SquareOffs public polling pilot with Oregon TV station could be a new niche
August 14, 2018 | Austin Barnes
Opinions are constant, said Jeff Rohr, CEO of the Kansas City startup SquareOffs. As social media consumers look for new ways to voice a plethora of differing views, Rohr said he and his company have inked a major deal with News-Press and Gazette Co. (NPG), that could overhaul the public polling conducted by local news outlets.
“It’s a really great fit for us,” Rohr said of the partnership, which is now being piloted at KTVZ-TV in Bend, Oregon. “With local news, you know, you really want to get people involved in the community.”
Getting users involved in local conversations is a top priority for SquareOffs — a micro-debate platform that increases user engagement and revenue for customers and allows them to give in-depth commentary on public polls — Rohr said.
“Publishers, especially in the last six to eight years are really pressured to get content out quickly and it’s a 24/7 news cycle. The use of SquareOffs is kind of a quick way to gauge the audience opinion on breaking news topics as well as to get ideas for follow-up stories,” Rohr said of the product’s ability to enhance newsrooms and the overall process of newsgathering.
The application also allows news companies to turn social engagement into revenue, he said.
“We’ve seen so much conversation go down on places like Facebook and Twitter and these news sites don’t own the data or the monetization if they’re not keeping the conversation on their own website,” Rohr explained.
SquareOffs’ partnership with NPG connects the company to 45 TV stations across the United States, including NPG’s headquarters, which is located just outside of the metro in downtown St. Joseph — a connection Rohr hopes to foster in the future.
“We’d be very excited to work with the St. Joe site,” he said. “It’s always great to have local partners that you can meet face to face.”
Any future work with stations in St. Joseph and others in the NPG family will depend on the success of SquareOffs’ pilot program at KTVZ-TV, Rohr revealed.
The SquareOffs CEO said the station has so far been pleased with the partnership.
“They do about 2 million page views a month [and have] a very active audience and they do a very healthy amount of comments,” Rohr said of the station.
As the company’s pilot program progresses in Oregon, Rohr said he is focused on showing NPG what SquareOffs’ technology is made of. The CEO is hopeful the company has found its niche with local news but plans to take the prospect of any future partnerships one day at a time.

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kansas City startups flex pitch skills in national Kauffman contest
Four Kansas City area startups — and one Lawrence, Kan. firm — have qualified to the top 40 of Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s 1 in a Million pitch competition. The competition offers those who have presented at 1 Million Cups in the last year a chance to snag a $25,000 prize. Hundreds of applicants — who…
Big Bang leverages smart city success, LaunchKC momentum
Editor’s note: This content is sponsored by LaunchKC but independently produced by Startland News. As Kansas City becomes a hotbed for smart city tech, one local startup is providing a spine for streamlined communication among the devices cities will leverage. Kansas City-based Big Bang’s Internet of Things software aims to work as the “central nervous…
JE Dunn leads $5M round in a local, ‘skunkworks’ tech spinout
One of Kansas City’s top corporations has led a $5 million investment round in a local tech firm that helps manage the torrents of paperwork associated with building maintenance and management. Kansas City-based JE Dunn led the Series A round in Site 1001, a software company that spun out of the construction giant to digitize…
Growing tech startup Campus Eye wants to make schools safer
College campuses aren’t the safest place to be. Nearly one in four female college students in the U.S. have experienced sexual assault. In the same study, 11 percent of female college students said they’ve experienced rape. And since 2013, there has been more than 76 instances of gun violence on college campuses. Campus Eye founder…

