2018 Startups to Watch: RFP365 grows its Fortune 500 client base from KC roots

January 16, 2018  |  Bobby Burch

David Hulsen and Stuart Ludlow, co-founders of RFP365, Client Discovery

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.

Ranking just behind root canals and color-coding a walk-in closet, the painstaking process of managing requests for proposals is enough to repel most anyone.

But where there’s vehement disdain, there lies startup opportunity.

Just ask RFP365, a Kansas City-based company that’s streamlining the repetitive and arduous RFP process with a software-as-a-service platform that’s gaining traction around the U.S.

“There’s a lot of inefficiencies in the RFP process and there’s a lot of data that needs to see the light of day and that needs to be unleashed,” said Dave Hulsen, co-founder of RFP365.

Founded in 2012, RFP365 created a software platform for issuers and receivers of requests for proposals — an often onerous process for organizations to solicit bids for commodities, services or assets. The company’s technology helps eliminate redundancies in the RFP process by providing streamlined tools to enable collaboration and improve workflow. It also allows RFP issuers to compare, track and monitor RFPs from respondents.

“It creates a seamless connection so that data is transmitted back and forth in a controlled and audited manner,” Hulsen said.

RFP365 boasts such clients as Lockton Companies, Charles Schwab, the City of Kansas City, Missouri, National Geographic Cengage and AMC Theaters. The tech firm has multiplied its revenue 10 times since 2014 and now employs 13 people.

That growth in part has been fueled by a supportive entrepreneurial ecosystem, Hulsen said. A former member of the Kansas City Startup Village, RFP365 outgrew is office/home in the entrepreneurial hamlet thanks to a collaborative network of people, Hulsen added.

Mentoring, connections and hiring referrals are all been an added benefit of being an engaged members of the ecosystem, Hulsen said.

“The community has been a tremendous resource and source of lessons learned,” he said. “There are so many early obstacles we overcome because of our proximity to and engagement in the startup community and the Kansas City Startup Village specifically.”

That community support inspires Hulsen and the RFP365 team to highlight its Kansas City roots, Hulsen said.

“I really want this to be a local, Kansas City story,” he said. “Pretty much every resource we’ve used thus far has been in Kansas City or within driving distance, and all our funding comes from Kansas City.”

With the prospect of adding more Fortune 500 firms to its list of clients, Hulsen said he’s expecting an exceptional 2018.

“There’s some really good momentum within our company,” Hulsen said. “We have assembled a really good team that has the capabilities to continue driving forward, a great sales pipeline that should propel us and will help us attract funding.”

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

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Events Preview: Pipeline IOTY

        By Tommy Felts | January 14, 2016

        There are a boatload of entrepreneurial events hosted in Kansas City on a weekly basis. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, investor, supporter or curious Kansas Citian, we’d recommend these upcoming events for you. WEEKLY EVENT PREVIEW Intentional Collisions When: January 20 @ 9:00 am – 4:30 pm Where: Sprint Accelerator Once a month, the Sprint Accelerator organizes a…

        Amid success, the Kansas City Startup Village is shrinking

        By Tommy Felts | January 14, 2016

        It’s Nov. 13, 2012, and Kansas City’s Spring Valley neighborhood is in a frenzy. TV vans line the streets near 4454 State Line Road, the first house to receive Google’s ultra fast Internet service in the Kansas City, Kan. neighborhood. Reporters jockey for access to a handful of entrepreneurs and techies that moved to area…

        Regional Roundup

        Why coastal investors ignore the Midwest and what’s next for federal startup policy

        By Tommy Felts | January 14, 2016

        Here are this week’s watercooler conversation-starters on why inland states struggle to find funding, coming issues in federal entrepreneurship policy and the success of innovation districts that are cropping up around the U.S. (and in Kansas City).  More in this series here. International Business Times: Finding venture capital far from the coasts Of the $48.3…

        Ebb and flow: The Kansas City Startup Village by the numbers

        By Tommy Felts | January 14, 2016

        Startland News created an infographic on the growth and shrinkage of the Kansas City Startup Village since its 2012 founding. Here’s a colorful interpretation of its ebb and flow, as presented by Startland’s Kat Hungerford. Read more about the KCSV’s history, successes and possible future here.