Techstars KC alum Grit Virtual posts $840K oversubscribed seed round
February 28, 2018 | Leah Wankum
Reality is starting to sink in for Grit Virtual, said co-founder Chris Callen.
“It’s exciting to finally be able to talk about our funding rounds and the successes we have had,” Callen said. “It’s been an exciting ride so far, and we’re kind of gearing up to make it a real company, not just an R&D project.”
The Wichita-based next-generation construction management software company last week announced an oversubscribed seed round of $840,000. Callen, who also serves as chief executive officer, said the company is also set to release the beta version of its new virtual-reality software.

Grit Virtual
Techstars Kansas City was Grit’s first outside investor, followed by $600,000 from angel investors across the state. At least $400,000 of those funds came from construction executives, Callen added.
“That’s a big point … almost half the round is filled by people who live and breathe construction every day,” Callen said, noting the detail is a point of pride.
Network Kansas and the Allen Angel Capital Education program based in the University of Missouri also invested in the seed round, he added.
Grit is poised for an April 2 release of the beta version of a construction schedule generator, Callen said. The software is designed to employ “virtual reality planning environments, algorithmic prioritization of tasks and a real-time feedback loop providing a transparent view of what actually occurs on construction jobsites.”

Grit Virtual
Grit will begin installing the beta software on live construction projects for about four to six months, testing it and making any final tweaks before commercial rollout toward the fourth quarter of 2018, Callen said.
“Implementing the sales team and having real clients in the software is exciting and terrifying all at the same time,” Callen said. “We’re looking forward to it and looking forward to seeing what the market feedback and validation is.”
With a staff of 10, Grit also outgrew its current space at Groundwork, a startup coworking space in Wichita, Callen said. Beginning in March, Grit’s new office space will neighbor one of its clients, the Associated General Contractors of Kansas, in Wichita’s Old Town Square.
“Being close to our clients is just a benefit,” he said, adding that the move represents an opportunity to be “as close as we can to the association” and will present opportunities “to have some creative collisions while we’re inside of our offices.”
Grit completed Techstars Kansas City’s three-month, mentor-led accelerator program last year and was highlighted in the Startland News’ Techstars Spotlight.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Now renting nostalgia: Hands-on classic car startup drives ‘look but don’t touch’ into the past
Ryan Wager isn’t just renting out classic cars with his new startup, he shared, he’s loaning out memories. North Kansas City-based RND — launched earlier this year — allows community members and visitors to take classic, RND-restored cars — like his own 1958 Chevy Corvette — for a spin with daily rentals. Want to take…
KC record label disrupts music industry with incubator studio concept that gives artists more freedom, ownership
Casio McCombs’ most creative ideas come to him during “dream hours” — late at night and early in the morning when a majority of people are asleep, he shared. “That’s when all these new ideas for music and how to structure the label would really hit us,” said McCombs, who co-founded the Kansas City-based record…
Their joyful art began with pom poms, but Bubble Gum Kurt’s upcycled expression won’t be boxed in
Infusing their work with plenty of color and a DIY approach, Kansas City artist Kurt Ryan weaves their identity into each craft, article of clothing, and piece of jewelry they sell. Ryan’s creates their work as Bubble Gum Kurt, and through their business venture FunStarShine, both of which evoke the colorful wares Ryan creates. “I…
Startup’s swift action against siloed systems: Finding that ‘single version of truth’ hidden in the data
This story is possible thanks to Entrepreneurial Growth Ventures (EGV), a business unit of NetWork Kansas supporting innovative, high-growth entrepreneurs in the State of Kansas. Celerity Enterprises is aiming no lower than industry modernization with its plug-and-play SaaS financial platform — designed to bring clarity to a world of industrial wholesale distribution that often is rooted…
