KC finance tech firm Lending Standard nabs nearly $500K
June 2, 2015 | Bobby Burch
Kansas City-based Lending Standard recently raised nearly $500,000 to further develop its software and hire additional employees.
The financial tech company snagged the funds from regional investors, and with it has hired two additional technical staff, bringing its total headcount to eight people.
Lending Standard created a platform on which organizations can receive and collaborate on documentation required to finance a commercial loan transaction. The platform helps cut about two months of work off the lending process thanks to collaborative tools and checklists that reduce errors and result in less expensive legal fees.
Lending Standard CEO Andrew Kallenbach said that little has changed in the commercial lending process since the 1980s, which makes it a market ripe for disruption.
“It’s a very antiquated process,” Kallenbach said. “Nothing has changed since the 80s. The last innovation was really the spreadsheet.”
The commercial loan process for multifamily units is an arduous process, Kallenbach said. It often can take up to nine months of back-and-forth between an array of parties — real estate lenders, banks, attorneys, businesses and other financial institutions — that use different programs to mange the mountain of documents required to complete a deal. There often can be more than 200 pages of documents associated with one loan transaction.
Needless to say, it’s a burdensome, expensive operation, he said.
“Today, they have to manually type all of these documents — there are an endless number of forms,” Kallenbach said. “We automate all the documents and letters that have to be completed.”
Lending Standard, formerly Form Zapper, participated in the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s E-Scholars program and is a graduate of SparkLabKC.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Crema apprenticeship effort aims to decode a more inclusive talent pool
Crema’s recent growth means more than an additional Crossroads office space for the startup, said Gabby Brotherton. It provides bandwidth for the firm to supplement Kansas City’s tech talent with a new apprenticeship program. “[Crema is] very much a company that values collaboration and innovation learning,” said Brotherton, marketing specialist at the software development firm.…
Biopesticide AgTech building toward RNAissance with TechAccel cultivation
KC-based TechAccel endeavors to guide startups through “the valley of death” stage that emerges after ideation, but before traction, said Brad Fabbri, noting the firm’s new venture, RNAissance Ag, is expected to disrupt the ag tech industry with environmentally-safe biopesticides. “We try to find products and help develop them to make [farmers’] lives easier and…
Digital Sandbox charges three new startups with its proof-of-concept challenge
An effort to elevate Kansas City’s creative minds, Digital Sandbox KC is digging deeper in its sixth year of acceleration — adding three new startups to its portfolio, the proof-of-concept program announced this week. “Our initial goal was to find 10 early-stage concepts that had high-growth potential and help them secure follow-on funding,” said Jeff Shackelford,…
KCultivator Q&A: Donald Hawkins chews on sage advice, blood sausage, ‘circle of giving’
Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. Founders should rally around Kansas City’s startup ecosystem like fans rallied around the Chiefs, said Donald Hawkins. “If you look at a lot of the companies that have scaled — there’s a huge connection gap between…

