Fund me KC: COPR Security Innovations
November 16, 2015 | Startland News Staff
Startland News is continuing its new segment to highlight area entrepreneurs’ efforts to accelerate their businesses. This is an opportunity for entrepreneurs to share their stories to gain a little help from their supporters. If you or your startup is running a crowdfunding campaign, let us know by contacting news@startlandnews.com
Who: Geoff Miles, Founder of COPR Security Innovations
What: We specialize in protecting and maintaining vacant properties nationwide with an emphasis on the needs and challenges of real estate investors. Our VP SmartTower is a wireless, automated, security system, custom-built for residential real estate investors.
The tower is a transportable security system that allows investors the flexibility to move it from place to place so they get the security where they need it, without complicated installation or long-term contracts.
How much: We hope to raise $100,000 in 30 days.
How will you spend it: Tooling and manufacturing of the VP SmartTower; reducing our costs through large order quantities; funding security systems and monitoring services for non-profit community development organizations, like Habitat for Humanity; and providing our supporters with their security and automation systems.
How’s it different from other campaigns: We are differentiating our campaign through our social mission. Community non-profits (like Habitat for Humanity) who are devoted to restoring blighted neighborhoods have lots of vacant homes on their books that are targets for copper theft, drug crime and vagrancy. If a home is vandalized, it creates an enormous additional expense for these small non-profits and contributes to the decline of the neighborhood. For these reasons, we are donating $30,000 of in-kind security equipment to neighborhood non-profits upon a successful campaign, allowing them to easily secure these homes and reverse the spread of blight.
Quirky of fun facts with the campaign: We’re donating systems in the Manheim Park neighborhood of Kansas City. Five years ago, Manheim Park was a “no-go zone” and had been overrun by blight. But now, thanks to the work of some amazing residents, it’s turning around. As part of our campaign, we’re sharing the story of that neighborhood as a blueprint for other communities looking to fight the spread of blight.
Advice on crowdfunding campaigns: People tend to contribute for two main reasons: they love (and want) a perk you’re offering and/or they want to become a part of your story. So, the core of your campaign involves offering people perks they want and then telling your story in as many places as possible.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Just funded: KCMO unveils $200K in grants for nearly two dozen restaurants, bars, coffee shops
Kansas City has an “enormous appetite” for outdoor dining, said Wes Rogers, highlighting the growing need for city leaders to be responsive to evolving industry and small business trends — and championing KCMO’s new outdoor dining grants program. Officials on Tuesday announced 20 inaugural recipients of the Outdoor Dining Enhancement Grant. It’s an initiative —…
Startup: Holiday season gift card boom needn’t skip small biz; this discrete digital wallet-ready option keeps giving local
Gift cards are convenient — and the No. 1 most-requested present — Nicole Glass said, but there’s frequently just something impersonal and disconnected about them that makes many people feel bad about slipping one into a card or gift box. “It’s like, ‘I didn’t really know what you wanted. Here’s Starbucks,’” said Glass, president of…
Beadwork maker thankful for Native heritage, crafting pieces that honor her lineage (not just what will sell)
Komina Guevara’s hands are rarely still. Through intricate beadwork and crafting leather, her art tells a story deeply rooted in cultural heritage, family traditions, and personal evolution. As the creative force behind KomGue, Guevara is gaining recognition as a standout Kansas City maker — her work showcased at pop-ups and earning her the $1,500 second-place…
