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The outage reportedly affected mobile services, data connections and point-of-sale systems, with some businesses asked to provide evidence of lost revenue, additional costs and steps taken to reduce the impact. Tradies may not rely on card terminals in the same way as cafes or retailers, but many depend heavily on mobile coverage for job scheduling, customer calls, supplier orders, banking, digital plans, safety apps and payment links. A few hours offline can quickly become missed work, delayed invoices or frustrated clients.
The practical lesson is documentation. If a service failure disrupts work, keep a clear timeline of what happened, which jobs were affected, any screenshots or outage notices, call logs, diary entries, invoices for alternative services and evidence of comparable revenue. Those records can support a compensation request to a service provider and may also be useful when discussing whether an insurance policy responds.
However, tradies should be careful not to assume every interruption is covered. Standard business interruption cover often depends on insured physical damage, such as fire or storm damage at business premises. Technology, cyber, utility or telecommunications interruptions may be treated differently depending on the policy wording, extensions, exclusions and waiting periods. This is where reviewing insurance for tradespeople before a disruption occurs is far better than trying to interpret a policy during a cash flow squeeze.
There are three immediate actions worth considering:
This latest outage also highlights the value of professional guidance. A licensed broker can help explain what is and is not covered, compare policy extensions and identify gaps that are easy to miss when buying on price alone. For self-employed tradies and small trade businesses, the goal is not to insure every inconvenience. It is to understand the most likely causes of downtime and put sensible protection around the ones that could hurt cash flow.
Published:Wednesday, 15th 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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