1 / 26

Guarding Your Company’s WC Rates… and Saving Your Profit Margin

K & R Safety, LLC. Guarding Your Company’s WC Rates… and Saving Your Profit Margin. Presenters: Darrell Harden and Kym Varner Risk Manager. The Impact of Accidents/ Illnesses on Your Company. The cost of accidents/illnesses depends on: How many employees you have

Download Presentation

Guarding Your Company’s WC Rates… and Saving Your Profit Margin

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. K & R Safety, LLC Guarding Your Company’s WC Rates…and Saving Your Profit Margin Presenters: Darrell Harden and Kym Varner Risk Manager

  2. The Impact of Accidents/ Illnesses on Your Company • The cost of accidents/illnesses depends on: • How many employees you have • How many incidents you have • Type of work you do • Value of materials, products or services. • The impact depends on: • Annual turnover • Your profit margin

  3. Facts You Should Know: • For “Start Up” companies or struggling companies, all economic losses are serious. • The loss of skilled workers, even for a few days, has great effect. • The smaller the company, the smaller the cushion. A serious accident could put a small company out of business. • 60% of companies experiencing a disruption longer than 9 days go out of business.

  4. Damage or loss of product/raw materials Repairs to buildings/ equipment Temporary labor/ OT/Extra wages Production delays Investigation time Fines Loss of contracts Legal costs Loss of business reputation Costs Your WC Policy DOES NOT Cover:

  5. Impact on Insurance Premiums A poor claims record will affect the amount you pay in workers compensation, general liability and auto insurance premiums. Your insurance premiums may be increased or insurance coverage may actually be refused.

  6. Examples: • A construction company had several critical/severe claims causing rates to be escalated • A company had an excessive # of claims that were first aid but seen by physician • A company had several claims but were not managed to reduce costs to insurance. • Claims are reviewed for 4 years.

  7. Sample NCCI Worksheet

  8. Sample NCCI Worksheet

  9. Effects of Losses on Emod Using the Sample Worksheet: • 1 $20,000 loss = .82 emod • 10 $2,000 losses = .94 emod • 2 $20,000 losses = .89 emod • 1 $100,000 loss = .95 emod

  10. Effects of Emod on WC Premium Assume $100,000 in premium and the emods calculated above: .74 emod = $74,000 (savings of $26,000) .82 emod = $82,000 .94 emod = $94,000 .89 emod = $89,000 .95 emod = $95,000

  11. Safety is an Expense • No one pays you for being safe. • Companies do not receive checks for safety. • Unfortunately, safety is usually not budgeted. • Safety costs are usually the first reduction. • Safety Managers/Coordinators are “an overhead expense.”

  12. Safety Budget • It is the key to survival. • We tend to budget everything in business except safety. • The consequence of not having a safety budget is obvious. • When a safety issue arises, it is often ‘out of the blue,’ therefore, unprepared companies must dig into meager profit margins to pay for them.

  13. Good News…Safety Budgets Work! • Safety budgets work effectively because someone actually gives time and thought to: • What are safety issues? • What are safety costs? • What is our company’s liability? • What will be relevant for different projects?

  14. How to Budget for Safety • Review safety costs from similar projects. • Create a ‘Safety’ category for your accounts. • Do a Task Analysis BEFORE the task is started. • Helps predict hazards and how they are controlled. • The cost of controlling the hazard should be researched and budgeted. • Get professional advice! A safety advisor/consultant can assist in identifying potential hazards and recommend ways to avoid or control them.

  15. How to Budget for Safety(continued) • Understand what safety costs. • Weigh the costs of owning versus leasing safety equipment. • Factor in the time of maintenance of safety equipment. • Factor in the time for training on relevant safety equipment. • Calculate the cost of safety equipment to be used on projects. • Include these costs in your costs of doing business.

  16. How to Budget for Safety(continued) • Steps 1-3 are effective accounting and business discipline techniques. Used consistently and reviewed regularly, these techniques will take the guess work out of the safety budget. It is true to say that guessing and hoping are not very effective business techniques. • External advice on safety can give your company a much more honest and effective focus for your budgeted safety money.

  17. How to Budget for Safety(continued) • Steps 4 and 5 are paradigm shifts for many companies, especially smaller contractors. The cost of safety, including safety equipment, needs to be a line item expense when calculating the tender/ manufacturing costs.

  18. How to Budget for Safety(continued) • Example: A project may require a contractor’s worker to come on to a construction site for 3 days. • Hard Hats, Safety Glasses • High Visibility Vests, Steel-toed Boots • 2 hours of Project Safety Orientation • Daily Safety Meetings • Hazard Analysis for the day’s activities

  19. How to Budget for Safety(continued) • What is the cost to the employer? • What is charged to the client? • Typically: Parts (Materials) and Labor. • The cost of “labor” is where the cost of doing business is recouped.

  20. How to Budget for Safety(continued) • Safety costs are often unaccounted for and end up coming directly out of the company’s bottom line. • Especially PPE! • It seems unreasonable to charge for the cost of a hard hat or a pair of safety glasses when they will only be used on the site for a few days. Therefore, they don’t get charged out, and “hopefully” the labor rates will make up the difference!

  21. How to Budget for Safety(continued) • Safety equipment costs money. • This equipment is required by clients, by law and by common sense. The cost must be accounted for. • The example above could cost a company about $240 (avg retail) per employee. • In the equipment’s life span (3 years), the cost comes to $22/month/employee. • That cost has to be accounted for somewhere, even if you do get a good deal.

  22. Process of a Safety Budget(Be fair) Assess current spending on safety

  23. Current Expenses/ Budget Items • WC Insurance • GL Insurance (split with other dept’s) • Various Permits (Hazmat, EPA, etc) • Safety Staff • Development of Procedures • Development of Training Programs • Training (Materials) • Training (Attendees time)

  24. Current Expenses/ Budget Items • PPE (per employee) • Safety Equipment (first aid kits, fire extinguishers, etc) • Current accident and injury costs (include estimated hidden costs) • Unaccounted loss/damage to items not reported • Monetary fines from compliance agencies • Current litigation regarding safety (including the time it takes to address the issue)

  25. Budget Must Address Goals • Identify what you want to achieve • Reduction in accidents? • Reduction in employee turnover? • Reduction in insurance costs? • Increase in production? • Decrease in equipment malfunction?

  26. Summary • Accidents/Illnesses cost your company hard-earned dollars! • Your company’s WC premium is most significantly impacted by your emod. • Safety is an expense that must be budgeted. • Safety really does pay!

More Related