ProfessionalChats founders on high growth: Don’t reinvent the wheel, just make it better
September 13, 2018 | Austin Barnes
Entrepreneurship isn’t like Shark Tank, said the co-founders of rapidly expanding Kansas City startup ProfessionalChats.
“I think people get confused in the Kansas City entrepreneurship community and they think they need to have an original idea that nobody’s ever done before and they need funding,” said Scott Hansen, co-founder, and CEO.
Outside funding doesn’t necessarily create a recipe for success either, revealed Trevor Flannigan, co-founder and COO of ProfessionalChats, which focuses on providing businesses with an informed, responsive and empathetic online chat service.
“We now have about 110 employees and we’ve grown the business this entire time without funding and without debt,” he said.
Hansen and Flannigan believe growing their company without the use of an outside investor has been one of their most rewarding and challenging entrepreneurial experiences to date, they said.
The company recently expanded its Kansas City headquarters, a direct result of a boom in business, Flannigan said.
“Now we’re in about 20,000 square feet and continuing to address new markets and bring this really straightforward and desirable service to more industries,” he said.
The company has amassed more than 1,200 clients in just two years, the co-founders revealed. It’s a growth rate the pair attributed to staying true to their original vision for the company.
“We designed the business to grow really fast and we hit our projections, but we wish it would go faster,” Hansen said. “I think that’s part of the fun too. It’s never been like we’re ever going to feel like we’ve made it because a lot of the fun is in the pursuit.”
Further expanding on the company’s growth won’t require reinventing the wheel, Flannigan said in acknowledgment that live chat platforms have existed for nearly 20 years.
The trick?
“We’ve just done it better,” he explained.
Flanningan and Hansen both agreed that ProfessionalChats has found its permanent home in the KC entrepreneur space. The leadership team said they see the company thriving in the metro for years to come.

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Photos: Kauffman’s ESHIP Summit sees strength in numbers, diversity
Despite a living legacy of ongoing entrepreneurial support, even the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation doesn’t have all the answers, Wendy Guillies told a 600-strong crowd at Wednesday’s ESHIP Summit kickoff in Kansas City. “We approach our work with a great deal of humility,” said Guillies, Kauffman Foundation president and CEO. “We need to listen and…
Rewriting the playbook: ESHIP Summit eyes new model of economic development
Whether it be in art, technology or science, fledgling fields of study often face challenges of legitimacy when they enter the mainstream. Such is the case for the domain of ecosystem building, which struggles to find validity for and unity among those working to create vibrant communities in which entrepreneurs thrive, said Victor Hwang, vice…
Manual entrepreneurship, refuge: ‘Farming is just the vehicle,’ says BoysGrow founder
“What’s the word?” “Respect!” shouted the teenage farmhands at BoysGrow, a two-year program dedicated to teaching entrepreneurship to urban youth through agriculture and farming. The 10-acre BoysGrow farm outside Grandview plays host to 30 to 40 boys, ranging in age from 15 to 17. They work, eat and learn on the nonprofit farm three days…


