In talent showdown with corporate neighbors, startups must hire smarter, say Digital Sandbox experts
August 20, 2018 | Austin Barnes
Kansas City heavy-weights like Garmin and Cerner court developers at the student level, said Brody Dorland, discussing a talent showdown seen by startups across the metro.
“How am I supposed to compete with that?” asked Dorland, co-founder of marketing tech firm DivvyHQ, during a recent Digital Sandbox: Summer in the Sand panel about growing startup teams.
“We’re competing in that bunch and you know, the big boys get a lot of the good talent,” he added, noting the ways in which some big-name companies work to recruit college-level talent — on occasion going as far as to bankroll student debt.
Such aggressive recruitment methods make it difficult for startups to acquire promising programmers or developers, and can ultimately stall company growth.
Click here to check out KC Tech Council’s recent report on talent challenges in Kansas City.
Amid this environment, DivvyHQ — co-founded in 2011 by Dorland and Brock Stechman — is working more diligently to hire smarter, Dorland said. Suggesting a slower hiring process best helps assess a candidate’s skills, the tactic also can weed out those who would not fit into the overall company culture.

Gabby Wallace, Go Natural English
Assessment tests also could be part of the equation, said Gabby Wallace, founder of Go Natural English and one of Dorland’s Digital Sandbox co-panelists and fellow alumni — alongside Claude Harris, CEO of College Coaching Network. Finding employees who understand the mission of a company and can contribute unique strengths to a team is worth the wait, Wallace said.
But when the wait still results in the best local candidates lost to corporate industry leaders, many startups are forced to outsource, Dorland said.
“The majority of our dev team has been done in Argentina and I’m sure that, if you talked to a lot of the smaller tech startups around here, there’s going to be some element of outsource to some other country and that’s just the nature of the city — really it’s just the nature of the tech world,” he said.
Not all hiring situations prove as difficult for DivvyHQ, Dorland said. Creative, sales and marketing positions are among the easiest to fill in Kansas City, he said.
With talent challenges in mind, Dorland has accepted that there are certain tasks he can and will fill within his company as it grows, he said.
Pulling double duty as a company leader and as an employee has its downside, Wallace said, describing the battle between working in the company versus working on the company. Balancing the two can be tough, but the outcome could make or break the overall acceleration of company growth, she said.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
It’s not too late to preserve KC’s Black-owned restaurants (or to enjoy Black Feast Week)
The recent closures of Soiree, The Krave, and Privee — Black-owned restaurants that each became a staple of Kansas City’s evolving food scene — leave a clear void that can’t be ignored, said Ryan Sorrell. An initiative to help save local culinary should-be hotspots in similar danger wraps this week, but the work to promote and…
Ancestry.com founder-turned-AI evangelist says rapidly advancing tech can uplift humanity, families
People across the globe are caught in an internet malaise, said Paul Allen, and tech visionaries’ response should be to renew humans’ dependence on faith and family and friendship and local community. One of their most critical tools, he said: decidedly non-human solutions from the rapidly evolving landscape of artificial intelligence. Allen — founder of…
KC filmmaker sees pleasure as a prequel to dystopia hiding ‘In Plain Sight’; His brave new wake-up call
Thomas Rex’s new proof-of-concept film project envisions a near-future world where society is on the verge of totalitarian control, he said, describing a cautionary tale about being unknowingly controlled by a culture of escapism through pleasure and pharmaceuticals. “In Plain Sight” serves as a prelude to Aldous Huxley’s novel “Brave New World,” an acclaimed but…
New owner plans Vietnamese redux with modernized experience at Northland bánh mi spot
Quick service. Customization. Simple menu. Meals made-to-order in front of the customer. Chipotle was built on this service model. Now Peter Nguyen wants to bring it to his new Vietnamese restaurant, and even use that system to start a franchise of his own. In August, Nguyen purchased the former Bun Mee Phan restaurant at 4011…


