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The $100K Risk Most Multifamily Owners Overlook with Kevin Jacobson, Ep. 794

podcast May 26, 2026


Background
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Kevin Jacobson is the CEO of Foxen, a proptech company modernizing multifamily operations with value-add compliance and financial wellness solutions. A former investment banker and private equity professional, Kevin built his career working on technology M&A transactions, IPOs, and capital allocation before moving into operating roles at high-growth SaaS companies. He previously served as CEO of LogicGate and CFO at Kapow.

At Foxen, Kevin leads a platform that has served approximately 3 million residential units across the country, offering renters insurance compliance, resident rent reporting, and pet compliance solutions to multifamily owners and operators.

Make sure to download our free guide, 7 Questions Every Passive Investor Should Ask, here.

Key Takeaways

  • Around 40% of residents required to carry renters insurance don’t have active coverage, creating real exposure for operators

  • Without resident coverage, a claim defaults to the property policy, which can carry a $50,000 to $100,000+ deductible

  • Renters pay 25 to 35% of after-tax income on rent but receive no credit benefit from on-time payments

  • 85% of renters say they want rent reporting; only about 10% currently have access to it

  • Proptech companies thrive by staying specialized rather than spreading thin across too many solutions

  • When evaluating a deal or operator, trust is the primary filter: if something feels too good to be true, dig harder

Topics

From Investment Banking to Multifamily Proptech

  • Kevin started in investment banking after college, working on technology M&A, IPOs, and capital allocation

  • He moved into private equity before finding his footing as an operator of high-growth technology companies

  • He joined Foxen as CEO four years ago and has been focused on building the company’s presence across the multifamily industry

The Three Core Solutions Foxen Offers

  • Renters insurance compliance ensures all residents maintain active coverage as required by their lease

  • Rent reporting (branded as Rent Street) reports on-time rent payments to credit agencies so residents can build a credit profile

  • Pet compliance manages documentation collection, emotional support animal verification, and HUD-related regulatory requirements

The Renters Insurance Compliance Problem

  • Roughly 40% of residents who are required to carry coverage do not have an active policy, either due to lapsed payments or intentional cancellation

  • Property management teams have historically had no scalable way to track and enforce this in real time

  • Foxen tracks compliance and gives residents a choice: maintain their own policy or enroll in a waiver program with no deductible exposure

The Financial Wellness Gap in Rental Housing

  • Mortgage payments are automatically reported to credit agencies; rent payments are not, leaving a major gap in the financial reporting ecosystem

  • Renters pay a significant share of their income on rent and build no credit history from it

  • California recently passed a law requiring property management companies to offer rent reporting; other states are evaluating similar legislation

How Foxen Thinks About Product Growth

  • There are approximately 50 million rental units in the US; Foxen has served roughly 3 million, signaling significant runway

  • The company focuses on specialized, complex functions that property managers do not want to own in-house

  • Clients increasingly want fewer vendors, not more, which creates a clear opportunity for companies that can deliver multiple services reliably through a single integration

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Round of Insights

Failure that set Kevin up for success: Kevin points to multiple moments across his career, from competitive sports to his first year as an analyst in a demanding investment banking program, where reality fell short of expectations. Each time, he did a quick retrospective and got back to work. He notes that even apparent successes don’t last long before the next challenge arrives, which helped him stay grounded in both directions.

Digital or mobile resource: AI tools to develop a working understanding of what’s currently possible.

Book recommendation: Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss.

Daily habit: Prioritizing time with his kids, some form of exercise, and completing one to three high-priority tasks before meetings and reactive demands take over. His goal is to have a meaningful win on the board by 10:30 AM.

#1 insight for evaluating a deal or operator: Trust is the primary filter. If something feels too good to be true, dig harder. When evaluating people directly, focus on whether you genuinely believe in their ability to deliver. Good operators find a way to make things work even when a specific idea does not pan out.

Favorite restaurant in Columbus, OH: Cameron Mitchell restaurants, including The Avenue and The Pearl.

Next Steps

  • Learn more about Foxen at foxen.com

  • Connect with Kevin Jacobson on LinkedIn

  • Review your current renters insurance compliance rate and identify active coverage gaps

  • Evaluate rent reporting as a resident benefit and potential retention tool

  • Assess whether your current vendor stack can be consolidated without sacrificing service quality

Thank you for joining us for another great episode! If you’re enjoying the show, please LEAVE A RATING OR REVIEW, and be sure to hit that subscribe button so you don’t miss an episode.

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