The start of a new year often brings renewed focused on financial planning. Yet one critical area is frequently left on autopilot: insurance.
Insurance is not a “set it and forget it” decision. It’s a living strategy that should evolve alongside your business, assets, and personal financial picture. As organizations grow and professionals accumulate assets, small changes can quietly introduce exposure that only becomes visible when it’s too late.
Mt. Franklin Insurance functions as an expert advisor, not a passive policy provider. Regular reviews and guidance are essential, and if your broker isn’t offering that, it’s worth finding one who will.
Here are a few reasons the new year is an ideal time for an insurance review:
Growth changes risk.
Expansion, new locations, additional equipment, higher revenues, or new responsibilities can all affect how much protection is truly needed and where.
Life doesn’t stand still.
New properties, vehicles, investments, or family changes often happen faster than policies get updated. Over time, this can lead to misaligned coverage limits or overlooked exposures.
Markets shift.
Insurance markets, underwriting standards, and coverage options change. What made sense a few years ago may no longer be the most efficient or protective structure today.
Complexity increases with success.
As wealth and business operations grow, so does the importance of coordination between insurance, legal, and financial planning. Gaps often appear at the intersections.
An annual review isn’t about expecting problems, it’s about confirming readiness. It’s a chance to validate that coverage still matches reality, identify areas worth adjusting, and ensure there’s a clear understanding of how policies respond when needed.
The most effective leaders treat insurance the same way they treat financials or operations: reviewed regularly, aligned with strategy, and adjusted intentionally.
As the year gets underway, consider whether your insurance program reflects where you are now not where you were when the policy was first written.
A short conversation today can prevent costly surprises tomorrow.



