Techstars Spotlight: Hanzo’s e-commerce tools designed to make you money

October 10, 2017  |  Meghan LeVota

Hanzo CEO  Zach Kelling and CTO David Tai

When a small business uploads its products to a third party e-commerce platform like Amazon, it’s giving away control, David Tai said.

“With things like Etsy and Amazon, it’s very hard to communicate and build your brand because you’re building your brand on their platform,” said Tai, CTO of Hanzo. “Your products are next to everyone else’s products. If you took a brick-and-mortar store analogy, it’s like one shelf with an infinite amount of products that aren’t yours.”

That makes it difficult for startups to differentiate themselves — a leading problem in today’s economy, he said.

Tai and CEO Zach Kelling co-founded Hanzo in 2014 to streamline the steps within the online buying and selling process. The firm also aims to help customers maximize the advantages of selling online, rather than just replicating the traditional storefront style.

“What we’re doing is enabling people to build,” Tai said. “We put the same really nice e-commerce experience, powered by data, on their own sites so they can create their own brand.”

The software-as-a-service – which earned a spot on the inaugural Techstars KC cohort – offers three products: analytics, commerce and marketing.

Each product features a distinct technical solution, widget or plugin, though Kelling said the products work best in tandem.

“Our unified platform combines all the analytics necessary to understand how to market and operate an e-commerce platform,” Kelling said. “People are launching online businesses more than ever, but the e-commerce platforms that exist today are not designed to leverage data. We want to give smaller brands the same tools that the Amazons of the world, with millions of customers, have.”

The firm “democratizes” e-commerce, he added. Hanzo has open-sourced hundreds of libraries and APIs, as well as widgets for “every part of an online store you need,” Kelling said.

“The firm has been difficult for us to explain as the business model is changing,” Tai said. “But, once you see it working, it makes total sense. We want to give people the freedom to build whatever type of experience they want.”

Both Tai and Kelling call Kansas City home, but spent the majority of their careers in technology on the West Coast. When the pair found out that Techstars was launching its Kansas City program, it was the perfect opportunity to jump, Tai said.

“We always wanted to be in the startup scene in Kansas City, so we heard that Techstars was doing something here and it was kind of an obvious move,” Tai said. “There’s a lot more people around here than you would think, too, and Techstars has been a great opportunity to bring the community and its excitement all in one place.”

The Techstars KC program is slated to culminate in a demo day Oct. 12. Following the program, Hanzo plans to onboard more small-to-medium enterprise businesses.

Kelling is happy to be growing the firm in Kansas City.

“I didn’t see any reason to build the company out in the bay area when I could build it in Kansas City and try and do good to help my community here,” he said.“I’ve always been a fan of Techstars, – it’s been tremendous validation that what we’re up to has value and that we’re pursuing a course of action that has an ability to help a lot of entrepreneurs.”

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

        Amazon's HQ2 finalists map

        Amazon narrows finalists for HQ2; Kansas City not on the list

        By Tommy Felts | January 18, 2018

        Kansas City apparently isn’t the prime location for Amazon’s HQ2, but area development leaders say the lessons learned from pursuing the online retail giant’s second headquarters not only united the metro, but better prepared it for future bids. “I understand that some Kansas Citians may be disappointed by the Amazon announcement,” Mayor Sly James said…

        Pipeline

        Pipeline readies fellows, judges, award finalists ahead of Innovators gala

        By Tommy Felts | January 18, 2018

        It’s nearly gala time for the Pipeline Entrepreneurial Fellowship and its alumni, as the program prepares to award top honors next week. Eight fellows from the 2017 Pipeline class are set to compete in an Aug. 25 pitch competition, which will culminate with one participant being crowned Innovator of the Year during a sold-out “The…

        Bungii Ben Jackson

        Truck hailing tech firm Bungii straps down $3M in oversubscribed round

        By Tommy Felts | January 18, 2018

        Ben Jackson and his team were so determined to meet their fundraising goal they didn’t notice they crushed it. “One day, we looked up and realized that we were already substantially oversubscribed,” said Jackson, co-founder of Bungii. “We’re super excited and thankful for it. … Our team attacked that goal hard.” Bungii — which created…

        Mycroft AI

        2018 Startups to Watch: Mycroft gives voice to corporate outsider tech

        By Tommy Felts | January 16, 2018

        Editor’s note: Startland News selected the top Kansas City firms to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch list. The following is one of 2018’s companies. To view the full, ranked list of Startups to Watch, click here. The in-house, top-tier technology at Mycroft speaks volumes about the competitiveness of the Kansas City company’s open-source…