Many of the incoming policies, whether domestic or international, could affect your bottom line. For example, health care mandates could affect how many workers you are required to cover and how much coverage you are required to provide.
In any given year, new laws might be passed into legislation that could impact your business and the decisions that you make. After an election in which the reins have changed hands, that possibility becomes all but a certainty.
So what should you do about it? Unless you want to become an activist and lobby your legislators, the best that you can do is be prepared. Is it possible to prepare for every eventuality? Of course not. However, it would be imprudent not to make the most basic preparations.
One basic way to prepare is to have a solid, varied base of clientele. If you are counting on a few large clients, you are not preparing yourself for situations in which one of those clients might leave.
You should make sure all your paperwork, such as letters of engagement and contracts, is in order.
Make sure that you have policies in place for use of technology, both current and emerging. Furthermore, make sure all your colleagues and staff follow those policies.
Check that all your bank communications are on file and up to date. Continually update your paperwork, including cash flow forms, and regularly communicate with a bank representative in order to maintain a good working relationship.
Is it possible that a new administration will drag the country into a war? Plan for the worst with insurance. One type to look into includes "business-interruption" coverage, which applies to the business side of your law practice when it is interrupted by a disaster that drastically reduces or even eliminates current revenues.
Business interruption insurance includes business income insurance, which is designed to replace income that otherwise would have been earned by the business had no loss occurred; extra expense insurance, which is coverage designed to pay for necessary expenses incurred during the period of restoration of the property; and contingent business interruption insurance, which is an extension of coverage designed to cover loss of income that you incur in your business owing to a property loss at a key client location.
A disaster can jeopardize confidential client records, work product and other documentation, such as master files, time and billing records, court filings, wills, powers of attorney, corporate records and any other materials that law firms are required to keep.
Many such documents are kept as active computer files and could be compromised by a hacker. Thus, cyber insurance might be a worthwhile investment.
As with any major event, the election will lead to some changes. We will all hope for the best — whatever that may mean to you — but should definitely prepare for the worst.
If you are looking for guidance on how to prepare your firm contact a legal coach today at 800-837-5880.
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