10 Red Flags That Usually Mean the Coverage Does Not Fit
A clean page should make the decision easier, not harder.
A bad fit is usually obvious if you know what to look for.
The address is wrong, the named insured is stale, or the policy still describes an older version
of the business.
The quote is full of jargon but short on exclusions, limits, and real examples.
The carrier or agent cannot explain what changed after a new vehicle, subcontractor, or location
was added.
A strong directory entry should remove that kind of confusion instead of adding to it.
What is the quickest sign that a policy is not really built for the business?