Three fathers bring Whizz Bang potty-training game to market through Make48, Handy Camel
September 7, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
The Whizz Bang gamifies potty training and saves the bathroom floors of all parents, said Amy Gray.
The device, which hooks on the underside of a toilet seat lid, emits a LED light target at the bottom the bowl. Once hit, the device plays musical praise, said Gray, the head of sales for Handy Camel, a KC-based online store for innovative gadgets like the Whizz Bang.
A crowdfunding campaign is a great way to test the market, she said. Click here to learn more about the Indiegogo effort.
Handy Camel hopes to raise $10,000 for Whizz Bang in the next month, with several companies on tap to create buzz around the product, she said.
Jungle Creations, an online media company, is developing comical videos promoting the product to push out on social media, and Enventys, a product development company, will handle the minutia of running the campaign, said Gray.
Whizz Bang was created by a team of three fathers at a recent Make 48 invention competition, a contest hosted by Handy Camel that poses challenges to teams and ends with a product pitch to a panel of judges, she said.
“The whole idea of Make 48 is to really empower the inventors and show them the process and the stumbling blocks and how hard it is to get into an invention to market,” Gray said. “So you may have a wonderful idea, but getting it to an actual hands-on-user, a consumer in the end, is a difficult process and it takes many, many steps. Lots of money.”
After the competition, Handy Camel picked up the three leading products, including the Whizz Bang, for licensing deals and royalties for the inventors, said Gray.

“I have two boys myself, and the first time I saw this product at the competition, I was like blown away and thought, I need this so bad!” she said. “So I know that there are other moms out there that are thinking the same thing. So it really does solve a problem and we’re excited to bring that to consumers.”
Pivot International, a KC-based product design and engineering firm, modified the device after the contest and will manufacture Whizz Bang once the campaign is complete, she added.
Anyone wanting to become an inventor should follow and learn from the experiences of others, Gray said. Most such entrepreneurs believe they have a million dollar idea, she said, but unless there’s mass appeal, it might not be a concept that’s actually viable.
“Don’t be afraid to share the product idea with other like-minded people and other consumers out there to really vet your idea and make sure that it is something that people are going to really spend money on,” she added. “That knowledge that you can get from that is just priceless.”
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘Those are fighting words’: Why Weston Bergmann won’t stop until ‘The Blox’ changes every challenger’s life
With the largest live-in startup competition now available on Amazon Prime Video, the stakes have never been higher and the potential never greater for “The Blox” — a show where the reality TV format is mined to turn entrepreneur education into entertainment. “The demand to be on the show has exponentially grown, and with it…
Team behind KC Current, CPKC Stadium honored as Entrepreneurs of the Year
Chris and Angie Long scored another big win Thursday — joining the roster of Kansas Citians honored as UMKC’s Entrepreneurs of the Year — amid an evening that celebrated the world of athletics and the leaders who make the KC sports scene shine. “We feel very proud that we have set a bar,” said Angie…
UMKC’s Student Entrepreneur of the Year sees business potential in KC’s diverse futbol ecosystem
Lesly Romo couldn’t shake an idea bouncing around in her mind for the past few years: a venture she ultimately would call Golazo, a multi-faceted soccer facility that offers the world’s diverse forms of futbol all in one place. Recently named UMKC Student Entrepreneur of the Year, Romo first conceived the concept during her freshman…
InvestMidwest aims to turn connections into dollars; startups can apply to pitch now
Attending InvestMidwest as an audience member was so impactful for Nick Love that the Love Lifesciences co-founder hopes to pitch his own company when the startup-investor conference and showcase returns this spring to Kansas City — for the first time since 2019. “InvestMidwest allowed us to speak with investors, but was also structured such that…
