t just reacting, you’re operating with control.
Admins: Simplify annual insurance prep
While executives or owners may lead the charge in insurance negotiations, administrative professionals often carry the weight of assembling the data that shapes how your company is perceived. From contract files and training logs to service documentation and safety records, much of what brokers and underwriters evaluate originates from systems you help maintain. If that responsibility lands on your desk each year, here’s how to make the process smoother for you and for your company’s bottom line.
Build a centralized archive — and use it
Start by establishing a single, secure digital location where you store the records that insurance carriers care about most:
This doesn’t have to be complicated. Even a well-organized folder structure on a shared drive works if it’s backed up and consistently used year round.
Make “pulling reports” a monthly habit
Don’t wait until renewal season to scramble through the year’s worth of documentation. Set a recurring reminder to export or archive key reports regularly. For example:
These can be added to a “Carrier Packet” folder throughout the year, making you well-prepared when your broker asks for supporting documents.
Work with operations to standardize input
Your job is easier when the data comes in clean. Partner with your operations team to standardize how service logs, training attendance, and safety incidents are reported. If everyone’s using a consistent format (whether through software or a shared form), it reduces time spent sorting or clarifying later. Be sure you know:
Know what insurers want and don’t want
Not every piece of data you collect is useful for insurance purposes. Focus on records that show consistency, professionalism and risk awareness. These include:
At the same time, be extremely cautious about including sensitive or poorly framed materials like ambiguous photos or raw GPS data that could be misinterpreted without context. Keep in mind, it is safer to have no data than the wrong data.
Create a summary dashboard
Before renewal season, create a one-page internal dashboard that summarizes:
This isn’t just a convenience for your leadership, it shows your broker that you run a tight, well-documented operation. When you can hand over organized materials and clear summaries, your company becomes more insurable, and sometimes more affordable to insure.
The strategic checklist: Are you ready?
Ken Boegeman is the president of SG Advantage and Swinter Group. He has over 13 years of experience as a snow and ice slip and fall expert as well as over 30 years in the snow industry. Contact him at kenb@swintergroup.com.