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Daniel E. Kaplan on Rebuilding Smarter: How Businesses Can Bounce Back After a Major Storm

Richard Brown by Richard Brown
November 18, 2025
in Business
Reading Time: 9 mins read
Daniel E. Kaplan on Rebuilding Smarter: How Businesses Can Bounce Back After a Major Storm

Daniel E. Kaplan, an accomplished business professional and insurance consultant, has guided countless organizations through the aftermath of natural disasters. For him, recovery requires rebuilding smarter, stronger, and more strategically than before. Storms, floods, and hurricanes may strike without warning, but how a company responds defines its future.

Preparation and adaptability are at the heart of any effective recovery plan. When a storm hits, the physical damage is only one piece of the puzzle. The true test lies in restoring operations, protecting employees, and maintaining customer trust. 

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Every business needs a plan for the first 72 hours after impact. Those hours set the tone for financial stability and long-term recovery. In coastal and high-risk areas, storms are no longer isolated incidents but recurring events. 

With each passing year, weather patterns grow more volatile, and insurance markets grow more selective. For businesses, resilience has become a competitive advantage.

Assessing the Damage: Beyond the Physical

After a storm, most owners rush to repair buildings and equipment. True recovery begins with a full-spectrum assessment. Disruptions to supply chains, customer relationships, and employee safety can erode a company’s foundation.

“Physical repairs are visible,” says Daniel E. Kaplan, “but operational wounds like lost data, communication breakdowns, or uninsured downtime can be more damaging in the long run.”

Companies should approach damage assessment in three stages starting with physical and extending to operational and financial. The physical stage covers property, inventory, and vehicles. The operational stage focuses on technology systems, logistics, and workforce capacity. The financial stage examines liquidity, revenue loss, and insurance claims.

Insurance carriers increasingly demand detailed documentation before approving claims. Photos, invoices, and third-party inspection reports can expedite settlements. Assign a team member or outside adjuster immediately after impact to maintain records and avoid disputes later.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and local chambers of commerce often provide temporary relief programs and coordination support. Kaplan cautions that such assistance rarely replaces comprehensive coverage. Emergency aid bridges the gap, but insurance and preparation close it. Understanding the scope of FEMA support for businesses in a natural disaster is imperative. 

Insurance plays a vital role in post-storm recovery, but Kaplan stresses that it should be viewed as a catalyst for smarter rebuilding, not just compensation for loss. Too often, businesses treat insurance as a one-time transaction rather than an evolving strategy.

Notes Kaplan, “Policies should grow with the business. Coverage that worked five years ago may not reflect your current footprint or risk exposure.”

Business interruption insurance coverage, in particular, is a lifeline for companies facing weeks or months of downtime. It covers lost income and fixed expenses during closure, allowing payroll and vendor relationships to continue. Every policyholder should confirm the waiting period before coverage begins and ensure it matches their operational needs.

Contingent business interruption coverage protects against supply chain disruptions. In industries dependent on shipping, tourism, or logistics, damage hundreds of miles away can halt operations locally. 

Newer insurance products such as parametric insurance are reshaping disaster recovery. These policies pay automatically when specific conditions like wind speed or rainfall thresholds are met, bypassing lengthy claim investigations. 

Kaplan sees these innovations as game changers for small and midsized firms. Speed matters after a disaster, and liquidity within days, not weeks, determines whether a business reopens or closes for good.

The Blueprint for Smarter Rebuilding

Reconstruction offers a rare opportunity to rebuild intelligently. Instead of restoring what was lost, businesses can redesign for efficiency, safety, and sustainability. Kaplan encourages clients to integrate modern materials, resilient layouts, and green energy systems during repairs.

Every rebuild should reduce future risk by engaging stronger roofing systems, elevated electrical panels, and flood-resistant materials. Resilience is the new standard, and businesses in coastal or flood-prone zones benefit from elevation improvements, waterproof foundations, and reinforced doors and windows. 

While upfront costs may seem steep, insurers often reward proactive design with lower premiums. In some states, tax incentives also support energy-efficient and disaster-resistant construction.

Technology is another pillar of smarter rebuilding. Cloud storage, redundant data centers, and remote work protocols ensure that operations can continue even when buildings cannot. Leaders should treat technology resilience as essential infrastructure instead of a convenience.

After repairs, businesses should review their property valuations and coverage limits. Too often, rebuilding increases replacement costs without a corresponding policy update. A company that rebuilds smarter should consider insuring smarter.

A business’s greatest resource is its people. After a disaster, employee well-being drives both morale and productivity. Clear communication, temporary relocation plans, and access to emergency funds help maintain stability. Kaplan believes human-centered recovery builds long-term loyalty. 

“Employees who feel supported will move mountains for your business. That commitment turns crisis response into cultural strength,” he says.

Business owners can develop continuity manuals that specify decision-making hierarchies, communication protocols, and vendor contacts. These manuals, stored both digitally and in print, ensure that even in chaos, everyone knows their role.

Regular drills and scenario planning prepare teams for real-world conditions. Mock exercises can reveal weaknesses in communication systems or evacuation procedures. In Kaplan’s view, the companies that recover fastest are those that practice recovery before it’s needed.

Collaboration and Community Recovery

Disasters test individual companies as well as entire economies. Local suppliers, utilities, and customers form an ecosystem that must heal collectively. 

Businesses that coordinate with neighbors and industry partners can accelerate shared recovery. A single business reopening is progress, but when an entire district rebuilds together, it revives the economy and restores confidence.

Participating in community resilience programs and local business coalitions that share resources like backup generators, storage space, and security patrols after storms can prove invaluable in stabilizing operations during prolonged outages or infrastructure delays. Public-private coordination also improves disaster response speed. When businesses share damage data with local agencies, it helps prioritize repairs to critical roads, utilities, and ports.

Recovery requires more than survival and relies on evolution. Each storm reveals lessons that can shape a stronger business landscape. The companies that thrive afterward are those that view disaster as a catalyst for innovation.

Rebuilding smarter means focusing on structures and systems. Success lies in how companies and communities manage risk, protect data, and care for their people. As climate events intensify, adaptive business disaster recovery planning will distinguish the leaders from the laggards. 

Businesses that embed resilience into their DNA will not only recover but grow stronger with every challenge. Insurance, infrastructure, and ingenuity together form the foundation of long-term sustainability. The future of business in high-risk areas lies in preparation, partnership, and progress, turning every setback into a blueprint for smarter, safer growth.

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Richard Brown

Richard Brown

Richard has worked as a journalist for various print-based magazines for more than 5 years. He brings together substantial news pieces from the Education industry.

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