2018 Startups to Watch: Mycroft gives voice to corporate outsider tech
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.
The in-house, top-tier technology at Mycroft speaks volumes about the competitiveness of the Kansas City company’s open-source voice assistant, said co-founder Joshua Montgomery.
Mycroft’s Mark II device, which is expected to launch on Kickstarter Jan. 25, sets a new standard for the startup, as well as an industry that includes such market heavyweights as Amazon and Google, he 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)
“Amazon’s Echo development process for Alexa actually involved a total of three acquisitions and four years of work,” Montgomery said. “Our company is about to be on par with them, and in our case, we’ve developed the wake word spotting, the speech recognition (in partnership with Mozilla), the natural language understanding engine that figures out what you’re trying to say, and then the speech synthesis engine mimic, which is kind of robotic — and we have a new one coming out that is really, really natural sounding.”
The Mark II — built on all the lessons learned from launching Mycroft’s original Mark I technology, Montgomery said — should arrive to backers in early December. The device will feature a new screen and an array microphone for improved sound quality, he said.
“So, by the end of this year, the user experience will be very similar to what Alexa and Google are providing, but with all of the technology under one roof,” Montgomery said. “There are only a few companies that can do that.”
Google, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and a handful of others have that capability, he said, even if they don’t all choose to do so.
“And then there’s Mycroft,” Montgomery said. “That puts us in pretty good company.”
Mycroft announced Friday it raised $1.75 million in an oversubscribed round, exceeding the firm’s goal by more than $1 million, Montgomery said. Those joining the seed round included the Missouri Technology Corporation, Kansas City-based Northland Angels, Deep Space Ventures, TechNexus and Social Starts.
Montgomery credits the company’s ongoing success to the talent of his team, he said.
“We got lucky with one of our original hires. He was the first hire a Siri and the second engineer assigned to Echo,” he said. “And even though we’ve only got 20 employees, we have 1,500 developers in our community that are making contributions every day.”
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
ShotTracker benchmark: KC tech gets waiver to be used courtside by coaches at Hall of Fame Classic
A score in the basket of history, Merriam-based ShotTracker has landed another monumental first, the company announced Tuesday, further positioning it as a leader in the Kansas City tech space. “ShotTracker is proud to drive this next stage of growth in college basketball,” Davyeon Ross, co-founder and COO said of the company’s latest NCAA collaboration…
Sprint Accelerator founder teases plans for ‘innovation district’ to fill Jazz-to-Crossroads gap
Kevin McGinnis sees potential in the creativity gap along the 18th Street corridor that connects the Jazz and Crossroads Arts districts, he said. The former Sprint executive and founder of the Sprint Accelerator teased plans Tuesday for a collaborative innovation district that could bridge societal gaps and further develop community in the startup ecosystem. “I’m…
Techweek KC taps into thirst for community at Boulevard kickoff party (Photos)
Revelers networking Monday night at a kickoff party for Techweek Kansas City were so lost in conversation that they frequently had to be reminded of the open bar available to them at Boulevard Beer Hall. The evening event capped the first day of Techweek KC programming, which ran the gamut from a KC Mayoral Tech…
Is KC scaring away disruptive tech? Mayor candidates revive sharing economy debate
A wave of technology is coming — and Kansas City should be ready, said Steve Miller, entering the fray between mayoral candidates over regulating the sharing economy. Appearing Monday at a KC Mayoral Tech Forum to open Techweek Kansas City, Miller compared navigating the regulatory waters around such emerging services as Airbnb, Uber and Bird to…
