RiskGenius touchdown: OP insuretech startup scores exit deal with industry leader

October 6, 2020  |  Startland News Staff

Chris Cheatham, RiskGenius

Overland Park’s RiskGenius crossed a finish line this week — but work remains as an exit looms, the company announced Tuesday. 

RiskGenius team

RiskGenius team

Columbus, Ohio-based Bold Penguin — an innovation-driven startup that rapidly increases speed-to-bind for commercial insurance — has agreed to acquire the insurtech company for an undisclosed amount, paving the way for continued dominance as the market leader in the $300-billion commercial insurance connectivity space, the company said in a release. 

“We’re proud to join forces with Bold Penguin and be the leaders in understanding every part of the insurance supply chain and making it better for the businesses, agents, and carriers in the mix,” said Chris Cheatham, RiskGenius founder and CEO, who noted both companies had completed Series B financing rounds. 

Founded by Cheatham and Doug Reiser in 2012, RiskGenius is a software firm that helps people understand their insurance policy language and policy data faster — a capability that’s expected to bolster the work of Bold Penguin in its second insuretech acquisition this year. 

“Bold Penguin’s work upgrading and digitizing small commercial distribution is an ideal complement to our policy analysis focus, and we both share the same passion to connect and accelerate the industry,” Cheatham said.

RiskGenius and its team are expected to fold into Bold Penguin’s insurance intelligence effort, which leverages data with a focus on intuitive workflow processing, the companies said.

Jeremy Smith, RiskGenius

Jeremy Smith, RiskGenius

The team will stay the same in the same locations, Cheatham told Startland News, noting he will become vice president of product for Bold Penguin’s new insurance intelligence division. RiskGenius President and COO Jeremy Smith will serve as vice president of business operations.

“Bold Penguin is obsessed with reducing the time it takes to quote and bind commercial insurance,” said Ilya Bodner, Bold Penguin founder and CEO. “Adding RiskGenius allows us to supercharge our data analysis efforts. Their policy level data approach helps our Exchange grow and ultimately has a significant impact in the quoting process for our customers.”

With $13 million raised, RiskGenius holds No. 15 spot on the 2020 list of Kansas City’s Top Venture Capital-Backed Companies, a data-driven effort curated by Startland — the ecosystem building, parent organization that houses Startland News’ independent, non-profit newsroom — and local investment minds.

“Our local Kansas City investors, including Flyover Capital and Mid-America Angels, as well as our Super Angels, played an instrumental role in helping us get to this position,” Cheatham said Tuesday.

The startup was also named one of Startland News Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2019, following significant traction with partners at insurance carrier QBE Insurance Group

“Everyone here has just studied the insurance industry. We’ve had thousands of demos with insurance professionals at this point and understand their workflows,” Cheatham told Startland News at the time, reflecting on the company’s momentum. “It’s not testing products and making sure things work [anymore.] It’s execution and making sure people are happy with the software.”

RiskGenius is the second Kansas City startup to see an exit in the past month, after BacklotCars revved its engine with a historic $425 million exit in September.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Here’s how a new data dashboard could help KCMO redirect funds to small businesses

        By Tommy Felts | September 5, 2024

        A new data dashboard built to better understand Kansas City’s business needs — and guide the city’s response — is not only revolutionary for the metro, said Nia Richardson, it could be the first of its kind, period. Small business advocates already are calling it a win. “I don’t know of any other city or playbook…

        Modern world requires entrepreneurs to think like creatives, says KU’s Innovator in Residence

        By Tommy Felts | September 5, 2024

        Editor’s note: The University of Kansas’ School of Business is a partner of Startland News. LAWRENCE, Kansas — Building a skill set around creativity is critical to entrepreneurship — especially at a time when careers can be short-lived, said Josh Wexler. “Jobs are no longer for life,” explained the Innovator in Residence at the University…

        Grantmaking reboot ‘just one piece of the larger puzzle’ in Kauffman Foundation reset, CEO says

        By Tommy Felts | September 5, 2024

        Overhauling the Kauffman Foundation’s grantmaking strategy aligns with a broader, holistic reset for the influential Kansas City organization, said Dr. DeAngela Burns Wallace, emphasizing org-wide moves to deepen the impact and dialogue sparked by its giving. “We’re still engaged in the work happening locally, regionally, and nationally,” said Burns-Wallace, president and CEO of the Ewing…

        KC Current’s goalkeeper AD Franch lauded for teaming with WeCodeKC to empower urban youth 

        By Tommy Felts | September 4, 2024

        AD Franch is more than just a world-class athlete; she’s a true community servant, said Tammy Buckner, founder of WeCodeKC, heaping praise on the KC Current goalkeeper-turned-advocate for technology education in Kansas City. “Her passion and dedication to our students are unmatched,” said Buckner. “Through her partnership, we’ve been able to bring sports and technology…