Local weight lifting tech firm Rack Performance lands $250K

May 29, 2015  |  Bobby Burch

Rack Performance (1 of 1)

A Lenexa-based tech company is racking up investment capital to further develop its weight room management software.

Rack Performance recently raised $250,000 from local, private investors that will help the company advance the second version of its software.

Rack Performance built a web-based, weight room and group fitness platform to help coaches and trainers efficiently manage their teams while exercising. The platform’s audio-visual timers help team members quickly transition between exercises, giving such information as the time to spend on an exercise, how to do it and when to change exercises.

“As a high school coach, you’re one person managing up to 60 people at potentially 20 stations,” Rack CEO Matt Sellers said. “You’re spending most of your time being a tempo manager, and not teaching technique or motivating. Our goal is to let you focus more on communicating with athletes, motivating them and teaching technique. ”

Founded in 2013, Rack performance now has six full-time employees and is planning a product update with its new investment capital. Sellers said that most of his clientele is located in Kansas and Missouri, but has expanded across the nation.

A former football coach, Sellers said that strength trainers have offered him positive feedback on how it affects their ability to manage team members.

“The overwhelming censuses is that once they used it they don’t want to go back,” Sellers said. “It’s a career extender and it gives them more energy in the weight room to be able to focus on teaching and motivating instead of everyday just being a time keeper.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2015 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Voodoo Volleyball bounces back in OP: Father-daughter duo doubles as new venture’s setters

        By Tommy Felts | March 28, 2025

        Quinn Austin put several sports to the test as a preteen — racing from basketball practice to softball to volleyball. But she latched on to just one. “Volleyball. It was my sport. Everyone was having a good time,” she said. “We just loved the cheers — a cheer when we got a hit, a cheer…

        Black farmers are losing ground in the fight to feed their communities, advocates say

        By Tommy Felts | March 27, 2025

        More than a century of systemic land dispossession and discriminatory practices has left Black farmers with less than 0.6 percent of U.S. farmland — less than a third of the 16 million acres they operated in 1910, according to local urban farming advocates.  They gathered Tuesday at Independence Boulevard Christian Church to confront this history…

        Cracking egg-flation: How farmers, substitute ingredients help restaurants mitigate price spike

        By Tommy Felts | March 27, 2025

        Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Kansas City PBS/Flatland, a member of the Kansas City Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, The Kansas City Beacon, and Missouri Business Alert. Click here to read the original story. Whether ordering an omelet, French toast, chicken n’ biscuits, chilaquiles, corned beef hash…

        Soccer tennis comes to KC ahead of World Cup; here’s how a weekend street festival is kicking it across the map

        By Tommy Felts | March 25, 2025

        Ryogoku Soccer Academy — with the help of local businesses like MADE MOBB, Café Ollama, and Café Cà Phê — is taking soccer from the pitch to the streets of Kansas City’s historic Northeast, Brad Leonard shared. As the metro gears up for hosting World Cup games in 2026, the neighborhood-based international school and soccer…