SandCounter
Mechanical
- Apr 24, 2006
- 253
I am currently in an industry facing a downturn. While many are being laid off, others are jumping ship. I feel a commitment to see my position through to the end but have a fear of showing a gap in my employment when my day comes. I decided to do all of the paper work, fees, submissions, licensing to start my own firm (sole proprietor) to keep in my back pocket so I can do consulting right out of the gate (Phase 1). Now, with my firm on the books, I am trying to figure out the best way to start out (Phase 2).
Insurance is my biggest question at this point. I understand that while professional E&O insurance is costly, it is an imperative. I also understand that it can be a process to initiate. I am trying to plan how to approach it and could use advice. Particularly, how to balance shouldering the cost of sufficient coverage with potentially scant cliental for the first several months. Here are some thoughts, but I would like constructive input:
[ul]
[li]Start off offering only drafting, with the understanding the client is responsible for the engineering.[/li]
[li]Offer only low risk (if there is such a thing) services (could use suggestions on what this might be).[/li]
[li]Scrutineering, that is evaluating other's designs against manufacturer spec sheets and application manuals.[/li]
[/ul]
All of this understanding that my goal is to do it right and be insured once the workload can sustain the cost. Thanks in advance for any input.
Insurance is my biggest question at this point. I understand that while professional E&O insurance is costly, it is an imperative. I also understand that it can be a process to initiate. I am trying to plan how to approach it and could use advice. Particularly, how to balance shouldering the cost of sufficient coverage with potentially scant cliental for the first several months. Here are some thoughts, but I would like constructive input:
[ul]
[li]Start off offering only drafting, with the understanding the client is responsible for the engineering.[/li]
[li]Offer only low risk (if there is such a thing) services (could use suggestions on what this might be).[/li]
[li]Scrutineering, that is evaluating other's designs against manufacturer spec sheets and application manuals.[/li]
[/ul]
All of this understanding that my goal is to do it right and be insured once the workload can sustain the cost. Thanks in advance for any input.