Order here: Menufy online restaurant platform delivers results, food from OP startup
December 5, 2018 | Noelle Alviz-Gransee
Servicing the online orders of more than 300 restaurants in the Kansas City metro, Overland Park-based Menufy is scaling its platform across the U.S., while maintaining a startup mindset, said Ashishh Desai.
“Even though now we have over 4,000 restaurants nationwide — every state but Vermont and in 1,200 cities — we still have that kind of underdog mentality,” said Desai, co-founder and director of sales for Menufy, a tech firm that builds websites and provides an online ordering platform for eateries. “We are getting bigger and starting to become a much larger player in the U.S. market, but we still have that mentality where everyone knows where we came from and we came from one restaurant.”
The co-founders, a group of University of Kansas alumni, founded the startup in 2009, while working at Stix Restaurant in Kansas City, Kansas. The Japanese steakhouse needed an online presence, as well as a robust and complementary way for customers to order food.
Challenges quickly began to present themselves, Desai said. Credit card processing was among the first hurdles, as well as a communication and verification system to notify the restaurant of paid orders, he added.
It took a year to work out the kinks, Desai said, but soon the co-founders were ready to tackle a restaurant with multiple locations. Next came dozens, then hundreds of Kansas City small businesses – from pizza shops to Chinese takeout spots.
Click here to see participating restaurants in Kansas City.
Eventually, it was time to push Menufy out into the world, Desai said.
“In 2013, I took three co-founders … basically packed everything that we owned and moved to Dallas, because we were out of restaurants in KC, Lawrence, Columbia and Manhattan,” he said. “We started selling in Dallas for about six months, then we packed up and moved to Austin, then Tampa and Denver.”
With the bootstrapped startup — the only major online ordering platform that accepts bitcoin — doubling in size annually, Desai said, Menufy strives to keep the aesthetics and best trappings of a small firm.
“We do still have the startup mentality: You can dress any way you want as long as you’re great at your job and you love your job,” he said.
Looking back, it’s been an incredible journey so far, Desai said, noting a sense of peace and satisfaction that tends to follow the scary, in-the-moment moves necessary to build — and keep — momentum.
“There were times when we took pretty big gambles to make sure our client base was growing,” he said.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
California retail tech firm opens Crossroads office, hiring 20
Retail technology firm PriceSpider is citing the area’s vibrant tech community as the reason behind rooting a new office in Kansas City’s Crossroads Arts District. Headquartered in Irvine, California, PriceSpider said the burgeoning startup community, deep pool of tech talent and Google Fiber’s arrival in 2012 helped push the company to choose the City of Fountains.…
Heart and soul: UMKC celebrates Entrepreneur of the Year Awards (photos)
Convening students, entrepreneurs and top civic leaders, the 32nd annual Entrepreneur of the Year Awards on Tuesday recognized some of the area’s top innovators, including the creative mind behind one of Kansas City’s most iconic structures. The University of Missouri Kansas City’s Henry W. Bloch School of Management presented its International Entrepreneur of the Year…
Women investors create intentional connections with female founders
Female entrepreneurs receive only about 2 percent of all venture capital but own 38 percent of businesses in the United States, the Harvard Business Review reports. That’s in part why a group of women investors in Kansas City is planning to meet with women entrepreneurs to foster better relationships. Investors from the KCRise Fund, Royal…
Not just for students: MCPL expands digital tool set for entrepreneurs
Editor’s note: The following content is sponsored by Mid-Continent Public Library but independently produced by Startland News. Dusty books. Tedious silence. Cranky shushers. Many stereotypes come to mind when one thinks of a library. But for those who haven’t recently visited these sanctums of knowledge, you might be surprised to see their transformations from canvas…


