Tech creators are getting the star treatment at a new talent management firm
Reign Maker Group is teaming with YouTuber Tech with Tim to launch a new management agency for tech, coding, and AI creators amid the AI boom.
Exclusive
Tech creators are getting the star treatment at a new talent management firm
By
Lucia Moses
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email.
Tim Ruscica, a YouTube creator known as Tech with Tim, says tech educators are underserved by traditional agencies.
Reign Maker Group
2026-04-01T10:50:01.240Z
-
Reign Maker Group is launching a new talent management firm for creators with YouTuber Tech with Tim.
-
The idea is to capture some of the money tech companies spend to promote their AI tools.
-
Sign up for Business Insider's weekly marketing newsletter.
Tech creators are getting the star treatment.
Reign Maker Group, a collection of brand, media, marketing, and talent agencies, is launching a new management firm for tech creators with YouTuber Tech with Tim, Business Insider exclusively learned.
The idea behind Kernel Management is to match tech creators with brand sponsors, help them build businesses outside YouTube, and connect them with each other through monthly meet-ups.
Kernel signed Tim Ruscica, the creator behind Tech with Tim, who will also become an equity partner in Kernel and mentor clients. He'll work with Jonathan Chanti, the CEO and cofounder of Reign Maker Group; while Damian Skocylaz, president of Reign Maker Talent, will oversee company operations.
Jonathan Chanti, CEO and cofounder of Reign Maker Group, says tech creators are having a big moment.
Reign Maker Group
Chanti said he expects to sign 30 to 100 clients this year. Among other criteria, he's looking for creators with at least 70,000 YouTube subscribers, a sign they're putting in the time to build a consistent audience.
Other agencies in the space include The Drive Agency, whose roster includes tech creators like Jean Kang and Mariana Antaya, and Creator Authority, which works with B2B influencers in tech and other categories.
Chanti cited creators including Delia Lazarescu, an AI tech educator with 387,000 Instagram followers who goes by Tech Unicorn, and David Ondrej, who posts AI software tutorials to his 362,000 YouTube subscribers, as the types of people Kernel is looking to sign.
Tech companies want creators to promote AI
Big AI players like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Microsoft are seeking help making their products and services look cool. CoreWeave, an Nvidia-backed cloud platform, increased its marketing spending by 700% in 2025 to $144 million.
Software companies that used to advertise in trade publications or at conferences are now looking to partner with creators, said Patrick Zielinski, CEO of The Drive Agency.
"Every AI company has raised an infinite amount of dollars, and they're trying to find customers. So, if you're a voice in the space, then you can capture some of that," said Avi Gandhi, founder of Creative Logic, which advises companies on the creator economy.
Ruscica said his own inbound requests from brands have doubled in the past six months. He said he's been offered $40,000 for a single video and more than $1 million for a long-term deal.
"The amount of money being pumped into this space is just insane," he said.
Meanwhile, the rise of vibe coding, where non-techies are using AI tools to write code, is expanding the audience for tutorials.
"We need more engineers using their influence to work with these brands, and these brands also need really credible people," Chanti said.
Agencies that focus on a particular category, like sports or music, are common in Hollywood but newer to the creator economy. Beyond tech, Chanti is eyeing other creator categories to build businesses around, including basketball and finance.
Tech creators have distinct needs
On the supply side, Chanti's view is that there's a shortage of experts who have strong video and communication skills. Some tech creators also need help choosing brand deals that won't hurt their professional reputations. Kernel wants to identify and guide them.
"Some of them don't know how to say 'no,'" Chanti said of tech creators weighing brand deals. "It's a bigger risk if you align yourself with the wrong opportunity. The stakes are high."
Ruscica started coding at age 12 and describes himself as a self-taught developer. He posts two to three tech tutorials a week to his roughly 2 million subscribers on YouTube. He said he saw a void in the market for an agency that can serve tech specialists like him.
"We have our own way of doing things," he said. "It can be hard to trust a third party. And it's hard to find an agency that has a deep technical expertise."
Still, some creators told CNBC they won't take sponsor deals that involve AI because the tech has been associated with job displacement.
Tech companies also face a wary public.
About 70% of Americans worry AI will reduce job opportunities, according to a March Quinnipiac University poll. It also found 74% believe that the government isn't doing enough to regulate the technology.
-
YouTube
-
Creator economy
-
Exclusive
-
More
Read next
Business Insider
https://www.businessinsider.com/reign-maker-launches-tech-creator-management-firm-kernel-ai-boom-2026-4Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

Conversation starters
Daily AI Digest
Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.
More about
launch
Hong Kong developers test homebuyers with modest price increases after sell-outs
Hong Kong developers are raising prices of new homes this week following sold-out launches in recent days, further testing the appetite of homebuyers amid geopolitical and interest rate uncertainties. Henderson Land Development put another 39 units at its Chester project in Hung Hom on sale on Monday, with 25 homes finding buyers, according to agents. With an average discounted price of HK$22,198 (US$2,831) per square foot, the units were priced 4.57 per cent higher than the 123 units that sold...
Knowledge Map
Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph
This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.
More in Releases

Hong Kong developers test homebuyers with modest price increases after sell-outs
Hong Kong developers are raising prices of new homes this week following sold-out launches in recent days, further testing the appetite of homebuyers amid geopolitical and interest rate uncertainties. Henderson Land Development put another 39 units at its Chester project in Hung Hom on sale on Monday, with 25 homes finding buyers, according to agents. With an average discounted price of HK$22,198 (US$2,831) per square foot, the units were priced 4.57 per cent higher than the 123 units that sold...

Why Microservices Struggle With AI Systems
Adding AI to microservices breaks the assumption that same input produces same output, causing unpredictability, debugging headaches, and unreliable systems. To safely integrate AI, validate outputs, version prompts, use a control layer, and implement rule-based fallbacks. Never let AI decide alone—treat it as advisory, not authoritative. Read All

An Empirical Study of Testing Practices in Open Source AI Agent Frameworks and Agentic Applications
arXiv:2509.19185v3 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Foundation model (FM)-based AI agents are rapidly gaining adoption across diverse domains, but their inherent non-determinism and non-reproducibility pose testing and quality assurance challenges. While recent benchmarks provide task-level evaluations, there is limited understanding of how developers verify the internal correctness of these agents during development. To address this gap, we conduct the first large-scale empirical study of testing practices in the AI agent ecosystem, analyzing 39 open-source agent frameworks and 439 agentic applications. We identify ten distinct testing patterns and find that novel, agent-specific methods like DeepEval are seldom used (around 1%), while traditional patterns like negative and membership tes



Discussion
Sign in to join the discussion
No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!