In time for Mother’s Day: Ovatemp wants to boost women’s fertility
May 8, 2015 | Bobby Burch
The arrival of Ana Mayer’s baby girl isn’t the only thing she’ll be thinking about this Mother’s Day.
Mayer — who’s among the newest founders in the Techstars-led Sprint Mobile Health Accelerator in Kansas City — will also be mulling how to further develop Ovatemp, the Boston-based ovulation tech company she leads.
Ovatemp offers women the tools to track their ovulation patterns via a wireless thermometer and app to naturally avoid or enable pregnancy.
Mayer doesn’t need to look far for validation that her product works. One glance at her growing family will suffice.
“It worked for me — I have a one-year-old boy and a baby girl on the way,” she said. “We want to share that, and we really think we can help women that are struggling.”
Mayer’s idea for Ovatemp first arrived when she wanted to naturally avoid pregnancy. Eventually, when Mayer wanted to start a family with her husband and co-founder, Daniel Graf, she used her tracking technique to become a mother. Achieving pregnancy, however, isn’t as simple as a bottle of wine and a Marvin Gaye album.
“It became a very long journey and it was not as easy as I thought it was going to be,” said Mayer, who was an attorney before launching Ovatemp. “When you’re a teenager you basically get told that if you even look boys in the eyes you’re going to get pregnant. Turns out it’s not that easy.”
To employ Ovatemp’s tech, a woman first answers a series of questions on her health and lifestyle, which assigns her a profile based on her responses. After a woman is profiled, she measures her temperature via a Bluetooth thermometer each morning, inputs information about her cervical and period fluid into an app and then awaits the status of her fertility. The company says the process can help women get pregnant up to six times faster.
Ovatemp’s app is now available on the Apple Store, and the company is currently accepting preorders of its thermometers.
“We’re making baby making fun and taking out the stress,” Mayer said. “We know we can improve their odds. … We’re making it as personal as possible. It’s data-driven, personalized advice rather than just tracking.”
In less than a month, Mayer will pitch Ovatemp’s solution on the Kauffman Center’s stage to hundreds of people and dozens of hungry investors during Techstar’s Demo Day. But unlike her peers in the three-month, mentor-led program, Mayer will be entering her third trimester.
“I’ll be seven-months pregnant,” she said. “I’ll get to flaunt my pregnancy on stage. I’m excited for what’s next.”
Featured Business

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Plaza retailers concerned for employee safety after recent shootings, upticks in thefts, harassment at iconic KC shopping district
No business owner should have to deal with ongoing incidents that threaten the safety of their employees and customers, Tyler Enders shared, but that’s the reality for some entrepreneurs on Kansas City’s Country Club Plaza. Employees at Made in KC’s marketplace location on the Plaza were closing up for the night Sept. 2 — the…
Ballerina-turned-entrepreneur’s second act moves older adults to embrace vitality through dance
Dot Burner spent her younger years dancing, taking modern dance classes in college and swaying the evenings away with her late husband. At 93, Burner still loves to dance. She takes part in bi-weekly ballet classes, hosted by Vitality In Motion. “It’s very relaxing,” said Bruner, a Shawnee Hills community member who has been taking Vitality…
KC entrepreneurs tapped to team up with top-tier Kansas enterprise businesses
A trio of emerging Kansas City startups are among 20 cohort members selected to forge new strategic connections with big-name Kansas enterprise partners like Koch, Evergy, Cargill and Spirit AeroSystems. Wichita-based NXTUS this week announced the latest program participants for the NXTSTAGE Enterprise Engagement Series — a diverse array of growth-minded entrepreneurs offering innovative tech…
Mpruv Sports adds pickleball, tennis to its on-demand edtech platform, strengthens C-suite roster
Just six months after teeing off, Mpruv Sports — and its first offering, Mpruv Golf — are seeing momentum on the course and the court, shared founder and CEO Mark Lukenbill. The peer-to-peer, on-demand sports education marketplace is expanding to include tennis and pickleball, pivoting to a progressive web app, adding corporate partnerships, and growing…

