Friday, December 29, 2006

Christmas and Insurance - The Secret Link

Depending on your religion if you’re asked about Christmas words such as “Jesus”, “Santa”, “Turkey” or “Queens Speech” may spring to mind. Asked which words you think of when asked about Insurance may well produce a few others! So what do Christmas and Insurance really have in common?

1. Although many people may wish Christmas occurred more often as we all know it happens just the once a year. Much like most insurance policies with their annual renewal date. Indeed the first line of the famous Christmas song "12 days of Christmas" could be perfect for the Insurance industry as the first principle of Insurance is that of Indemnity (that is if you suffer a loss you will put back in the same financial position you were in before you suffered the loss).

How very different the song would have been if our dear friend the Partridge in the pear tree was instead replaced with:

On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me the principle of indemnity.

Whilst the principle of indemnity is one of the best things about insurance not everyone would appreciate receiving it from their loved one.

2. Does the following story sound familiar? You're sat around the Christmas tree on Christmas morning looking at all the presents Santa has left behind. You're hoping that the rather large box with your name on it contains the latest (play station, IPOD, perfume, brew your own beet kit in hours or whatever gift you were longing for) only for you to rip it apart and find inside a (cake baked by your aunt, a box of cheap aftershave, jumper knitted by your Gran with the only 2 colours of wool she had left – pink and yellow – or whatever gift you didn't want).

If this does indeed sound like a familiar Christmas tale in your household then for some people insurance can sometimes throw up the same feeling. You may have taken out an insurance policy and expected it to cover you in the event of a loss occurring only to find out (too late) that it doesn't. So what can you do when it comes to insurance to try and prevent this? Well that leads us to number 3.

3. Your research will be rewarded. Remember all those hints that your wife/husband/children have dropped in the days, weeks and months leading up to Christmas about the present they would really like? Well if you've been paying attention and have made notes in the run up to Christmas and have actually gone to the trouble of buying people what they want then there's every chance you'll have a very merry Christmas.

Depending on your religion if you’re asked about Christmas words such as “Jesus”, “Santa”, “Turkey” or “Queens Speech” may spring to mind. Asked which words you think of when asked about Insurance may well produce a few others! So what do Christmas and Insurance really have in common?

1. Although many people may wish Christmas occurred more often as we all know it happens just the once a year. Much like most insurance policies with their annual renewal date. Indeed the first line of the famous Christmas song "12 days of Christmas" could be perfect for the Insurance industry as the first principle of Insurance is that of Indemnity (that is if you suffer a loss you will put back in the same financial position you were in before you suffered the loss).

How very different the song would have been if our dear friend the Partridge in the pear tree was instead replaced with:

On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me the principle of indemnity.

Whilst the principle of indemnity is one of the best things about insurance not everyone would appreciate receiving it from their loved one.

2. Does the following story sound familiar? You're sat around the Christmas tree on Christmas morning looking at all the presents Santa has left behind. You're hoping that the rather large box with your name on it contains the latest (play station, IPOD, perfume, brew your own beet kit in hours or whatever gift you were longing for) only for you to rip it apart and find inside a (cake baked by your aunt, a box of cheap aftershave, jumper knitted by your Gran with the only 2 colours of wool she had left – pink and yellow – or whatever gift you didn't want).

If this does indeed sound like a familiar Christmas tale in your household then for some people insurance can sometimes throw up the same feeling. You may have taken out an insurance policy and expected it to cover you in the event of a loss occurring only to find out (too late) that it doesn't. So what can you do when it comes to insurance to try and prevent this? Well that leads us to number 3.

3. Your research will be rewarded. Remember all those hints that your wife/husband/children have dropped in the days, weeks and months leading up to Christmas about the present they would really like? Well if you've been paying attention and have made notes in the run up to Christmas and have actually gone to the trouble of buying people what they want then there's every chance you'll have a very merry Christmas.

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