WYCO sunglasses customizes KC cool for a brightly-colored nationwide vision
July 23, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Kasey Skala frames WYCO as a Kansas City brand ready to look beyond county or state boundaries, he said.
“I think it’s great that we started here in the Midwest. We’re proud of being a Midwest brand, growing it here and taking [advantage of] what Kansas City has to offer,” said Skala, WYCO chief marketing officer, noting parallels to fellow KC brands like Charlie Hustle and Baldwin. “[They] started here in Kansas City and they’ve really grown beyond the Kansas City market, but their roots are still here.”
Though the customizable sunglasses brand now ships across the U.S., WYCO plans to stay true to KC, said Skala. Kansas City’s hard-working culture and support of local businesses makes it easy to keep its headquarters local, he said.
WYCO Sunglasses are built with interchangeable, colored pieces, which provide day-to-day personalization — a feature nonexistent in other brands, he said.
“You coordinate shoes, you coordinated outfits … then typically you’re stuck with the traditional, expensive pair of black sunglasses or cheap sunglasses,” Skala said. “So we wanted to create affordable sunglasses that allow you to customize it based upon your personality and your style.”
WYCO sunglasses now feature a universal square shape and are catered primarily toward men, he said, but the brand plans to release new shapes and sizes, targeting women and children.
The company’s value proposition is completely different from luxury brands like Ray Bans and Sunglass Hut, which together control 80 percent of the sunglasses market, said Skala. With WYCO’s interchangeable design, getting two pairs of WYCO sunglasses is like getting eight different pairs of the other brands, he said.
“We’re not competing with the luxury market. We don’t want to be Ray Bans, we’re not trying to compete with them,” Skala said. “Our focus is less on price and more on the customization and personalization. Our long-term plan is to expand the product line into different types of interchangeable fashion accessories and apparel.”
Originally founded by Blackops Development’s general manager and founder of the Miles app, Lance Windholz, WYCO was purchased by Skala and partners Bob Wray and Lee Cooper in May, said Skala.
Windholz began the venture as a side project in 2013, but couldn’t find the right business partner to put in time and commitment, he said, and sold it to Skala, Wray, and Cooper to provide proper attention it needed.
Wray and Cooper work as strategic advisors and provide entrepreneurial-related expertise from their experience across various Kansas City businesses, said Skala, who works on the ideas and operations side.
“They understood the concept and the product and went through the sale,” Windholz said.“They’re really pushing strong and it’s exciting to see that brand grow. Now hopefully I can look back and be like, you know, I started that and they’ve grown it to be something really, really big.”
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
High school student wants to secure a better world for girls in STEM
In 2015, Ruby Rios — sophomore at Bishop Miege High School at the time — arrived late to the first day of her college-level computer science class at Johnson County Community College. “I got lost, so I walked in late wearing my high school uniform in a room full of 30 college guys,” Rios said.…
Mycroft reveals newest open source AI product
Kansas City-based artificial intelligence startup Mycroft AI revealed Wednesday its newest product during Techcrunch Disrupt’s Product Showcase in San Francisco. The firm opened a Silicon Valley office in 2016, yet its headquarters remains in Kansas City. Mycroft is an open-source device, similar to Amazon Echo, using natural language processing technology to enable its everyday use in…
Immigration debate could stall Moran’s revived Startup Act, again
Federal legislation geared toward boosting entrepreneurship would make it easier for foreign-born innovators to obtain permanent resident status in the United States. “The newly-introduced Startup Act promotes public policies that would change our KC startup community for the better,” said Melissa Roberts, vice president of communications and outreach for Enterprise Center of Johnson County, which…
Pipeline alum set to ‘save the world’ through $1M US Army biotech contract
The U.S. Army recently awarded a Missouri biotech startup a $1 million contract for 24 months. Based in Drexel, Missouri, about an hour south of Kansas City, InnovaPrep was selected out of hundreds of proposals for the Department of Defense’s 2016 Rapid Innovation Fund. The contract is expected to advance development of the U.S. Army…
