Fund me, KC: MatchOn serves up virtual tennis club
August 3, 2016 | Startland News Staff
Startland News is continuing its segment to highlight area entrepreneurs’ efforts to accelerate their businesses. This is an opportunity for entrepreneurs — like MatchOn founder Garrett Gates — to share their stories to gain a little help from their supporters. Back MatchOn’s Indiegogo campaign here.
Who are you?
Garrett Gates, founder and CEO of MatchOn.
What does MatchOn do?
We make arranging a tennis match or getting a sub easy, while helping you to centralize and grow your tennis network. MatchOn is largely about expanding on some of the things I’ve seen work here in Kansas City and begin to automate them for all tennis players around the world.
How’s it work?
MatchOn is a mobile tennis club, which is changing the traditional manual tennis processes of brick-and-mortar clubs, and finding and arranging games. We enable players to easily invite others to matches. The app also automatically keeps track of the people it’s previously matched players with, which helps centralize tennis contacts in one place.
If you need a sub, the app will help you find a new player at a similar skill level to play with. MatchOn even works on the go, because your virtual tennis club is not confined to just one club location. The app can help you arrange a match and get a sub no matter where you are in the US.
How much do you hope to raise?
$38,000
What do you plan to use the funds for?
Right now we have designed and specced out the application. But the app is not yet downloadable in the iOS or Android stores. We are using the funds to bring our prototype application to life. These funds will allow us to provide a much-needed service to all tennis players.

How are you differentiating your campaign or bringing attention to it?
Both my parents are entrepreneurs in the Kansas City tennis space, so I grew up around the sport.
My dad, Kirkland Gates, was the founder of the Tencap Rating System, which is a golf-like handicap for tennis with 150,000 rated players internationally. My mom, Kathy Gates, created the largest tennis league in Kansas City that uses that rating system.
I plan to leverage our family’s tennis connections to help get the word out and ensure a successful campaign.
Is there anything quirky about your campaign?
We think we’ve got a pretty cool campaign video!
Any advice for launching a crowdfunding campaign?
The number one thing I can say is do as much promoting as you can before and during the campaign. The first few days are critical to the campaigns success. No one will want to donate to a campaign that has been around for 10 days and hasn’t raised any money. It will take you at least one to two months to get ready to launch your crowdfunding campaign.
If you or your startup is running a crowdfunding campaign, let us know by contacting news@startlandnews.com.
Featured Business

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Digital Crossroads: Techstars sees hints of KC’s future in its history as a collision point of ideas
Techstars’ Oct. 11 programming during Techweek Kansas City finds inspiration in the past, Lesa Mitchell said, but it focuses on the metro’s future at a digital crossroads. “In the old days, it was called the crossroads because this was actually where all the trains were going through from Mexico to Canada, and east and west…
Jasmine Diane: ‘My Girl Story’ empowerment is bigger than T-shirts, Instagram
Jasmine Diane Cooper dreams of inspiring women across the world with the My Girl Story movement, she said. “[As women] we will tear ourselves down or we look for things that kind of separate us, but we all have the same struggle,” said the social media influencer and rising star on the Kansas City marketing…
Pipeline rotates The Innovators gala to Omaha for celebration of fellows, incoming cohort
Pipeline hopes moving its The Innovators gala to Omaha for 2019 will help keep the premier startup event fresh after more than a decade in Kansas City, said Joni Cobb. “Change and experimentation are what Pipeline is all about,” said Cobb, president and CEO of Pipeline. “We are an entrepreneurial organization, and as such we…
KCultivator Q&A: Lesa Mitchell talks eating eyeballs, remembering names, growing startups
Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. The KCultivator Series is sponsored by WeWork Corrigan Station, a modern twist on Kansas City office space. Growth is a daily driver, Lesa Mitchell said, but it can be limited by the environment around entrepreneurs. “If…

