What the Flokk? Startup to connect residents with area events
July 26, 2016 | Meghan LeVota
For Trey Rhedrick, the alarm sounds at 5 a.m.

Trey Rhedrick
He rises before the sun to work at Black & Veatch as a chemical engineer project manager. When finished at 5 p.m., Rhedrick conducts a couple meetings for his other gig before heading home to snarf down dinner. For the next six to eight hours — or until he falls asleep at his desk — Rhedrick codes and troubleshoots the mobile app he built from scratch.
It’s not your typical work day, but it is for Rhedrick, who divides his 80-hour work week between Black & Veatch and his startup, Flokk. Founded in 2014, Flokk scratched a personal itch for Rhedrick when he moved from North Carolina to the Kansas City area several years ago.
“It was hard for me to find things to do. I would go on Facebook, Eventbrite you name it,” Rhedrick said. “It got frustrating because I would drive all the way down here, I would go to some event at some club or bar and it was never what I expected; in a bad way. How can I find out stuff about what’s going on? I started asking other people and they have had the same issue.”
Flokk is an app that aims to create an incentive for people to go out and try new things. It allows you to locate social events in town, shares real time statistics on the event before you arrive, offers rewards for users and allows you to connect with friends. Its goal is to gauge a user’s interests based on interactions, and for the app to grow with you.
To distinguish the app from popular competitors like Facebook Events and Eventbrite, Rhedrick said Flokk allows users to connect with Snapchat, Uber, Ticketmaster and OpenTable. With the help of those services, a Flokk user can find events based on location, create events, buy tickets, find a ride, post updates and get rewards all within the app.
The iOS and Android apps launched in early 2016 and already have several hundred users. Currently, the app is only available for users in the Kansas City area, but Rhedrick hopes to expand.
Earlier this summer, Flokk was awarded $25,000 from Digital Sandbox KC, an area incubator that provides proof-of-concept resources to startups. Aside from Digital Sandbox’s funds, Rhedrick had some financial help from a couple friends, but he said the firm has largely been bootstrapped.
Rhedrick — who works full time at Black & Veatch to fund Flokk — said that working with Digital Sandbox allowed him to make valuable connections, including with mentors and angel investors. While thankful for Digital Sandbox’s support, he said that bootstrapping the firm has had positive side effects.
“It is a struggle — you really have to find a way to fund it yourself,” he said. “Bootstrapping is important because you have a greater sense of pride and urgency with that. It gives you more flexibility, so you don’t have to worry about having to answer to anybody, or owing anybody equity. It reduces your risk long term.”
Currently, Flokk has one graphic designer and one contractor on staff. Rhedrick hopes that the app will be self sustaining by the end of the year.
Ultimately, Rhedrick said that he hopes Flokk will enable people to have more fun in Kansas City.
“I just want people to come out and have a good time,” Rhedrick said. “Don’t have a care in the world, just come out and meet new people and have a good experience. I want you to go home happy.”

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
$11M renovation in the works for historic hub of Black entrepreneurship; project ties into 18th Street pedestrian mall plans
Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by AltCap, an ally to underestimated entrepreneurs that offers financing to businesses and communities that traditional lenders do not serve. For more than one hundred years, the Lincoln Building has served as a cornerstone of commerce and community in the 18th and Vine district. The historic district —…
MTC’s spring $1.4M investment cycle loops Facility Ally, DevStride into equity deals
Two Kansas City startups are among a handful of Missouri companies receiving a collective $1.4 million in investment allocations through a state-sponsored venture capital program. Facility Ally, led by serial entrepreneur Luke Wade; and DevStride, co-founded by Phil Reynolds, Chastin Reynolds, Aaron Saloff and Kujtim Hoxha; must now complete the Missouri Technology Corporation’s due diligence process…
Kauffman CEO: Foundation’s reset aligns Mr. K’s intent with KC’s needs of the moment
A recently announced strategy refresh for the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation will drive the organization’s collective impact in the community — honoring the vision of its namesake while recognizing the challenges Kansas City faces today, said Dr. DeAngela Burns-Wallace. “Mr. K had very distinct philosophies and ideas around how he wanted this work done,” explained…
Block by block: Prototype builds startup’s housing vision where everyone can afford their own castle
A mock home facade project on the grounds of Kansas City’s historic Workhouse Castle serves as a proof point for Godfrey Riddle’s rebooted Civic Saint — a social venture built on compressed earth blocks as its key to affordable, sustainable housing. “CEBs (compressed earth blocks) are great for Kansas City, because non-expansive sandy clay soil…
