| KEY PERSON
LIFE INSURANCE
Andrew Carnegie once said, “Take
away my factories, my plants, take away my railroads, my ships,
my transportation, take away my money, strip me of all of
these, but leave me my men and in two or three years I will
have them all again.”
All business success is dependent on
its men and women, and every organization has one or more
key people. Their ability, talent and expertise is that “intangible
asset value” which may outweigh the brick and mortar,
equipment, accounts receivable and inventory in contributing
to the success of the business.
Whether the business is a proprietorship,
partnership or corporation, there are key people, such as:
the founder who built the business; the executive who formulates
and executes policy; the engineer who schedules and supervises
production; the treasurer who plans budgets, arranges financing
and controls costs; or the sales manager who analyzes the
market and promotes the sale of products or services. The
knowledge, leadership, judgment or connections of these key
people are what make things happen profitably.
The death of a key person can result
in serious consequences for the business. Credit could be
substantially impaired, or even worse, loans would be called
if the key person were a co-signer. If a business loan has
been guaranteed by one or more officers of a company, most
loan documents permit the lender to call the loan in full
upon the death of any co-signer. This can be very burdensome
to a company already suffering the loss of an essential member
of the management group.
The loss of that “intangible asset
value” represented by the key person may be greater
than that caused by a fire, flood or other catastrophe.
When insuring a loss through death, permanent
whole life insurance accumulates reserves that may be used
for the ultimate retirement, termination or the retraining
of successors.
Businesses insure against casualty
losses and the same technique is appropriate for losses of
key people. The difference is that one might never have a
fire, but each key person will disappear someday through death,
disability, retirement or termination.
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