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.
Jame Benham, CEO of JKB and Terra
James Benham has been building technology for insurance companies for 25 years — not InsurTech, actual technology. In Episode 150, he makes two arguments the industry needs to hear: first, that shadow AI is a compliance crisis hiding in plain sight at virtually every carrier, TPA, and MGA; and second, that roughly a third of the insurance workforce is performing manual clerical tasks that should be automated — while the industry simultaneously struggles to find enough qualified adjusters and underwriters. The fix to both problems runs through the same place: AI that is embedded, tested, and governed rather than bolted on or used ad hoc.
Anupam Gupta, CPO at Applied Systems
AI won’t replace insurance brokers.
But it will change how their work gets done.
In Episode 148, I spoke with Anupam Gupta, Chief Product Officer at Applied Systems, about how AI is transforming the brokerage tech stack.
One idea stood out:
Instead of replacing humans, AI will become digital teammates working behind the scenes.
For example:
• AI agents preparing renewal packets
• Extracting data from submissions and emails
• Comparing carrier responses
• Surfacing missing coverages
The result?
Less administrative work.
More time for brokers to do what actually matters: advise clients.
One of my favorite lines from the episode:
“Imagine every employee showing up like your top 10%.”
That’s the real promise of AI in insurance.




