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Managing Small Business Risk

As any risk manager can tell you, risk knows no market segment. Large businesses with their multi-million dollar losses may get more attention but small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) face risks as well.

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The difference for these smaller businesses is that the losses they face can’t always be absorbed into their balance sheet. Losses that would be relatively minor for their larger counterparts, could be devastating and could even force an SME to close its doors forever.

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This is why, according to a survey by UK insurer Premierline Direct (part of the Allianz UK Group), it is interesting to see that despite being aware of, and having encountered, many common risks like customer non-payment, supplier issues and natural disaster losses, not all SMEs have been spurred to take action to mitigate future risk. One-fifth of UK SMEs surveyed not only do not have anyone who is responsible for managing risk, but have no plans to manage risks in the future.

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One-quarter do not consult with any specialists for risk management advice. Of course, the majority of SMEs do take risk management measures but closing the gap for the remaining businesses should be a priority.

To illustrate their findings and offer some tips on how SMEs can manage their risks more effectively, Premierline Direct provided the following infographic.

Infographic by Premierline Direct

The Small Business Crisis

Though large, corporate failures are what’s grabbing the headlines these days (such as GM, Extended Stay and Six Flags), there has been another crisis brewing — that of the small business failures.

A recent report issued by Equifax states that commercial bankruptcies almost doubled from March 2008 to March 2009 — a staggering statistic. The Western part of the U.S., including California and Texas, was the hardest hit. Equifax states that Los Angeles, Riverside/San Bernardino and Sacramento metropolitan areas led the nation in small business bankruptcy filings in March 2009.

There were some dramatic increases year-over-year in commercial bankruptcy filings in a number of Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA). The Chicago MSA increased to 199 bankruptcies from 67 in March 2008; Dallas increased to 162 from 73; Portland to 145 from 65 and Denver 157 from 58.

Other hard-hit metro areas during that same month include:

  • Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL
  • Anaheim-Irvine, CA
  • Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX
  • Denver-Aurora, CO
  • San Diego-Carlsbad, CA
  • Oakland-Fremont, CA
  • Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton, OR-WA
  • Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA
  • Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX
  • Oregon (excluding the Portland MSA)
  • California (excluding previously mentioned MSA’s)
  • Seattle-Bellevue-Everest, WA

On the other side, the cities with the fewest small business bankruptcy filings are:

  • Gainesville, Fla.
  • Lafayette, La.
  • Lynchburg, Va.
  • South Bend/Mishawaka, Ind./Mich.
  • Springfield, Mass.
  • Trenton/Ewing, N.J.
  • Amarillo, Tex.
  • Cedar Rapids, Iowa
  • Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, Iowa
  • Durham, N.C.
  • Fayetteville, N.C.

Do you feel that small businesses are hurting in your area? Or are they faring well compared to the corporate giants?