Berbagai klaim yang di bayar salah satunya tragedi Titanic

For
Prudential the prompt payment of claims to provide immediate help in
time of emergency is a central part of customer service. Prudential
collectors were always on hand to provide rapid financial relief to
beneficiaries when calamity struck.
During the Second World War there was even a case in which a claim
was paid to the heirs of a man killed in an air raid barely an hour
after taking out a policy on his own life. Allowances were also made for
cases in which claimants' policies and supporting documentation had
been destroyed along with their other possessions.

The
Sun newspaper's profile of Prudential, published in 1894, observed that
‘no serious accident occurs among the masses of people without
including in its death-roll persons who are assured with the company'.
Localised disasters, such as the floods on the Lincolnshire and East
Anglian coasts in 1953 brought out the gallantry and efficiency of the
Prudential field staff, who were often among the first on the scene.
More recently, claims have been paid following the grounding of the
Braer oil tanker at Garth Ness, Shetland in 1993 and widespread flooding
in 2000.

A
wide range of claims has been covered by Prudential over the years,
including fire, flood, marine, motor, railway, industrial and domestic
accidents. Most notoriously, the sinking of the Titanic on 14 April 1912
resulted in the loss of over 1,500 lives; by June 1912, Prudential had
paid £14,239 in claims for 324 lives.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar