Kansas City’s Five Elms injects $4M in Omaha startup

April 6, 2016  |  Bobby Burch

The Flywheel team. Photo by Flywheel.

Kansas City-based Five Elms Capital recently led a round of financing for an Omaha blog-hosting startup.

Five Elms led a $4 million round for Flywheel, allowing the startup to add features to its platform for designers and agencies, as well as beef up marketing and sales operations. Linseed Capital and the Nebraska Angels, a network of venture capitalists, also joined the round.

Five Elms was founded by Fred Coulson, who serves as its managing partner. Five Elms has invested in other area firms such as Kansas City-based United Medicare Advisors, Lenexa-based Smart Warehousing and Kansas City-based Spring Venture Group, of which Coulson is founder and chairman.  

Five Elms focuses on investments of $3 to $30 million in business-to business firms with $2 to $20 million in revenue. The firm’s advisory board features Jeff Stowell, who is leading Kansas City’s new $25 million seed fund, Royal Street Ventures & Innovation Center.

Flywheel CEO Dusty Davidson said that he’s pleased with the partnership his company has struck with the Kansas City investment firm.

“We couldn’t ask for better partners than the team from Five Elms, who we’ve known for many years and are excited to work with side-by-side,” Davidson wrote in a blog post. “We’ve also got an amazing team of creative, passionate Flywheelers who are excited for what the future holds. And we’re just getting started transforming the hosting industry for the people who design and build the majority of the sites in the world: designers and agencies.”

Flywheel offers WordPress-based hosting services specifically targeting designers and creative agencies. The site allows users to create, launch and manage sites from a central location, helping to foster collaboration.

The Omaha World-Journal reports that Flywheel employs 35 people and expects to grow to a staff of 80 by the end of 2016, Davidson said. Founded in 2013, Flywheel now has more than 40,000 clients. The company raised about $1.2 million in 2014, which was led by Omaha-based Linseed Capital.

Davidson said that Flywheel was in a rare position for a startup in that it didn’t need the capital it just raised.

“We’ve got a large and growing customer base and cash in the bank,” he wrote. “With the seed round of funding from a year and a half ago, we were able to build a fast-growing and profitable business, and have established ourselves as one of the top players in the WordPress hosting market.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2016 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Cathi Hanauer, TEDxKC

    TEDxKC speaker Cathi Hanauer: Hope starts with working marriage reality

    By Tommy Felts | August 23, 2017

    Editor’s note: Startland News is exploring a few of the most impactful quotes from speakers at Friday’s TEDxKC event at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts. “Break the rules from your parents’ generation. Your father kept an immaculate garage. Your mother made a home-cooked meal every night. But in your family, with two full-time…

    Louis Rosenberg, TEDxKC

    TEDxKC speaker Louis Rosenberg: Hive mind key to battling alien threat

    By Tommy Felts | August 23, 2017

    Editor’s note: Startland News is exploring a few of the most impactful quotes from speakers at Friday’s TEDxKC event at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts. “Here we are: the most intelligent species on the Earth. Congratulations. Unfortunately, things are about to change.” — Louis Rosenberg An alien intelligence is headed toward humanity at…

    Report: KC startups driving quality job creation across metro

    By Tommy Felts | August 23, 2017

    Young Kansas City businesses are substantial job creators for the area, according to a recent report from entrepreneurial resource hub KCSourceLink. In its recent “We Create Jobs” report, KCSourceLink found that new firms that employed fewer than 20 workers created 16,325 new jobs in 2016. And for the past five years, startups created an average…

    CAPS Network

    CAPS put grads on top, alumni say

    By Tommy Felts | August 23, 2017

    Education innovation is a growing industry in Kansas City. Leaders say it has grown tremendously within the past two years and will eventually impact the region’s talent pipeline. One of the metro’s trailblazing programs is Blue Valley Center for Advanced Professional Studies, CAPS. The program began in the Blue Valley School District in 2009 as…