Coverage selection must be driven by the client’s actual exposures and needs, not by convenience, price alone, or mechanical use of standard forms. A broker should compare policy wordings, limits, exclusions, extensions, deductibles, conditions, valuation clauses, and insurer service capability against the client’s risk profile. Option A is too rigid because standard wording may be inadequate for unusual property, specialized operations, high-value contents, business interruption exposure, liability hazards, or contractual obligations. Option C is meaningless; a policy being heavily legalistic does not make it appropriate or superior. Option D is poor practice because overinsurance is not a proper E & O defence and may create affordability issues, client dissatisfaction, or unsuitable placement. The professional standard is needs-based recommendation supported by clear documentation. Brokers must identify what the client needs to protect, match those needs to available insurance products, and explain significant limitations. References/topics: From Quote to Policy; coverage selection, wording comparison, needs analysis, E & O prevention, client suitability.