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QBE’s Self-Assessment Tools Signal a Shift Towards Prevention

Why consultants should treat risk reviews as more than a renewal exercise

QBE’s Self-Assessment Tools Signal a Shift Towards Prevention?w=400

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QBE has broadened its risk-prevention offering for Australian businesses with new online self-assessment tools covering property, liability, motor fleet and ESG exposures.
Announced on 9 July 2026, the move reflects a wider shift in commercial insurance: insurers are increasingly trying to help customers identify and reduce risks before they become claims, rather than simply pricing those risks at renewal.

For consultants, the development is worth watching even if the tools are not aimed solely at professional services firms. Many independent consultants and small advisory practices operate without a dedicated risk manager, safety officer or compliance team. That can make it harder to spot gaps in day-to-day controls, especially where client contracts, subcontractors, data handling, travel, workplace safety or environmental reporting expectations are changing quickly.

The most relevant message is not that every consultant needs another online checklist. It is that insurers are placing more value on evidence of active risk management. A consulting business that can explain how it reviews client scopes, manages advice sign-off, protects confidential information, trains staff, documents complaints and monitors emerging obligations may be better placed when discussing suitable cover and renewal terms.

QBE’s launch also arrives against a tougher regulatory background. Work health and safety duties, industrial manslaughter offences in several jurisdictions, climate-related reporting obligations for larger entities, and increasing supply-chain scrutiny are all lifting expectations on Australian businesses. Even where a consultant is too small to report directly, larger clients may still request emissions, governance, cyber security or risk-control information as part of procurement and contract management.

This matters because professional indemnity and public liability exposures are not isolated from operational practice. A consultant advising on projects, systems, management change, safety, ESG, technology or compliance can face claims linked to poor documentation, misunderstood deliverables, missed warnings or weak client communication. A practical self-review can help identify whether insurance limits, policy wording, exclusions and contractual indemnities still match the way the business now works.

The lesson for consultants is to avoid treating insurance as a once-a-year transaction. Before renewal, review recent projects, new service lines, AI use, subcontractor arrangements, higher-value clients, interstate work and any contractual insurance requirements. Where uncertainty remains, discussions with experienced brokers can help translate those business changes into the right questions for insurers. QBE’s initiative is another reminder that better risk information can support stronger conversations, clearer cover expectations and a more resilient consulting practice.

Published:Friday, 10th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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Knowledgebase
Grace Period:
A time period after the premium is due during which an insurance policy remains in force even if the premium has not yet been paid.