Real estate tech firm RealQuantum moving from bootcamp to LaunchKC stage

October 11, 2018  |  Austin Barnes

Mark Davis, RealQuantum

Lacking the sex appeal of tech and other high-growth, super-charged industries, the world of commercial real estate is ripe for change, said Jeff Weiner. LaunchKC competitor RealQuantum is ready to modernize that landscape, he said.

Jeff Weiner, RealQuantum

Jeff Weiner, RealQuantum

“Serving a critical need that doesn’t really get a lot of attention is a really smart place to be and we’re glad to be able to do that with a local team with 100 percent local investment,” Weiner, RealQuantum’s chief marketing officer said of the company’s growing reach in the software space.

The Kansas City firm is set to be among 20 startups vying Friday for their piece of $500,000 in non-dilutive grants from LaunchKC and the opportunity to build their new and emerging tech businesses in Kansas City, Missouri.

Specializing in the simplification of tedious real estate appraisals, RealQuantum allows busy real estate appraisers the opportunity to increase productivity through the use of its web-based narrative appraisal software and cloud-hosted comps database, explained CEO Mark Davis. The technology elevates the real estate appraisal industry, bringing it into the 21st century, he said.

A casual breakfast with a friend –– Dennis Dull, who would become the company’s co-founder –– sparked Davis’ initial idea for RealQuantum three years ago, Weiner said. 

“He had been complaining about his job as a commercial real estate appraiser and, in particular, his company’s cumbersome software,” Weiner said of Davis. “Mark is a technology architecture consultant, so he asked [him] to elaborate.”

Demand for the RealQuantum software has increased greatly in 2018, resulting in new opportunities for the company, Davis said. During the past month, the RealQuantum team has brought a senior software developer on board –– the result of their appearance on the 1 Million Cups KC stage, he said.

“He came up and introduced himself afterward and we had a few meetings after that to make sure everything was a right fit,” Davis said.

Building momentum, RealQuantum found itself elevated by a nomination for LaunchKC. Such opportunities are rare and must be taken seriously, Davis said.

RealQuantum’s team is excitedly preparing for their pitch to the competitions judges, their first major shot at inciting impact within the local tech space, he said with humble optimism as he spoke of the welcome RealQuantum has received from Kansas City’s startup ecosystem.

“Technically, we could exist anywhere and we could all work remote,” Davis said. “We’re intentional about being in Kansas City because we think it’s the right place to be.”

In preparation of LaunchKC, Weiner and Davis took part in the Enterprise Center of Johnson County’s Pitch Perfect boot camp over the summer, Weiner said.

“That was incredibly high value,” he said. “[The boot camp] led immediately into the opportunity to apply for LaunchKC and the timing of that was so effective. So, we did our best to leverage those two very effective programs and we’ll see what happens.”

Bootstrapped until recent weeks, RealQuantum is riding a path of progress in light of receiving first-round ceed funding, Weiner touted. Couple the funds with their LaunchKC nomination and the trajectory of success for RealQuantum can only climb higher, he said.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Leawood-based online restaurant platform Menufy acquired by hungry Houston cloud company

    By Tommy Felts | October 26, 2021

    A rapidly scaling Leawood tech company that helped dozens of Kansas City restaurants, as well as eateries across 3,000 other cities, survive the pandemic has sold to a Houston-based cloud software provider for the restaurant industry. Menufy’s vast online food ordering platform and network is expected to be incorporated into the HungerRush 360 cloud POS…

    Kansas City-made fitness apps flex tactics to monetize training’s trend toward tech

    By Tommy Felts | October 26, 2021

    Jake Heyen’s Fitic exercises its potential at the intersection of pandemic-pumped fitness and influencer marketing industries, the Kansas City founder said, detailing the intertwined world of fitness-minded consumers and content creators. “We love the fact that we sit within two industries that are poised for explosive growth going forward,” said Heyen, who also serves as…

    Hunter Browning and Ben Schultz, LaborChart

    Exit to watch: Top startup LaborChart sells in a deal under construction for generations

    By Tommy Felts | October 22, 2021

    LaborChart, one of Kansas City’s leading startups, has sold to a California-based giant in construction management — a deal that proves hard work and determination pay off, its founder said.  The startup was sold to Procore Technologies, the companies announced Friday, noting in a release the deal is expected to further innovate the world of construction…

    Bearded Fellas

    Bearded Fellas shave away ‘just a doll’ — leaving the beauty of everyday magic, people

    By Tommy Felts | October 22, 2021

    Ali Bustos didn’t even know how to sew when she was gifted a sewing machine by her parents in 2008. More preoccupied with painting at the time, the machine sat mostly unused.  But when her first son was born, it was difficult to paint with a wiggly baby in her arms, she said.  Her yearning…