Ask any closer where the days go between order and open, and you’ll get a shrug. In every operation we’ve audited, the same three bottlenecks show up — and none of them are what the team thinks. Here’s where the time actually goes, and what changes when you start measuring instead of guessing.
The Hidden Cost of Manual Abstracting (And Why Independents Are Going Digital First)
May 5, 2026 · Alex Weeks · Business & Operations, Title Industry
Most independents still treat abstracting as a fixed cost — the price of doing business. It isn’t. When you actually time the work, label the hand-offs, and add up the rework, the bill is usually two to three times what the line item suggests. Here’s where the real money goes.
26 Years in Title Tech: What’s Actually Changed (And What Hasn’t)
April 23, 2026 · Alex Weeks · Industry Perspective, Title Industry
I wrote my first title production system in the late ‘90s. Since then, the industry has been through Y2K, the 2008 crash, a pandemic that rewrote closings, and an AI revolution. Here’s my honest take on what’s actually changed in 26 years — and what hasn’t moved an inch.
Why Independent Title Companies Are Moving to Cloud Title Plants (And What to Expect)
April 21, 2026 · Alex Weeks · Cloud & Infrastructure, Title Industry
The title plant has been the foundation of this business since before computers. Now independent title companies are moving their plants to the cloud — and the ones that have made the jump aren’t treating it as a minor IT upgrade. Here’s what the migration actually involves, why it’s happening now, and what to expect.
How to Think About ROI When Evaluating Title Software
April 16, 2026 · Alex Weeks · Business & Operations, Title Industry
If your last software evaluation came down to a feature comparison spreadsheet, you left money on the table. The real ROI of title technology isn’t in the feature list — it’s in the workflows you’ll never have to think about again. Here’s a better framework for evaluating title software in 2026.
Deed Fraud Is Evolving — Here’s What Independent Title Companies Need to Know in 2026
April 14, 2026 · Alex Weeks · Fraud & Security, Title Industry
A forged notary stamp used to be the tell. In 2026, the criminals are using the same generative AI tools the rest of us are — producing synthetic identities, fabricating government-issued IDs, and using deepfake video to impersonate property owners during remote online notarizations. The game has changed fundamentally.
Why I Built Electra Digital for Independent Title Companies—Not the Enterprise Market
April 9, 2026 · Alex Weeks · Industry Perspective, Title Industry
I’ve watched the same pattern repeat for two decades: big vendor builds for the top 10 underwriters, then bolts on a “lite” version for independents and calls it good enough. I decided to start from the other direction. That decision wasn’t idealistic. It was strategic.
What 'AI-Powered' Actually Means in Title Insurance (And What It Doesn't)
April 7, 2026 · Alex Weeks · AI, Automation, Title Industry
Every vendor in title tech now claims to be “AI-powered.” As an engineer who’s been building these systems for 26 years, I can tell you: most of the time, that label does more marketing than actual computing. Here’s how to tell the difference between genuine AI and a relabeled rules engine.
5 Repetitive Tasks Your Title Team Should Stop Doing Manually in 2026
April 3, 2026 · Alex Weeks · Automation, Title Industry
After 26 years in title technology, one thing still surprises me: the sheer number of hours that skilled title professionals spend on work that doesn’t require their expertise. Your best examiners and processors are some of the most experienced, highest-judgment people in your entire operation. So why are they spending hours every day on tasks that software can handle faster and more consistently than any human?
Wire Fraud Has Gone Global. Here’s How Title Companies Fight Back
April 1, 2026 · Alex Weeks · Wire Fraud, Title Industry
It starts with an email that looks exactly right. A buyer, days from closing, receives wire instructions from what appears to be their title company. The logo matches. The language is professional. The routing number, of course, is not. By the time anyone realizes what happened, the money — often the buyer’s entire down payment — has been swept through a series of overseas accounts and is gone for good.
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