After $2.95M round, corporate deal ensures word-of-mouth marketing for RiskGenius
November 7, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
RiskGenius’ $2.95 million series A extension funding round is worth more than its face value, said CEO Chris Cheatham.
The round was led by QBE Ventures, an Australia-based firm known as being among the world’s top 20 insurance companies. In addition to the funds, QBE North America will be the first division to fully implement the RiskGenius platform. The company is expected to upload about 125,000 policy documents by 2018.
“The large enterprise contract is a huge win,” Cheatham said. “It’s really exciting and it’s frankly leading to a lot of other opportunities as well. In insurance, once you have one large user that’s willing to vouch for you, a lot of other parties can then decide that they want to do something with you, too.”
Founded in 2012, RiskGenius — previously known as ClaimKit — grew from an initial concept focused on improving insurance claim documentation to now an artificial intelligence platform for policy automation.
Although the firm still offers its previous ClaimKit service, Cheatham is focused on expanding the RiskGenius offering, which delivers insights into coverage plans, uses automation to review policies and makes it easier to develop policy language, he said.
“RiskGenius has a bigger market potential,” he said. “ClaimKit solved a niche problem for people, but RiskGenius is focused on a huge, nasty problem that is literally costing people hundreds of millions of dollars, and we are the only people out there solving it.”
Bob James, group head of transformation at QBE, is delighted to bring on Risk Genius as its first, major partnership, he said.
“QBE North America completed a proof-of-concept of the RiskGenius platform earlier this year, and saw great results leveraging the company’s proprietary, machine learning product to compare policies as part of our product development process,” James said in a release. “From that proof-of-concept, we’ve now signed a multi-year commercial use agreement, and plan on implementing the RiskGenius platform across all our business units in North America during the first half of 2018.”
The $2.95 million round also included funds from Flyover Capital, Cheatham said.
“Flyover has been awesome,” Cheatham said. “They have given us the room to create the product we needed to build. One of the reasons I was excited to see them join this round is because they’ve invested in the previous round we did. We were attracted to them because they are former entrepreneurs and understand the process we have to go through to get a product right.”
With a current team of 12, RiskGenius raised $2.78 million in 2016 to accelerate the development of its tech. Following on the most recent funds, the firm plans to focus on acquiring customers.
“That’s our biggest focus, without a doubt,” Cheatham said. “Customer happiness and customer success. Thanks to QBE, we now have a really great base of users. Now, we just want them to be really happy.”
Cheatham is excited about the budding opportunity for technology startups in the Kansas City region, he added.
“EyeVerify (now Zoloz) sold for a bunch of money doing artificial intelligence for financial services, and now we are doing artificial intelligence for insurance,” Cheatham said. “I think that there is a lot of opportunity in Kansas City in artificial intelligence. … There are a lot of interesting and important solutions coming out of the Midwest.”
RiskGenius was named an under-the-radar startup by Startland News in 2017. In September, Cheatham was named Entrepreneur of the Year at the Entrepreneurial Insurance Symposium.
Featured Business

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC-created comic’s evolution in motion as ‘Scarlet Knight’ quests toward animated streaming series
Kansas City comic book creator Juaquan Herron is adding another chapter to his ongoing graphic novel series, “The Scarlet Knight,” though this next iteration will be even more animated. Describing the coming move as a long-expected next step, Herron announced he’s begun working on a five-episode animated video series — each about 10 minutes long…
Venboo heads to market(s), hoping to make local vendors the next Crumbl Cookies with its event booking tech
The Venboo app — which connects individual vendors and event organizers on a single platform — will soon gain a dashboard that allows all parties to connect more seamlessly, detailed Juaquan Herron. The dashboard is expected to further streamline the user’s booking experience of Venboo, which lets vendors set criteria for events that match their…
Behind the blooom deal: How Morgan Stanley at Work boosted its robo-advising tech with startup buy, but kept a human touch
Editor’s note: Morgan Stanley is a financial supporter of Startland News. The investment management and financial services company has branches in Leawood and on the Country Club Plaza. Acquisition is scaling blooom’s tech ‘beyond our wildest dreams’ Integrating a Kansas City startup’s tech into its globe-spanning robo-advising portfolio — along with securing a soft landing…
From abandoned artifact to new Negro Leagues’ space: Why renovated Paseo YMCA now bears the name ‘Buck O’Neil’
The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum’s redevelopment of the old Paseo YMCA is nearly complete, according to NLBM President Bob Kendrick, who said the renovated building will help the museum share the history of the Negro Leagues with generations to come. Set to open in late spring or early summer, the Buck O’Neil Education and Research…
