Tech firm LendingStandard raises $600K, lands big client

January 5, 2017  |  Meghan LeVota

Andy USE (1 of 1)

Kansas City-based tech firm LendingStandard announced Thursday that it’s closed on an angel capital round of $600,000.

CEO Andy Kallenbach said he’s pleased with the direction of the startup, which created software for multi-family lender organizations. Kallenbach added that he’s excited by what opportunities the financing affords LendingStandard.

“This investment will allow us to develop new targeted multifamily product solutions that will differentiate LendingStandard in the marketplace,” Kallenbach said. “Our early 2017 plans now include an additional, more substantial, investment round that will allow us to scale the business, add valuable team resources and to serve as the catalyst for new client and revenue growth.”

LendingStandard is a software-as-a-service platform on which multi-family lender organizations can receive and collaborate on documentation required to finance a commercial loan transaction. The platform helps cut about two months of work off the lending process thanks to collaborative tools and checklists that reduce errors and result in less expensive legal fees.

In other words, LendingStandard is reducing paperwork for an industry that has been stuck in the 80s. Kallenbach said that the paperwork often creates a struggle for multi-family lenders to complete, and frequently spurs additional problems.

“You may think that ‘it’s just a checklist, why can’t people just follow it?’ [about the paperwork,]” Kallenbach mused. “But, the problem is that everything is just so tedious, we’re talking over 100 different exhibits necessary for just one loan. “

Lending Standard in 2016 snagged Berkadia — the largest multi-family lender company in the United States — as a client.

“They are the 500-pound gorilla,” Kallenbach said. “I’m grateful to be working with the titan of the industry.”

After being located in downtown Kansas City for a year, LendingStandard moved to the Heartland House in Kansas City Startup Village last year. Kallenbach said the new location has made him feel at home in the community, adding that he loves what he does.

“I love being able to provide solutions to people doing tedious work and trying to make their job easier,” Kallenbach said. “I think a lot of satisfaction in our business has been able to help lenders do their job better.

In 2015, LendingStandard raised nearly $500,000. The startup also took part in the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s E-Scholars program and is a graduate of SparkLabKC.

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

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Photo courtesy of United American Hemp

        Two novice gardeners in an Olathe lab could harvest Kansas’ first legal hemp harvest

        By Tommy Felts | July 23, 2019

        Potential for a high-yield payoff grows with each day as Michael Wilson and James DeWitt inch closer to their first hemp harvest — likely the first in the state in modern times, they said. “It’s the jumping off point to create a repeatable process,” said DeWitt, co-founder and CEO at United American Hemp. “We’ve learned…

        Lisa Bledsoe, Tea-Biotics Kombucha

        Tea-Biotics bottles $1.2M in quick funding round; taps into thirsty new markets for kombucha

        By Tommy Felts | July 22, 2019

        From jar-lined countertops in her kitchen to a 13,000-square-foot facility brimming with brew tanks, Lisa Bledsoe’s mission to pour Kansas City a more refreshing bottle of “booch” is scaling fast, she explained over a freshly tapped glass of her “Beachlife”-flavored kombucha.  “I think it can be an inspiration for younger women or even other women…

        Henry Kim, LG Electronics, Innovation Exchange

        LG Electronics tech expert: Kansas City a smart home for corporate-startup collaboration (IXKC photos)

        By Tommy Felts | July 20, 2019

        Tech industry giants see significant potential in the ideas being created in startup hubs like Kansas City, an LG Electronics leader told a crowd gathered this week at Homebase.  “A lot of startup companies can bring innovation to the front. Big companies like ours, sometimes we’re so busy that we lose track of that activity,”…

        Photo by Jakob Owens Sharkoff shark bite survivor

        5-year-old shark bite survivor returns to the ocean with help of SharkOFF wearable, founder says

        By Tommy Felts | July 19, 2019

        A sweet taste of its do-good mission has Kansas City-based SharkOff eyeing new ideas, explained Shea Geist, recounting the tale of 5-year-old Violet Jalil’s journey back into the ocean.  “Several months ago we got a big order from [Violet’s mom,] Jessica [Veatch], and she commented when she put in her order, talking about her daughter…