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Employee Benefits Health Insurance

Healthcare and Group Life Insurance Plans

Tycoinsurance Employee Benefits can offer a full review of the healthcare market as well as advice and proactive management of group healthcare and health cash plans.

The Group Private Medical Insurance (PMI) market is a changing one, which is seeing significant price rises due to the increased costs within private medicine. However, we are able to not merely ‘broke’ this type of arrangement, but negotiate and work with the ‘whole of market’ to ensure that an employers needs and circumstances are understood by the healthcare insurance underwriters.

It is possible to make significant savings to group health insurance, while also improving the cover that is being provided. Our experiences show that unless you know your client and understand their needs, it is difficult to provide a tailored and appropriate solution.

At Tyco we do take time to work with, and understand, our clients and ensure that recommended providers supply the levels of medical and dental cover that are needed. It may well be that, in particular areas, NHS hospitals are appropriate for some clients, thus potentially reducing costs.

Our specialist team know the healthcare market inside out and can ensure that all group health insurance plans are monitored to remain cost effective for clients.

In addition to the conventional group PMI cover, we can also provide advice on a range of other complementary services, including:

  • Cash Plans
  • Dental Plans
  • Hospital Plans
  • International Healthcare

Tycoinsurance Employee Benefits provides innovative advice and solutions from the ‘whole of market’ for Group Life Assurance, Group Income Protection and Group Critical Illness. Consultancy on business protection insurance is also an important additional proposition we can provide for clients.

It is not merely a question of getting the best rate, based upon a list of data. However, our service in this specialist field does mean that we can secure the best possible rates for your Group Life Assurance (GLA), Spouse/Dependants Pensions, Group Income Protection (GPHi) and Group Critical Illness (CIC).

Getting data that is as accurate as possible helps to provide accurate and competitive results. Issues, such as catastrophe limits, could also be a serious consideration for some clients.

Absence management tracking can provide an employer with valuable data and, with this, we can assist with addressing related issues.

With Group Income Protection insurance there are many different ways in which cover could be considered, such as restricting the term the payments are paid or increasing the deferred period.

Discrimination legislation is another area in which we can provide proactive advice on all aspects of group risk and, indeed, employee benefits in general.

While not technically group risk, we also provide a full proposition around business protection insurance. This can include Keyman Insurance (also known as Keyperson insurance), Co-shareholder cover and Partnership Protection.

In addition, if you require individual life assurance, critical illness cover or any personal protection cover, we can assist.

Categories
Employee Benefits

Employee Benefit Pension and Defined Contribution

We can advise companies on what type of pension to offer to employees. In the current market, there are two main pension schemes, known as Defined Benefit Pension and Defined Contribution Pension.

A Defined Benefit Pension, also known as Final Salary Pension, is a pension plan in which the monthly payment on retirement is the basis of the ‘defined’ formula used to calculate the employee’s pension contributions.

A Defined Contribution Pension is a pension plan where employee’s individual contributions are invested in, for example, the stock market or pension investment funds, and the returns on investments are then put into the individual’s pension pot. Contributions in this pension plan are defined, however the outcome will only be known once the employee is looking to retire.

The two main areas of pension scheme advice we can offer through HEB are listed below; clicking on the links will bring you to more detailed pages. Each area includes a wide-ranging variety of aspects; therefore all of our client solutions are bespoke and are established to ensure the individual requirements of every client are met.

Defined Contribution Pension Consulting

Henderson Employee Benefits specialise in the communication of benefits to employees on behalf of the employer, thus ensuring value to the employer for the non-monetary benefits of an employee remuneration package.

Our team of advisers specialise in both the setting up of new pension schemes, but also being appointed to assist employers in communicating the benefits of existing pension schemes and ensuring compliance with current legislation.

Our range of services include advice on design, provider choice, employee communications and all administration interactions between providers and employees working for companies who choose to offer Defined Contribution Pensions.

A Defined Contribution Pension is a pension plan where employee’s individual contributions are invested in, for example, the stock market or pension investment funds, and the returns on investments are then put into the individual’s pension pot. Contributions in this pension plan are defined, however the outcome will only be known once the employee is looking to retire.

The Defined Contribution Pension consultancy service is not purely aimed at providing advice and recommendations for a provider, but about providing an integrated, ongoing service.

It is important for employees to understand their employee benefits and what choices they have. This could be in the form of group personal pension, group stakeholder pension or group occupational pension schemes. The message and the focus to help engage the employees is the same.

Pension investment is often an area for which most employees don’t understand. This is often due to what appears to be over-complicated and technical material, and a lack of good communication from company advisers. Our experiences show that this should not, and does not need to be the case.

All employers will be forced to think long and hard in the next few years with the government’s launch of NEST pensions (National Employment Savings Trust), which will have an impact on all employers and most employees. We can assist in ensuring that both employers and employees take full advantage of these legislative changes.

Defined Benefit Pension Consulting

Henderson Employee Benefits (HEB) provides advice to employers and / or trustees in managing the risk of what is normally now, the employers ‘legacy’ scheme.

A defined benefit (DB) pension, also known as Final Salary Pension, is a pension scheme which the pension on retirement is on the basis of a defined formula such that the employee has a certain known level of pension, based on service and earnings. The employer though has a potentially open needed pension liability.

HEB can provide advice to employers and trustees on all key issues such as;

  • Pension accrual cessation
  • Deficit recovery plans
  • Compliance with The Regulator Codes of Practice via secretarial support for Trustees
  • Pension Scheme wind up
  • Enhanced transfer value exercises

We also have experience of providing a full range of consultancy advice to schemes entering the PPF (pension protection fund), which is a statutory fund founded to ensure continuity in pensions when employers become insolvent.

Categories
Health Insurance

How to Locate a Lost Life Insurance Policy

When a loved one dies, one of the first things you have to do in this painful time, is access their life insurance policy. However, many times policyholders fail to divulge information to their family members as to where their policy has been stored, for various reasons. Searching for a lost policy, especially when a family is in dire financial need, can be quite a draining exercise, more so when you are also trying to come to grips with the loss of a loved one.

How can you make the search for a lost life policy more fruitful, and less stressful? Here are some pointers:

Check the deceased’s bank documents:

Checks and credit cards are the most common ways that people in the US pay their life insurance premiums. The first place to check is your loved one’s check books and credit card statements (to see if any payments were made to life insurance companies). If this doesn’t work, ask the bank for any life insurance-related ECS (electronic clearing service) transfers. Some banks also offer policies at subsidized rates to their customers, so you will need to check with the bank if your loved one’s bank account is linked to any of their policies.

Contact the deceased’s employer: Many people opt for a group insurance if their employer has the facility. Contact your employer to check if a) your loved one had such an insurance policy, and b) if a component of his deductions was going towards insurance premiums.

Contact the deceased’s friends:

Because the topic of life insurance can be frightening or uncomfortable for family members, many prefer to discuss and plan their life insurance with close friends rather than with family. Get in touch with your loved one’s circle of friends and confidantes, and they may be able to give you a clue.

Address book or phone contacts:

If your loved one had insurance, it is very likely that he has kept his agent’s contact details handy either in a book, or on his cell phone. Check these sources.

Request access to their email id:

If your loved one has searched for his policy online, there might be information in his or her email account. Most email service providers will hand over access to a deceased user’s email account, after making sure that you are in fact closely connected, and requesting for an authorized death certificate. However, it may take you as long as 30 days to finally get access to the account. When you do get access, search on key words such as “life insurance” “policy number”, “term life insurance quote” or “affordable life insurance” to locate relevant emails quickly.

Contact online brokerage firms:

Since online brokerage firms deal with hundreds of insurance companies, it might be possible that your loved one has purchased insurance through them. Most online agencies offer free term life quotes, and if one of these was offered to your loved ones, they will have a record of the same, and if your loved one has purchased a policy based on the free life insurance quote.

Enlist the help of professional policy-finding services:

When you have searched everywhere with no results, perhaps it is time to enlist help. There are a few individuals and companies who offer professional help to trace your loved one’s policy.

MIB Group has a Policy Locator service that has a record of all policies applied for in the last 13 years. For a nominal fee of $75 they will search through their database of applications and let you know if your loved one had applied for a policy, and if so, the name of the insurance company. You have to then contact the insurance company and check if a policy had been issued on that application.

Lost Life Insurance Finder Expert is a service that will fax letters to hundreds of customer service centers at insurance companies asking if your loved one had any policies enlisting you as a beneficiary. They charge a nominal fee, which is much less than it would cost you to fax letters on your own steam, not to mention saving you the time it would have taken you to compile insurance companies’ contact information.

Finally, if some time has elapsed since your loved one’s death, MissingMoney.com is a website that offers you a free online search of life insurance policies which have been deemed unclaimed and transferred to the state.

When you locate the policy, check if it’s a term life policy or a permanent one. If it’s a term life insurance policy, check that the term has not expired. If it has, then you won’t be able to collect death benefits on it. Similarly, with a permanent life insurance policy, you will be able to collect the benefits only if premium payments are up to date.

There is a good chance that the deceased may have had more than one insurance policy. Usually if you locate one policy, other policies are easier to locate as the application of the located policy usually contains details on other life insurance policies owned at the time of purchasing the policy.

As you can see, all the hassle of trying to locate a policy can be avoided if you have first hand information on your loved ones’ insurance details. If you are a policyholder remember to keep your policy where your family can find it, or better still, keep them informed of the policy details as soon as it is purchased.