The partnership is aimed at helping Victorian businesses better understand insurance and risk management at a time when many operators are dealing with higher costs, changing compliance obligations and more complex claims environments. The program is expected to include expert-led webinars, in-person events, educational content and tools designed to make insurance decisions easier for business owners who may not have in-house risk expertise.
The timing is important. Reported industry figures linked to the announcement suggest a large share of Australian businesses remain underinsured, while many take an informal or reactive approach to risk management. For small businesses, sole traders, tradies and event operators, that can create real exposure if a customer, supplier or member of the public is injured, or if property is damaged during business activities.
Public liability insurance is often one of the first covers a business considers, but it should not be treated as a set-and-forget purchase. A policy that suited a business two years ago may no longer match current turnover, contracts, premises, staffing arrangements, equipment, products or customer interactions. Growth can be good news, but it can also increase the chance and potential size of a third-party claim.
The announcement also reinforces a broader theme emerging across the insurance market: education is becoming just as important as access to cover. Business owners are being encouraged to understand what their policy does and does not cover, what limits apply, how exclusions work and what information may be needed if a claim occurs.
Practical steps for business owners include:
- reviewing public liability limits against current contracts, lease requirements and event obligations;
- checking whether products liability is included where goods are sold, supplied, repaired or installed;
- updating insurers when business activities, locations or services change;
- keeping clear records of incidents, site safety measures, customer communications and contractor arrangements;
- seeking guidance from a broker or adviser where the business has higher-risk activities or multiple cover needs.
Although the alliance is Victorian-focused, the message is relevant Australia-wide. As premiums, legal costs and claims expectations continue to evolve, businesses that regularly review risk and compare public liability insurance options are better placed to avoid gaps, meet contractual requirements and protect their cash flow when something goes wrong.
Please Note: If this information affects you or is relevant to your circumstances, seek advice from a licensed professional.
