Canadian firm to house in KC, Techstars Demo Day announces other developments for cohort (Photos)
October 12, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Local government has the most impact on people’s lives, said Ryley Iverson, co-founder and CEO of Townfolio, a Canada-based firm providing city data as a service that was among the 2018 Techstars Kansas City cohort.
Townfolio announced a partnership with the Kansas City Area Development Council Thursday during the accelerator’s Demo Day: fuel the international firm will use to open a Kansas City office.
“With that government focus, we’ve scaled Canada like a virus,” said Iverson, noting the company has an global focus and can be used to provide outside entrepreneurs with a window into scaling cities like Kansas City.
Another member of the cohort, SaRA Health — a recovery assistant that simplifies physical therapy — also announced a partnership with a KC-based company, Bardavon Health Innovations, a firm dedicated to revolutionizing the workers’ compensation industry.
“Through this outcome study we will prove that SaRA reduces recovery times, improves outcomes, and reduces cost,” said Steven Coen, co-founder and CEO of SaRA.
Wattbuy — an online electricity marketplace that was founded after receiving a grant from the Department of Energy —will team up with Zego, KC-based firm that promotes engagement among apartment residents to give renters new options for selecting an electricity provider.
“The whole electric brokerage and purchasing of energy universe is shady, it lacks trust and transparency, and it’s ripe for the type of solution that Wattbuy is bringing to market. […] There’s no one out there doing this so I know that there is a lot of companies, like mine, out there that will want to work with these guys,” said Adam Blake, co-founder and CEO of Zego.
Other startups in the 2018 cohort work in industries from education technology, to food and artificial intelligence, and transportation and clean water.
- Bellwethr: a Kansas City-based software firm, founded in 2016 by Matt Moody, that utilizes AI and machine learning to predict customers and employees that are at risk of leaving businesses.
- Daupler: a Kansas City-based company that created a first-response SaaS platform for city water departments.
- EdSights: a New York-based company, founded by two first-generation students from Rome, that allows universities to predict students who are at risk of dropping out and intervene.
- Smart Diagnostics Systems: a Kansas City based company that has created a reagent, hardware, and software platform to detect pathogens in food, throughout all points of the food supply chain.
- Noviqu: the SaaS firm works to digitize safety, training, and maintenance logs in the manufacturing industry.
- Qwyk: the Netherlands-based firm helps to digitize transportation and international logistics transactions.
- SaRA Health: the recovery assistant simplifies physical therapy by enabling doctors to create personalized exercises for patients and track their progress.
- SoLo: the Cleveland-based firm provides a mobile lending exchange app, founded by Travis Holloway in April of 2018, is partnering with KC-based firm Adpredictive.
- Townfolio: the Canada-based company, founded by Ryley Iverson, provides city data as a service.
- Wattbuy: the online electricity marketplace enables users to save on electricity costs by providing access to cheaper providers.Check out a photo gallery from Techstars below.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Former school principal’s SafeDefend active shooter system installed at Jewish Community Center, target of 2014 Overland Park shootings
Every student, teacher and staff member deserves the greatest opportunity to get home from school safely, said Jeff Green, founder of SafeDefend. Green’s security solution — an active shooter response system that sends alerts throughout a school community, as well as detailed information to law enforcement, within seconds of an incident — recently was installed…
H&R Block must reconnect with startup energy, innovation, CEO Jeff Jones says
Jeff Jones’ journey to Kansas City — winding through hangouts with popstar Justin Timberlake, dinner with Oprah, and a stint driving one of the world’s most dominant sharing economy companies — has been transformative, the H&R Block CEO said. And if the homegrown corporate juggernaut he now leads is to meet its stretch potential, the…
From Cake to Google: Musician-turned-tech leader composes career between keyboards
Well into a music career — but noticing friends who were still trying to find gigs to make ends meet — Ben Morss faced a life-altering pivot. “I got sick of it and I turned to programming full time,” said Morss, a developer advocate at Google. “As a musician, I was trying to call people…
Idle Smart posts Series A round with KCRise Fund, multimillion-dollar investment support
A multi-million dollar investment round has Kansas City-grown Idle Smart revving its engine and accelerating toward rapid growth in 2019, revealed Jeff Lynch, company president. “I think it’s a reflection of what the team has been able to create over the past few years,” Lynch said of Idle Smart’s completion of a milestone Series A…


















