Mobility Designed to ‘bottle lightning’ from viral video success

April 29, 2016  |  Bobby Burch

Mobility Designed 3

The international spotlight is shining bright on Mobility Designed, a Kansas City startup that’s snagged tens-of-millions of viewers interested in their futuristic crutches.

Last week, Mobility Designed’s ergonomic crutch was featured in a Tech Insider video that’s now attracted more than 38 million views around the world. That particular video has now been re-edited and published by dozens of other platforms — The Verge, Gizmodo and Weather.com to name a few — garnering the company millions more viewers.

“We’ve had users writing us, begging us for our products, saying ‘Please send me your prototypes.’” – Max Younger

And here’s the kicker: Mobility Designed had no idea Tech Insider was planning a feature. But thanks to the unexpected windfall of attention, Mobility Designed has prioritized capturing a torrent of potential customers with a pre-order sale.

“We’ve been trying to figure out how to bottle lightning,” Mobility Designed co-founder Max Younger said. “It’s felt like we’re in a movie. We had to start rebuilding the website instantly because of traffic. … At one point, (the video) was hitting a million views an hour.”

Mobility Designed’s first product, the M+D Crutch, is what’s creating all the buzz. The crutch allows a user to apply the bulk of her weight on her elbows — as opposed to the armpits or wrists — offering a more comfortable experience. It’s versatile, too, accommodating users from 4’7” to 6’8” and up to 300 pounds.

It revamps a device that has largely remained the same for more than 100 years, Younger said. And in addition to millions of viewers, Mobility Designed has received a flood of personal stories about how its crutches could change people’s lives.

“We’ve had users writing us, begging us for our products, saying ‘Please send me your prototypes — I need them now,’” Younger said. “There are so many people with big injuries or in the hospital right now sharing their stories that I’m reading in bed at five in the morning — literally crying — because of their overwhelming stories and now we’re trying to figure out how to get this product to market faster to help these people that need it now.”

The company’s pre-order sales are now underway, allowing customers to reserve a pair with a $100 deposit. It’s planning to ship its first batch of crutches in the U.S. on Aug. 31, 2016.

To learn more about the company and its crutches, check out this video.

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

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Lightwell building overlooking the outdoor seating of Jason's Deli, incoming home of Strang Chef Collective at Lightwell

        More downtown eats: Chef-driven food hall joining Made in KC on Lightwell’s ground floor

        By Tommy Felts | October 27, 2021

        Nearly two years after details of a chef collective at Lightwell were first teased, developers today announced the popular urban Johnson County food experience Strang Hall will indeed open a second location in downtown Kansas City. “Like the original Strang Hall in downtown Overland Park, the concept will be a casual, modern space designed for…

        Sharmil Desai, Menufy

        Menufy sale scales HungerRush to more than 500 workers, 20,000 restaurants, KC co-founder says

        By Tommy Felts | October 27, 2021

        Growth isn’t new to the menu for Menufy’s Leawood based team, said Sharmil Desai, noting the online platform for restaurants had grown to 140 employees before its freshly announced acquisition by HungerRush. “I can’t think of any point when Menufy has not been adding and expanding,” Desai, co-founder and CEO of Menufy, told Startland News.…

        Stadium rendering from Kansas City NWSL, by Generator Studio, JE Dunn and Monarch Build

        How a new stadium planned for Kansas City’s riverfront could redefine ‘long-neglected’ neighborhood 

        By Tommy Felts | October 26, 2021

        A $70 million project along Kansas City’s riverfront is expected to be the first stadium purpose-built for a National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) team, Kansas City NWSL owners announced Tuesday, unveiling early plans for the 11,000-seat complex just north of downtown. “The goals for reclaiming our long-neglected riverfront have been bold but clear – develop…

        Leawood-based online restaurant platform Menufy acquired by hungry Houston cloud company

        By Tommy Felts | October 26, 2021

        A rapidly scaling Leawood tech company that helped dozens of Kansas City restaurants, as well as eateries across 3,000 other cities, survive the pandemic has sold to a Houston-based cloud software provider for the restaurant industry. Menufy’s vast online food ordering platform and network is expected to be incorporated into the HungerRush 360 cloud POS…