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Business Protect Limited

Victoria Road, Macclesfield, Cheshire

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‘19 Certificate of Excellence, 2019

About

Business Protect was started by Martin after 7 years in the financial services industry and seeing how a) banks treated their clients knowingly and b) how little generalist practitioners knew about the niche products that exist in the business protection sector.

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5/5

1 customer review

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7 November 2017

We have found Martin to be diligent, honest and very helpful in getting our insurance sorted. I don't think he has an easy job having to deal with the different providers but he kept us up to date and found options for us when things changed. I would happily recommend Business Protect LTD for financial services. More...

Services

A review of what you have in place, the worst case scenario being that I confirm what you have in place is good value, fit for purpose and properly set up.

If you don't have anything in place an overview of products available and their suitability to your personal situation will be undertaken.

This is a free service but only undertaken for genuine enquiries with a budget for Busiess Protection at a minimum of £50 per month.

This is my guide below:

10 Questions you need to ask yourself before setting up Business Protection

What is your budget? It doesn’t matter what you need if you can’t afford it. Most businesses can’t afford “ideal world” protection because they don’t live in an ideal world. Set a budget that you can afford for now on an ongoing basis. Whatever that budget is…some protection is better than none at all.
What is your biggest priority? In most cases it’s making sure you and your family or dependants don’t suffer financially if you die or suffer a critical illness and your business folds as a result. Second to that is usually business survival. Prioritising means you can take care of the most important things first.
Who is crucial to the ongoing success of your business? Is it just you? Are you a one person band? If YOU can’t work is there no revenue? Can you get someone else to do your work if you are ill? Are there people in your business that are crucial to your business functioning on a daily basis? Sales, admin, financial, IT. If X didn’t turn up on Monday morning what impact does that have…what if they don’t turn up for 6 months or ever again?
What is your business worth with you and without you? It’s one thing selling a business while you still own and run it, another thing entirely someone else selling your business if you are unfortunate enough to pre-decease it. Will your beneficiaries get fair value? Will your staff stay on when approached by head-hunters seeing an opportunity to poach quality staff nervous about their security if tenure? Will the bank call in loans or overdrafts?
Do you want to be in business with your business partner’s spouse/beneficiary? If a shareholder dies and leaves the shares to their spouse, congratulations, you are in business with them whether you like it or not. They may have a controlling share and revert to salary only remuneration cutting off dividend revenue or decide to sell to a competitor.
Do you have a share/partnership agreement? If you do great but an unfunded partnership or shareholder agreement isn’t worth the paper it’s written on. It’s all very well saying “I’ll buy your shares in the event of…” but you need the funds to do it. Going to the bank manager and saying “My MD/FD?Sales Director etc. has just died, will you lend me the money to buy the shares from their beneficiary please?” isn’t a plan and guess what the most likely answer is…..no.
Do you have directors loans or a building in a SIPP? Directors loans and pension arrangements are repayable to the estate on the death of a director. This can be a massive hit to cash flow and try selling half a building.
Have you signed any personal guarantees against loans or overdrafts? If so the last thing you want to happen is the bank turning up on your doorstep saying “I’m sorry about the death of your partner Mr/Mrs spouse, but they signed a PG so I’m afraid we’re selling your house” It’s basic stuff but it needs covering off. You have to cover your ass(ets).
What is your exit/succession strategy? Do you plan to sell, pass on the business or work forever? Most business owners are doing it for a better life for themselves and their loved ones which eventually means passing on the fruits of your labour. It’s good to have an exit strategy, that “deck chair on the beach” plan. It’s also smart to cover off the possibility of an unplanned exit.
Who should I really talk to about Business Protection? An expert, you don’t ask a GP perform brain surgery on you, you need to speak to someone that does Business Protection day in and day out. They have their finger on the pulse of current products and solutions. You can’t be good at everything so seek out a specialist and take advice.

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