Sprint Accelerator Demo Day preview (part I)

June 1, 2015  |  Bobby Burch

SprintAccel part1 Collage

The second class of the Sprint Mobile Health Accelerator is gearing up for its much-anticipated Demo Day, which serves as a culminating event and is expected to draw a crowd of nearly 2,000 people. Led by Boulder-based Techstars, the Kansas City-based accelerator is now hosting 10 mobile health tech startups from around the world for its three-month, mentor-led program. Startland News caught up with each of the firms to get their thoughts on the program and will release a new part of the series each day ahead of Demo Day, which is scheduled for 5:30 p.m., June 4 at the Kauffman Center.

SprintAccel part1 Collage

Photos by James Allison/Sprint

Melon Health
Founder and CEO: Siobhan Bulfin
Hometown: San Francisco
Company bio: Formerly Social Code, Melon Health’s mobile health platform helps people manage their health through peer support, access to clinicians and behavior change tools.

Bulfin on the accelerator’s impact …
It’s given us the opportunity to get in front of organizations that are genuinely receptive to working with startups. It’s also given us access to a wide range of high achievers by way of the mentor network. It’s been a great opportunity to be supplanted somewhere completely away from where you normally are in order to work intensively with your team.

Bulfin on Kansas City …
I think everyone here would say that Kansas City is the most hospitable, friendly city. Every single interaction I’ve had with every single person in this city has been really nice and positive. You walk down the street and people ask you how you’re doing. The people have been overwhelmingly friendly.

Bulfin on what’s next …
After the accelerator, we will be returning to San Francisco, and we are currently hiring for a position here in Kansas City. We are establishing a presence here, hiring a local account manager in Kansas City. We see this as the best launch pad for our Midwest activities.

Alcahoot
Founder and CEO: Chris Ayala
Hometown: New York City
Company bio: Alcahoot is a personal smartphone breathalyzer to help consumers make responsible decisions when out having a good time.

Ayala on the biggest change in Alcahoot’s business …
One [of the biggest changes] was our focus. What we need to do now? Where do we need to sell our product? What are the markets we need to go after? … We’ve seen a lot of good traction in consumer retail, and we’ve actually launched pilot programs in police departments and in that fleet management space.

Ayala on his biggest lesson at the accelerator …
The biggest lesson is never doubt a sales opportunity or someone who might have interest in your product.

Ayala on Kansas City …
The opportunity in Kansas City is awesome. We’ve made such great strides here. … I’m actually already interviewing a couple people to be located here full time. … I think Kansas City is awesome. One of the most wonderful things about this city to date has been our ability to make one phone call and get to a decision maker. In New York it’s usually 5 or 6 phone calls.

REX
Founder and CEO: Amado Guloy
Hometown: Houston
Company bio: REX monitors animal diseases across the globe by aggregating real-time and assorted data to provide analytics for the animal health industry.

Guloy on the company’s biggest change …
We’ve definitely changed from what we came in before [the accelerator]. We’ve morphed. … During the course of mentor madness we realized that we were having trouble with growth and we knew this was a reflection of pet owners not really taking their pets to the vet regularly. … (Eventually) we found there was a really big need for (animal disease tracking) in the animal health industry.

Guloy on the company’s biggest lesson …
We learned how to quickly adapt, to try things really fast and see what sticks. Like some of the other companies here we got to taste all the startup drama you could have in a short time. We changed some employees, and we pivoted.

Guloy on the accelerator’s impact …
Literally two weeks after we pivoted we got our first pilot. We’ve booked more revenue in the past two months than we have in the past year and a half that we’ve been working on this.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2015 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Dual attractions at vineyard disc golf course bring hole-in-one for this Kansas entrepreneur trio

    By Tommy Felts | April 9, 2025

    Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro.  EDGERTON, Kansas — A rural Douglas County family is pairing its award-winning Kansas table wine with 18 holes of disc golf and earning national recognition in the process, Christy Fuller-Flyntz shared.…

    Peek inside: Engenious Design expands its hands-on R&D collaboration space in Prairie Village

    By Tommy Felts | April 8, 2025

    A 56,000-square-foot design center for his business is about more than just space, said Chris Justice; it’s what’s inside the high-tech facility by design: people. “Our work of designing, prototyping and testing is hands-on with specialized tools and equipment. That means our team works together, in person,” said Justice, co-founder, principal and CEO of Engenious…

    How a Missouri native’s high-tech, faith-based bracelet company found inner peace in California

    By Tommy Felts | April 8, 2025

    The emotional rollercoaster of social media can take a toll on mental health, said Gary Rakes, a Raymore, Missouri, native who saw an opportunity to create a digital safe space — one that lives on a user’s wrist.  His business, Free Luma, offers a line of RFID-enabled bracelets designed to connect others through positivity and…

    Mayo Clinic research: Missouri startup’s VR tech can help calm patients’ pre-surgery jitters

    By Tommy Felts | April 8, 2025

    A recent study from the renowned researchers at the Mayo Clinic suggests a dose of virtual reality can help reduce pre-op anxiety in older patients undergoing their first open-heart surgery — and their findings come after testing with technology from Columbia, Missouri-based Healium. “While much of the research to date using VR involved younger patient…