2018 Startups to Watch: Super Dispatch takes shipping partners into the digital age

January 16, 2018  |  Traci Angel

Super Dispatch

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.

Super Dispatch first delivered its concept to the trucking and hauling industries with professionals and managers adopting the Kansas City firm’s technology. Now it’s time for the next leg of the journey.

“We have evolved to taking an entire trucking company and digitizing it,” said founder Bek Abdullayev.

When Abdullayev created the company four years ago, he hoped to streamline the paperwork, receipts and confirmations of shipments for companies and their fleets. Bringing the idea to fruition took experimentation, as well as communication with operators and truckers, he said. Getting drivers and others on board with an idea that would completely revamp their bookkeeping systems took time.

“At first, not everyone had a smartphone,” Abdullayev said. “But that has changed. In the last couple of years it has been driven by peers and what is causing our growth are referrals and word-of-mouth.”

Revenue grew 10 times more in 2016 than in 2015, Abdullayev said, and 2017 brought revenues increasing about 300 percent from 2016.

“That puts us at a huge milestone as a team in crossing into seven figures,” he said.

In doubling its size to about 19 full-time employees, Abdullayev said the team is focusing on its growth.

“We went from being a nuanced pop-up shop to having a space at the table,” Abdullayev said. “We were taken seriously and now we can start discussing much larger problems.”

Super Dispatch’s next frontier aims to find digital solutions to connect those needing to ship materials with trucks that can haul it.

“So far, we have focused on the carrier side and streamlined that,” Abdullayev said. “We want to help the shippers find space and then track the shipment and get paid fast. There’s $700 billion of shipments and they are looking at message boards and calling people. Our platform can be to streamline that.”

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

        CreativeMornings Kansas City

        CreativeMornings KC relaunches with art culture, business community in focus

        By Tommy Felts | June 11, 2018

        Artists are George Brooks’ people, the Crema co-founder and a co-host of the newly relaunched CreativeMornings KC guild said. “I love that CreativeMornings fosters the idea that we can all view our work, hobbies, and life through lenses of creativity,” Brooks said. “By bringing together a community of people who value creativity, it bridges the…

        Advancing women as important now as ever, says STEMMy Awards leader

        By Tommy Felts | June 8, 2018

        Women leave tech-intensive industries at a higher rate than their male counterparts because of a lack of encouragement and support, said Renee Keffer, citing a 2014 report by Catalyst. The fifth annual STEMMy Awards Gala aims to change that narrative in Kansas City, Keffer, co-chair of the event, said, but organizers need help: Nominations remain…

        Philip Gaskin, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation

        Kauffman Foundation’s Philip Gaskin sees entrepreneur ecosystems in the humble snowflake

        By Tommy Felts | June 8, 2018

        Editor’s note: This content was sponsored by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation but independently produced by Startland News. When it comes to developing a startup, there’s no better training ground than a political campaign, Philip Gaskin said. “You’re building movements of people to do extraordinary things,” said Gaskin, director of entrepreneurial communities and chief of…

        Quoleshna Elbert, Community Local, and Victoria Bowman, Bow Designs by Spherea

        Mother-daughter businesses connected by sustainability, faith, yearning for community

        By Tommy Felts | June 7, 2018

        Quoleshna Elbert wants to get — and give — the most bang for her buck, she said. “I’m the person who wants to kill three birds with one stone,” explained the founder of Community Local, an eco-friendly T-shirt brand based in Kansas City. Such drive is hereditary. “We want to be able to go deeper…