VideoFizz adapts greeting card app for real estate listings, closes $500K deal

February 17, 2018  |  Leah Wankum

Eric Goeken, CTO, and Laura Steward, founder and CEO, VideoFizz

Don’t miss your customers’ cues, said Laura Steward, founder of VideoFizz.

Though the Kansas City-based startup originally developed its mobile app as a tool to help individuals create video compilations of their personal photos and videos, Steward and her team noticed a growing number of real estate agents using the technology to stitch together video listings for homes, she said.

A subsequent collaboration with United Real Estate Group to create a customized version of the app that caters specifically to real estate agents’ needs now has led to a more than $500,000 contract with the group, Steward said.

“I think the secret to surviving as a startup is living long enough to learn what customers want to do with your product,” she said. “It’s always hard to start out; I guess we’re getting rewarded for having made it this long.”

If at least half of the 8,700 agents at United Real Estate Group sign up for the app, it would be worth a half million dollars, she added. That payday could rise as high as $1 million if all agents chose to use the technology. The customized app is set to be unveiled to the group’s agents next week at the 2018 Viva United Education & Awards Convention.

The news comes fresh off word VideoFizz was awarded another $250,000 from the Missouri Technology Corporation. The state agency sustained major cuts to its 2018 budget.

Video is an integral part of modern-day house hunting, according to a 2013 joint study conducted by the National Association of Realtors and Google. But making a video takes up valuable time, energy and resources, Steward said. That’s why her company has found that real estate agents keep using the VideoFizz app to do the work for them.

“Instead of adding a process to the real estate agents that is cumbersome and takes them more time and costs them a lot of money, what they’re able to do is create really inexpensive quality listings so they can sell homes,” she said.

Dan Duffy, chief executive officer of United Real Estate Group, said they are excited about working with VideoFizz.

“This is an absolute rising star opportunity for Kansas City to get on the map with something that, in my opinion, is the technology of the future, not just for real estate but for other vertical markets,” Duffy said. “It’s unbelievable and random that, you know, we happen to be headquartered internationally here, and this sharp technology company is right in our backyard.”

United Real Estate Group members, of course, aren’t the only agents using the app — though the group is the first franchisee of the customized technology, Steward said. Agents from Coldwell Banker, RE/MAX, ReeceNichols, and Better Homes and Gardens also take advantage of VideoFizz’s offerings, Steward said.

“If you’re emotionally tied to how someone wants to use your product, you might miss the cue,” she said. “We saw customers using it in a specific way. It solves a problem for them, and now when we look at the problem that we solved for them, that is the way our business will grow.”

Steward and her team will focus on executing VideoFizz’s contract with United Real Estate Group before shifting greater energy to the next vertical, she said.

School districts, multi-level marketing corporations and small businesses are among the company’s looming prospects, not to mention the individual consumers VideoFizz originally targeted when it launched in March 2015, she said. Since then, VideoFizz has seen nearly 100,000 downloads, Steward estimated.

“It’s like the power of the platform and the process of what we have created has had so many applications across so many verticals that we that we did not realize because we were only talking to consumers,” she said. “Our next question is, ‘How big will it get?’” she said.

The pivot point for Steward was when she noticed many of their customers were businesses, not just individuals.

“We pivoted from business-to-consumer to business-to-business, and it happened so quickly that we can’t even explain it,” Steward said.

VideoFizz has a team of six developers and two full-time employees, but it’s expanding, Steward said, adding that the company just moved into its new headquarters.

“We’ve been very lean, and we’ve had a lot of contractors, but at this stage, we’ve found our market niche,” she said. “We understand what our product is, and it is time to build our team.”

 

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Tech workforce program championed by former Chiefs star graduates its first KC class

    By Tommy Felts | January 27, 2024

    An education initiative recently launched in Kansas City not only focuses on lifting up young people from low-income backgrounds and helping them succeed in the high-tech sector, said pro football hall of famer Will Shields: it upends a cycle of decline and replaces it with building blocks. i.c.stars, headquartered in Chicago, launched in Kansas City…

    Build-A-Bear founder joins VFA’s board, lauding group as an ‘onramp’ to entrepreneurship for overlooked young professionals

    By Tommy Felts | January 27, 2024

    ST. LOUIS — A hometown founder and entrepreneurial icon is joining the board of one of the region’s premiere work placement opportunities for early-career professionals. Maxine Clark, founder of Build-A-Bear Workshop — the teddy-bear-themed retailer she launched in 1997 in St. Lous — is the latest appointment to the national board of directors for Venture…

    Leveraging KC’s resources: How the right people at the right time can unlock a startup’s potential

    By Tommy Felts | January 27, 2024

    The level of collaboration seen in Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem is unmatched by peer communities, said Jill Meyer, noting it’s not a phenomenon that developed by accident. And it takes transparency and trust, she added. “There is a lot of work that resource partners do to make sure that our companies and our founders have…

    Looking for investors? A startup’s first ask shouldn’t be for money, leading VCs say

    By Tommy Felts | January 26, 2024

    Most startup founders think of funding as transactional, Darcy Howe shared, but it’s actually relational. “You’ve got to have relationships with people long before they’ll fund and that includes angels and all the others,” the KCRise Fund founding managing director told a crowd gathered at UMKC’s Bloch Executive Hall for Startland News’ Kansas City Startups…