[pianotech] Business insurance/attitudes...

Gregor _ karlkaputt at hotmail.com
Sat Mar 31 02:33:38 MDT 2012


Once I removed a picture frame from the wall behind/above the upright piano and it fell down. It turned out that it was a handmade frame which cost me about 100 Euros. Fortunately it did not fall on the piano! Since that experience I have an insurance (and I don´t remove anything from pianos or walls!). It´s not so expensive, I think I pay about 150 Euros each year. Gregor

------------------------
piano technician - tuner - dealer
Münster, Germany
www.weldert.de

 > From: drjazzca at gmail.com
> Date: Fri, 30 Mar 2012 09:46:19 -0400
> To: pianotech at ptg.org
> Subject: [pianotech] Business insurance/attitudes...
> 
> Hello list
> 
>     A fellow technicians was asked if they had insurance......
>     He in turn asked me what I thought.
> 
>       Upon reflection, it could make  a very interesting discussion.
> 
>  Those that have, any stories of claims made and reason your glad you had it, those that
> Don't, any stories of disaster and wishing you did have it?
> 
>  Below is my response.....
>  Tell me I'm wrong. Tell me why I should reconsider, or not.
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------
> 
>    I have no business insurance.
>     
>     On a few performance gigs at commercial clients, festivals, shopping centers, people
> Are starting to ask for liability insurance. That can be had through the musicians union....
> 
>     For us, in canada, PTG can not cover us, we would have to go through a commercial insurance agent. Expensive.
> 
>     Do i want to work for people that demand I spend more money on more administration, 
> Or be full with people that don't want to force me to spend more time, more energy, 
> More money, for the privilege of tuning their piano. I choose the later.
>      Clients  invite me into their homes and establishments because they like my work, 
> They Ike me, and they trust me. If they don't trust me, and don't like me or want my work bad
> Enough that did does not mitigate other administrative details then I'd rather not do it.
> 
>        It's usually just a piano tuning.
> Do they want insurance from the person that vacuums the rug, waters the plants, plants a rose
> Bush. We are Not like an electrician that could burn down the building, or a plumber that could flood it.  Not like a construction worker that could fall off the roof. Do the musicians need insurance because their flute might fall on someone, or clarinet might explode. A tuning is not working  With power tools, working in a crowd of people, etc. it's more like a musician....just adjusting  Piano strings. Insurance......if a string breaks they want insurance to pay for it?
> 
>     I think the chances of a piano tuner needing to use insurance, having a claim, are so much more remote then most every trade......unless your doing rebuilding on site in their location....
> But we are just turning screws, and adding pieces of paper or felt for the most part.
> 
>     Just an opinion.........I could be wrong..........I certainly have an attitude toward insurance companies.
> 
>                                                 Cheers
>                                                   Dave Renaud
> 
 		 	   		  
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