2018 Startups to Watch: Cambrian momentum building toward ‘a more important app’
January 16, 2018 | Tommy Felts
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.
Joel Teply and Heather Spalding — the married duo behind Cambrian — might be the only two in Kansas City who are excited about winter.
The augmented reality tech startup is taking advantage of the cold-weather months to refine its Home Harmony app, as well as ride a wave of enthusiasm following Cambrian’s $100,000 LaunchKC win in September, Teply said.
1) Plexpod
2) PayIt
3) Bardavon
4) Rx Savings Solutions
5) Swell Spark
6) Mycroft
7) Super Dispatch
8) Made in KC
9) RFP365
10) Ruby Jean’s Juicery (tie)
10) Cambrian (tie)
“We’ve been able to make our engine a lot more powerful, so the graphics themselves are more realistic looking and we can do more with animation,” he said, describing the improved functionality of the DIY app that allows users to more accurately visualize home makeover projects using a smartphone. “We can create much more realistic lighting. … It’ll be faster. It’ll be more accurate. It’ll be more compelling.”
Building a richer environment for users — which will include furniture, appliances and even items that move — is only part of the development equation, he said.
“As an entrepreneur, you have to stay pretty focused on your target market, but I want to expand on the consumer interface to give them a compelling reason to come back to our application,” Teply said. “As much as I like working on augmented reality, a lot of what I’m thinking about this year is what we can offer to get consumers to use this on daily basis and really incorporate it into what their dream is for what they can do in their home. It’s about creating community experiences, sharing of projects. … This year is about creating a much more important app.”
To do so, Cambrian is taking advantage of the networking resources and other side-benefits of the LaunchKC award, Spalding said.
“The momentum is really still there. We’re just trying to use it to our benefit as much as possible and not let all that momentum go to waste,” she said, noting an effort has begun to raise funds. “We’re securing some contracts, but we really want some explosive growth over the next 18 months. We’re looking to quickly do a funding round, so we have some funding to focus on our own tech and marketing. We want to be known outside of Kansas City as well, and to have people downloading our app, so we can really solidify our place in the market.”
While Cambrian’s to-do list seems to always be growing, Spalding said, she and Teply are excited to grow their team, as well as to be able to afford the top-level talent needed to make the company a continued success.
“We want to not only have the best technology out there, we want to be proud of what we make,” she said.
Though Cambrian emerged from under-the-radar status in the fall, the tech startup has enjoyed critical backing from Kansas City for years, Spalding said.
“Even before the LaunchKC win, we’ve just had the most unbelievable, wonderful support from the people of this city,” she said. “I can’t imagine a greater place to start a business like this. We’re so lucky to be here. We’ve gotten the most incredible love from everyone we’ve met.”
Featured Business

Tommy Felts
Tommy is editor-in-chief for Startland News, a Kansas City-based nonprofit newsroom that uses storytelling to elevate the region’s startup community of entrepreneurs, innovators, hustlers, creatives and risk-takers.
Under Tommy’s leadership, Startland News has expanded its coverage from a primarily high-tech, high-growth focus to a more wide-ranging and inclusive look at the faces of entrepreneurism, innovation and business.
Before joining Startland News in 2017, Tommy worked for 12 years as an award-winning newspaper journalist, designer, editor and publisher. He was named one of Editor & Publisher magazine’s top “25 Under 35” in 2014.
2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Devoured chef designs oven-baked backyard pizza concept for pop-ups and beyond
An unexpected medley of events helped Jhy Coulter realize her career as a designer needed to end for her creativity to truly shine — through food, the emerging Kansas City chef shared. “Designing for others with all these limitations was just not fulfilling for me,” said Coulter, founder of Devoured — a pop-up pizzeria known…
Advocate envisions Plexpod ‘art village’ rebuilding KC culture at the intersection of art, business
An arts advocate in Kansas City hopes to partner with one of the metro’s leading community coworking spaces to create a haven for nearly 1,300 art entrepreneurs. GUILDit announced Thursday plans to develop an art village within Plexpod Westport Commons — featuring coworking, studios, a theater, and gallery — with a goal to rebuild art…
Legacy-filled eclair shop launches with crowds, pastry case lined with custom, unexpected treats
Chef Erin Luttrell recalls tales of lines out the door and around the block at her great-grandparents’ bakery in the 1920s — the inspiration behind her newly opened sweets shop on the historic Independence Square. “During the grain strike, people couldn’t get flour or bread or products to bake at home for their families, so they…
BLK + BRWN debuts KC’s first smart bookstore with a twist: ‘I wanted to be as Black as possible’
Kansas City’s newest Black woman-owned, brick-and-mortar bookstore in Midtown has opened its doors, but customers shouldn’t judge the operation by its cover, owner Cori Smith said, revealing an additional first for the metro that has heads and pages turning. “There’s a technological aspect paired with each book,” explained Smith, owner of BLK + BRWN — Kansas…
