If you have a hazardous
occupation certain companies will not be a good choice because of their statistics.
Not exact matches
Baratunde Thurston, a director's fellow at MIT Media Lab, Fast
Company columnist and former digital director of The Onion, replied, «Online training and certification will grow significantly in part due to the high expense of formal higher education along with its declining payoffs for
certain occupations.
It's also valuable for people who work in high - risk
occupations, such as roofers, firefighters, military, police officers, etc., who usually can't get disability insurance or even life insurance through
certain companies.
While there are no hard and fast rules, you do see
certain companies being more appropriate than others based on your
occupation.
Some situations and
certain occupations may be covered under standard auto policies, but you should ask your insurance agent if your
company's vehicle use suggests a commercial policy.
Certain occupations will be better off with one
company over another.
When a death occurs — we hope for one due to old age, but dead is dead, and the
company pays (except suicide in the first one or two years, or one of the few exclusions that may be in the policy, such as war or act of war, military service, flying an airplane, or
certain hazardous
occupations or hobbies — many policies only have the suicide exclusion), you can think of the death benefit in one of two ways.
Instead, insurance
companies look at more
certain factors such as your medical history, age, gender, location, smoking status,
occupation, and hobbies to determine your risk class.
The insurance
company will require
certain information — age, height, weight, gender, lifestyle,
occupation, smoking habits, alcohol consumption, etc..
For example, there are
certain occupations that life insurance
companies deem as being too risky to insure with traditional life insurance coverage.
Life insurance
companies will consider you a high risk if you have
certain health conditions or participate in high risk activities or
occupations.
This has been a standard practice for years, and the car insurance
companies argue that it is all based on numbers:
certain occupations statistically present higher risk to car insurance
companies than others, while higher levels of education statistically present lower risk.