Blooom makes national TV debut
June 19, 2015 | Bobby Burch
Overland Park-based financial tech firm Blooom hopes to seed new growth opportunities after a recent national TV appearance.
Blooom CEO Chris Costello and President Greg Smith hopped onto Fox Business Tuesday to discuss 401(k) management and their company, which created an online 401(k) management tool that’s seen solid early traction.
The tool uses a flower in various growth stages to symbolize the health of one’s 401(k) and offers professional advice on how to allocate funds.
Costello said that the appearance likely will lead to more adoption of Blooom’s product, which already has customers in 48 states.
“The exposure that Fox Business provided us was wonderful,” Costello said. “We are confident that this exposure will lead to a significant number of retirement savers looking into Blooom to fix their 401(k).”
In addition to explaining their company, Costello and Smith discussed with Fox Business a recent report that revealed for the first time in U.S. history, more people withdrew from their 401(k) accounts than those that deposited. Americans withdrew $11.4 billion from their 401(k) accounts in 2013, according to the Wall Street Journal.
“We recognize that middle-class Americans are not being successful in their 401(k)s,” Costello said on Fox Business. “We think advice, education and fancy calculators aren’t going to fix the problem. People need help. People need someone to do it for them.”
To access Blooom’s services, users pay $1 per month for an account less than $20,000, and $15 per month for accounts more than $20,000. Costello said that the platform resonates well with younger people who lack knowledge about their 401(k)s and are more apt to conduct financial transactions online.
“Tens of millions of middle class Americans are going to rely upon their savings, not pensions, to fund the last third of their life,” Costello said. “This (appearance) is more validation that we are solving a problem that affects 10s of millions of Americans.”
Blooom in September beat out more than 60 competitors to claim first place at the annual Finovate conference in New York City. The conference features dozens of financial tech firms hoping to disrupt the finance industry.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Una Mas Empanadas folds authentic Argentinian flavors into new restaurant spot at Parlor
Expanding Silvia Herrera’s business from a food truck in Gardner to one of Kansas City’s most active and eclectic food hubs brings the Buenos Aires-born entrepreneur — and her grandmother’s 50-year-old handcrafted empanada recipe — to an even wider, more diverse audience, she said. “Our empanadas are more than just food,” Herrera said. “They represent…
It’s not too late to preserve KC’s Black-owned restaurants (or to enjoy Black Feast Week)
The recent closures of Soiree, The Krave, and Privee — Black-owned restaurants that each became a staple of Kansas City’s evolving food scene — leave a clear void that can’t be ignored, said Ryan Sorrell. An initiative to help save local culinary should-be hotspots in similar danger wraps this week, but the work to promote and…
Ancestry.com founder-turned-AI evangelist says rapidly advancing tech can uplift humanity, families
People across the globe are caught in an internet malaise, said Paul Allen, and tech visionaries’ response should be to renew humans’ dependence on faith and family and friendship and local community. One of their most critical tools, he said: decidedly non-human solutions from the rapidly evolving landscape of artificial intelligence. Allen — founder of…
KC filmmaker sees pleasure as a prequel to dystopia hiding ‘In Plain Sight’; His brave new wake-up call
Thomas Rex’s new proof-of-concept film project envisions a near-future world where society is on the verge of totalitarian control, he said, describing a cautionary tale about being unknowingly controlled by a culture of escapism through pleasure and pharmaceuticals. “In Plain Sight” serves as a prelude to Aldous Huxley’s novel “Brave New World,” an acclaimed but…
