Curtis Barton, CEO of ALKEME

Curtis Barton, CEO of ALKEME

Curtis Barton started Alkeme in October 2020 with seven agencies, $25 million in combined revenue, and a simple argument: stop running a lifestyle business and start building generational wealth. Five years later Alkeme is at $350M+ in revenue, 35 states, 110+ locations, and 85+ acquisitions. In Episode 160, Curtis explains why most consolidators are more overleveraged than they admit, why organic growth is the only honest metric in the rollup game, and why every insurance brokerage — whether it wants to or not — is becoming a software company.

Heather Wilson, CEO of CLARA Analytics

Heather Wilson, CEO of CLARA Analytics

A finger cut came in as a severity one workers comp claim. Nobody looked at it for 90 days. CLARA's models kept reading the incoming medical documentation — and caught the trajectory shift before any human did. By the time the alert fired, the case was heading toward amputation, not a bandage. In Episode 159, CLARA Analytics CEO Heather Wilson explains how claims AI actually works in practice: not as a replacement for adjusters, but as a 24/7 safety net that catches what tired eyes miss — and what she wants to accomplish before she leaves this industry: finally connecting the claims intelligence that closes cases to the actuarial intelligence that prices them.

Sid Jha, CEO of Arbol

Sid Jha, CEO of Arbol

Sid Jha didn't come from insurance — he came from Citadel, trading commodities, pricing weather risk. In Episode 158, he explains how that background shaped Arbol's thesis: that parametric insurance wasn't just a claims shortcut, but a bridge to entirely new pools of capital that traditional insurance could never access. We also get into why Arbol stopped being a pure parametric company — and why being ideological about your product is the fastest way to miss what the customer actually needs.

Jack Siney, co-founder and CRO of FrontRace

Jack Siney, co-founder and CRO of FrontRace

Jack Siney built FrontRace out of a real operational crisis: when COVID sent his sales team home, all the organic knowledge transfer that happened in an office disappeared overnight. The internal tool he built to fix that problem became a nine-figure exit. In Episode 157, he explains why your sales process probably has twice as many steps as you think, why AI on the business side is not ready yet, and what insurance agencies should be doing right now to prepare for the tools that will actually matter in 2027.

Gary Eastman, founder of SwiftBonds

Gary Eastman, founder of SwiftBonds

Most insurance professionals have heard of surety bonds. Almost none of them can explain what one actually is. In Episode 156, SwiftBonds founder Gary Eastman — attorney, 18-year surety specialist, and self-described young person by industry standards — breaks down how surety works, why it underpins trillions of dollars of economic activity that barely anyone in InsurTech is paying attention to, and why a niche still running on 1980s underwriting models is finally ready for a technology moment.