Another slice in stock: Walmart picking up KC startup’s Made-in-the-USA Pizza Saver
June 20, 2018 | Tommy Felts
Mighty Good Solutions leaves no ideas to waste, said co-founder Ben Rendo. The Crossroads-based company’s Pizza Saver product — baked from a simple premise — is its latest offering to earn a deal with the world’s largest retailer.
“We just try to focus on products that are going to make everyday life better,” Rendo said of Mighty Good’s ideation philosophy. “We don’t source products from outside. We don’t license products. Everything we develop is developed in-house. We try to identify problems. We ask: ‘What are things we don’t like doing? What is a task that we can make better or more enjoyable?’”
For the Pizza Saver, it’s the challenge of preserving and reheating leftover slices.
“When the average family of four orders a large pizza, our research has shown, they have about three slices leftover,” Rendo said. “So most people will either jam the full box into the refrigerator or they’ll try to cram the pizza slices into round or square-shaped containers, or they might even put them in baggies. If you use Tupperware, pizza gets stacked on top of each other and it can get congealed and funky pretty fast.”
Mighty Good’s product features triangular compartments within the specialty container.
“Pizza Saver is shaped like a half moon; three slices go in and then there are raised, injection-molded ridges on the bottom,” he said. “So it elevates each piece to prevent sitting directly on the bottom of the container. When you microwave to reheat the pizza, our design allows heat waves to go evenly around the entire body of the slice — leading to a uniformly heath, tasty eating experience.”
Open Call for inventions
The deal with Walmart — details of which are still being finalized, though the product will sell for $1.98, Rendo said — wasn’t a one-off victory for Mighty Good. The company has participated in Walmart’s Open Call in Bentonville, Arkansas, since the program’s inception in 2014.
That’s when Mighty Good successfully pitched its Mighty Handle product, which continues to be carried by the retailer today. Rendo and co-founder Anita Newton, who also serves as chief innovation officer at CommunityAmerica Credit Union, have presented product concepts each year since.
Open Call is part of Walmart’s initiative to purchase an additional $250 billion by 2023 in products made, sourced or grown in the U.S. Mighty Good’s inventions are manufactured in Knoxville, Tennessee, Rendo said.
An estimated 1 million new U.S. jobs are expected to be created through the effort, according to Walmart, noting $7.3 billion spent with Missouri suppliers in 2017, supporting more than 59,953 local jobs.
The process begins with companies like Mighty Good visiting an online portal to upload product photos, descriptions, pricing and demographics, Rendo said.
“If there’s some potential interest, they’ll let you know you’ve been accepted to present, and then it’s just buyer meetings all day,” he said.
About 450 companies participated in last week’s annual Open Call event, Walmart said.
“You have 30 minutes with a buyer for your category,” Rendo said. “That’s kind of your chance to shine — to tell them why your product would be a good fit for Walmart, why they should sell it, and why it would benefit their customers.”

Less Mess from Mighty Good Solutions
In the product pipeline
Mighty Good planned to pitch another product at last week’s event: a cat waterer called the Less Mess.
Unfortunately, Rendo noted, the presentation was scheduled with a dog feeding and watering buyer, rather than the appropriate buyer for feline products.
The company expects to reschedule the pitch for later this summer, he said.
Another successful Mighty Good product, the Dip Buddy — pitched at a previous Open Call — is set to debut in 3,400 stores in the first week of September, Rendo said.
Priced at $2.48, the product — a snap-on cup — prevents dipping sauces and condiments from spreading all over a plate while a person eats, for example, buffalo wings, he said.
Such simplicity and functionality are the keys to Mighty Good’s traction so far, Rendo said, also noting the team’s ability to keep a pipeline of 10 to 20 ideas floating at all times.
“It’s a numbers game. For every 10 we pitch, we might get one in,” he said. “So we constantly have to be innovative.”
Rendo is grateful to Walmart, which was the first chain to launch Mighty Good’s wares, he said.
“They’ve given us incredible opportunity and allowed us to take it from one product that my wife and I packaged entirely by hand to now, when we feel like we’re finally a real company,” Rendo said.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Critics challenge DEI as ‘immoral’; this VC has a message for those seeking equity for Black, Brown founders: We are not powerless
Pushing for equity in long-siloed industries might seem obvious to some, said Marcus Whitney, but advocates for change must remember that not everyone is on board — and some are actively working against level the playing field. “I hate to say it, but we have enemies,” Whitney told a crowd gathered Thursday at Vine Street…
Not excited about these 3 Downtown KC projects? ‘You need to have your pulse checked’
It’s never been a better time for businesses in Downtown Kansas City, shared Mike Klamm. “A lot of us are Kansas City natives, and if you’re not excited about where we are right now, I do think you need to have your pulse checked,” said Klamm, chair of the Downtown Council board and senior vice…
Donutology’s trolley adds new flavor to River Market with streetcar shop stop’s opening
Kansas City’s new treat trolley has arrived with Friday’s opening of the new Donutology donut shop within a 70-year-old repurposed streetcar in River Market. Just a few months after news broke that Donutology would take over the space at 426 Delaware St. — formerly a Made in KC micro location — the business opened its…
Acquiring company: Homebase’s KC team will make valuable workforce, leadership additions
Homebase’s acquisition by an industry leader in the smart home space this week gives its Kansas City team a greater voice in redefining the future of living, said Blake Miller, sharing details of what the exit means for the talent at his Crossroads headquarters. “We’ve created an entirely new category in an industry (real estate)…



