90 on the Clock with Mighty Handle

October 21, 2015  |  Bobby Burch

Mighty Handle

90 on the Clock with Mighty Handle 
By John McGrath, KCPT, and Bobby Burch, Startland News

Ed’s Note: Flatland and Startland News have partnered to highlight Kansas City’s innovators and entrepreneurs, all in 90 seconds. This is the fifth and final episode in the series.

Think of Mighty Handle as your digital defender.

No, Mighty Handle is not anti-virus software. Rather, the handy, Kansas City-made contraption is a device that can save your fingers from the pain of hauling heavy grocery bags.

Made of recycled materials, Mighty Handle is an anchor-shaped gizmo that allows a user to carry six to eight bags —up to 50 pounds — in one hand. The company targets apartment dwellers, mothers and the aging population.

“Think about the last time you went grocery shopping — you get home and you try to crab claw everything and make it inside in one trip,” said Ben Rendo, founder of Mighty Green Solutions, which manufactures the device. “Mighty Handle takes the stress from those bag loops cutting into your hand and places the weight on your shoulder where it’s much more comfortable for us to carry groceries. It’s similar to if you picked up the handle of a suitcase.”

Rendo first sketched his idea for Mighty Handle on the back of a napkin in 2006 after he experienced the pain of lugging up groceries to his apartment. Nearly a decade later, he now works with his partner, Anita Newton, and a small team of manufacturers to produce the device and sell it to the masses.

“The challenge now is to get mindshare from customers,” he said. “Mighty Handle is a new product, so we’re not competing against an existing brand. We’re competing against the status quo, which is basically your hands.”

In July, Rendo and his team signed a massive deal with the largest retailer in the world, Wal-Mart. The agreement moves Mighty Handle into about 3,500 Wal-Mart stores nationwide.

A former presenter at 1 Million Cups, Rendo said Mighty Handle will surpass $1 million in revenue in 2015, and the product was featured on the Home Shopping Network in August. The company also will be selling Mighty Handle in A&P, Save-A-Lot and SUPERVALU stores.

Here are a few more nuggets from Rendo’s conversation with Startland News and Flatland:

On inspiration for Mighty Handle …
In 2006, I had been out of school for a couple years and had been transferred back to Kansas City from St. Louis. I lived in a walk-up apartment in downtown Kansas City and every week I’d go grocery shopping. I’d get home and then I’d try to Sherpa my bags up to get to my front door. By the time that I got there and jumbled my keys out, my hands, fingers and forearms would be red and on fire. So I thought there had to be a better way. That’s how I came up with the concept for Mighty Handle. I put it on the backburner until 2013.

On the company’s Wal-Mart deal …
We got into Wal-Mart with a test at 100 stores last October. We went in and beat our metrics and they said ‘We’re going to roll you out to about another thousand stores.’ We did that in January and continued to sell well above our weekly sales goals and last month we got rolled out to another 2,500 stores. Today we’re in about 3,500 Wal-Marts across the U.S.

On advice to other entrepreneurs …
You’ve got to stay positive. There are a lot of hard days and for me it’s incredibly important to have a team that’s supportive. Also my wife, Tracy, who’s been incredibly supportive — without her none of this would be possible. I’m not more talented or smarter than anybody, by any means. But I’ve surrounded myself with people that really are. Find that good team and go from there.

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

        Mary Kay O'Connor, PatientsVoices

        KC-based PatientsVoices pulls $150K in first round of seed capital, additional $75K from MTC

        By Tommy Felts | July 6, 2018

        Competing for a spot in a Nashville-based health tech accelerator, PatientsVoices landed its first round of seed capital — with a booster shot from the State of Missouri. A $150,000 innovation grant from Jumpstart Foundry investment group represents a leap forward for PatientsVoices, headquartered in iWerx’s North Kansas City entrepreneurial development center, said founder and…

        Jordan Fox and Ryan Hetu, Foxtrot Supply Co.

        Beyond buzzwords: Foxtrot Supply mounts protest of an increasingly online-only world

        By Tommy Felts | July 5, 2018

        A large butcher block table stands between the owners of Foxtrot Supply Co. and its customers. But the found-object centerpiece of their Crossroads store is meant as a meeting place, not a barrier, said Ryan Hetu. “It’s alluring, inviting and kind of vulnerable,” the Foxtrot co-founder explained. Stitched into the high-traffic fabric of First Fridays…

        Peek inside: Made in KC Marketplace offers a glimpse of its new Plaza store (Photos)

        By Tommy Felts | July 3, 2018

        Amid the bustle of traffic and construction in one of Kansas City’s most dominant shopping destinations, the Made in KC Marketplace has quietly been taking shape on the Country Club Plaza. The retailer — which specializes in showcasing wares crafted by local makers — opened the doors of its new location with little fanfare this…

        iwerx Gladstone

        iWerx Gladstone to expand Northland coworking, incubator options in former racquetball club

        By Tommy Felts | July 3, 2018

        Two years after launching its sprawling flagship site in North Kansas City, a premiere coworking community is expected to debut iWerx Gladstone in late fall. The two-story, 32,000-square-foot space — originally built as a racquetball club and renovated into a traditional office building in the mid 1980s — will be home to about 80 offices,…