Blooom co-founder dissects $4M raise
October 19, 2015 | Bobby Burch
Financial tech firm Blooom recently snagged one of the Kansas City area’s largest funding rounds in months.
QED Investors from Alexandria, Va., led Blooom’s $4 million Series A round, which also included investments from DST Systems Inc., Commerce Ventures, Hyde Park Venture Partners and UMB. The Leawood-based firm plans to use the funds to hire new sales staff and accelerate development of its web-based 401(k) tool.
Blooom created an online 401(k) management tool that helps users grow their account through professional management. 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. Founded in 2013, Bloom now has 18 people on its staff.
Blooom co-founder Chris Costello recently shared with Startland News his thoughts on the round and what it means for his fast-growing firm.
On what the round means for Blooom …
This takes the financial pressure off the three co-founders, having bootstrapped Blooom the past two-and-a-half years. And it will give us plenty of time and resources to prove out which channels will allow Blooom to scale the fastest.
On completing the round …
I worked closely with our president, Greg Smith, over the past four months on this. It certainly involved a lot of our time but we went into this process with the mindset that we need to take our time to be sure that we will be working with the right kind of investors. I guess I wasn’t too worried about finding the money for Blooom so we wanted to focus on finding the right kind of money. By that I mean people that can add real value beyond just writing a check — whether this can be a value-add from an operational, marketing, technology or strategic perspective. I am happy to report we can check all of those boxes with the investors and corporations that came together to fund Blooom.
On strengths of Blooom’s investors …
Our lead investor is QED Investors. They were one of the earliest investors in Credit Karma and also invested in SoFi, Prosper and Braintree. They are largely former CapitalOne executives, including Nigel Morris who was one of the founders of CapitalOne. We think they will be immensely helpful in helping us with our direct-to-consumer marketing channel.
On landing local investors …
We are very excited about the two local Kansas City companies that invested in this round: DST Systems and UMB. We are very eager to show the country that innovation can come from the Midwest and we are quite proud that two long-standing, established Kansas City companies are supporting us.
On Blooom’s plans …
Execute, execute, execute. We have an elegantly simple product for a huge market that badly needs something like Blooom. Now we just need to execute on the mission.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Hunting access to capital? Do your homework first, Techweek panel says
Imagining overnight startup success is as unrealistic as wanting to become a winning athlete or megastar musician overnight — it all takes time and practice, said Juan Campos. “If you actually have the ambition to create a multimillion dollar company, then the people that are the most successful at that didn’t just wake up one…
Real estate tech firm RealQuantum moving from bootcamp to LaunchKC stage
Lacking the sex appeal of tech and other high-growth, super-charged industries, the world of commercial real estate is ripe for change, said Jeff Weiner. LaunchKC competitor RealQuantum is ready to modernize that landscape, he said. “Serving a critical need that doesn’t really get a lot of attention is a really smart place to be and…
ShotTracker benchmark: KC tech gets waiver to be used courtside by coaches at Hall of Fame Classic
A score in the basket of history, Merriam-based ShotTracker has landed another monumental first, the company announced Tuesday, further positioning it as a leader in the Kansas City tech space. “ShotTracker is proud to drive this next stage of growth in college basketball,” Davyeon Ross, co-founder and COO said of the company’s latest NCAA collaboration…
Sprint Accelerator founder teases plans for ‘innovation district’ to fill Jazz-to-Crossroads gap
Kevin McGinnis sees potential in the creativity gap along the 18th Street corridor that connects the Jazz and Crossroads Arts districts, he said. The former Sprint executive and founder of the Sprint Accelerator teased plans Tuesday for a collaborative innovation district that could bridge societal gaps and further develop community in the startup ecosystem. “I’m…
