Vive Crop Protection makes key sales appointments in Corn Belt and Southwest

Appointments strengthen coverage across major row-crop territories

Vive Crop Protection makes key sales appointments in Corn Belt and Southwest

Insurance News

By Josh Recamara

Vive Crop Protection announced changes to its US sales leadership, promoting Darren Bodine (pictured, left) to Corn Belt regional sales leader and hiring Thomas Truesdell (pictured, right) as Southwest territory sales manager. 

Bodine, based in Illinois, brings more than 28 years of experience in agriculture to his new role. Before joining Vive as Midwest territory sales manager, he worked as a strategic account manager at Valent USA. He will now oversee the Plains, Southern Plains, Dakotas, Red River Valley, Upper Midwest, Midwest, Great Lakes and Heartland territories.

Meanwhile, Truesdell, who is based in Texas, has more than a decade of agricultural leadership and sales experience, including entrepreneurial roles and key account management. Most recently he served as a key account manager with Simplot Grower Solutions. He will support Vive’s expansion across the Southwest, including Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma.

Why these moves matter for crop risk and insurance

The personnel moves come at a time when weather volatility, input-cost pressures and shifting planting patterns are keeping crop risk in focus for insurers and reinsurers that write US farm, agribusiness and supply-chain business.

According to the company, the Corn Belt and the Southwest remain central to US production of corn, soybeans, cotton and other crops that underpin both the federal crop insurance program and private-market coverage.

Specialist crop-protection and agritech providers such as Vive sit close to that risk chain. Their products and advisory support can influence yield stability, pest and disease resilience, and input efficiency, all of which are factors that feed into loss frequency and severity for crop and farm carriers.

A stronger commercial presence in the Corn Belt and Southwest can also correlate with higher adoption of newer technologies and practices, which underwriters and brokers are monitoring as they refine views of risk quality at farm and regional level, the company said.

For insurance professionals working with co-ops, input retailers and large growers, expansions like Vive’s in regional sales leadership signal where agchem and input providers are concentrating resources and where new offerings or agronomic programs may emerge. That information can help frame discussions on risk management, coverage structure and how best to support producers facing increasingly complex climate and market conditions.

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