More than a Fountain City vacation: SavR bringing US headquarters to Kansas City
December 7, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Kansas City’s startup culture and support network helped the City of Fountains land the new U.S. headquarters of Australia-based SavR, said founder Tim O’Shea.
“If you’re a company that’s trying to strive for genuine outcome, then you’ll be very well received [in Kansas City],” he said. “I think Midwestern people tend to ferret out the profit-oriented, the capitalistic, and [those] just trying to suck money out [of you.]”
O’Shea announced the U.S. headquarters news Thursday evening at Startland’s “Investivus for the Rest of Us” Innovation Exchange, which featured a panel of three Fountain City Fintech accelerator founders at nbkc bank.
Check out more photos from the event below. Investivus was sponsored by nbkc and also included an investment panel moderated by Melissa Roberts of the Enterprise Center in Johnson County.
Fintech firm SavR — which boosts savings by utilizing automated round-ups from debit-card transactions — is set to present along the Fountain City Fintech cohort’s five other companies at the accelerator’s inaugural Demo Day Dec. 13 at nbkc. Fellow panelist and cohort member Parker Graham, co-founder of Destiny Wealth, teased more announcements could be in store for the coming event.
Click here to see more details about the Demo Day and RSVP.
“For us, the people [in Kansas City] have been amazing, the startup community really attractive in particular,” he added. “That’s the state government, local government and organizations whose sole goal in life is to help people like us share our vision and mission and to help us grow as an entrepreneur.”
The biggest barriers in entrepreneurship stem from those who do not actively champion for the success of others, said O’Shea.
“As an entrepreneur, if you can find yourself lucky enough to be in a community like we are here in KC, where we’re able to surround ourselves with people who are ambitious and entrepreneurial and positive and want to see you succeed — that can often be one of the biggest determining factors for us to be able to grow,” he said.
Related: KC Mythbusters challenges Kansas City to rethink how it supports startups

Ronnie Washington, Onward, Tim O’Shea, SavR, Parker Graham, Destiny Wealth, and Austin Barnes, Startland News
SavR was offered a site for its headquarters in a San Francisco coworking space, O’Shea said, noting the culture of the area doesn’t fit the firm’s mission and values.
“There’s almost a culture [in San Francisco] of like, ‘If you don’t have an AI-powered, blockchain-transacting robot that’s going to Mars, the whole idea of what you’re doing doesn’t even really gel with the community,’” said O’Shea.
Working to benefit “the 1 percent” is the harsh reality for companies on that East Coast, he said, while SavR aims to aid the average American’s savings to pave the way for vacations and world travel.
“It makes a whole bunch of sense for us to stick to who we are as people and as a company, and to surround ourselves with people who have the same values and the same kind of mission in life,” said O’Shea.
A partnership with nbkc bank and a solid footing in the community enables SavR to “shout their message from the rooftops” and begin to scale, he said.
Click here to read about fellow cohort member Onward Financial’s recent $1M grant.
“To enable people to travel and to see the places in the world that they’ve always dreamed of in a way that helps them to minimize the amount of debt they get into and to help create a link between mobile technology and what their challenges are as a human — that’s the most rewarding thing we can possibly hope for,” O’Shea added. “KC really delivers us the opportunity to explore all of those things that are valuable to us.”
Participating in the accelerator and its overwhelming benefits overshadows the “absurd” cold in the Midwest, he said.
“This 75-day accelerator [which is nearing its end] is basically like a normal businessperson taking two years of work and compressing it into 75 days, and I wouldn’t trade it for the world,” he said. “It’s amazing and it’s enriching.”
“It’s just the freaking temperature,” O’Shea added, laughing. “Just send us somewhere warm. We’re a tropical species, we really are. We literally just want to go somewhere warm for a while.”
Click here to read more about Fountain City Fintech’s first cohort.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Cassie Taylor is just getting queerer and weirder (and thanks to a wild 72 hours, she’s now a Playboy Bunny)
Be your authentic self, said Cassie Taylor, even if that means losing people along the way. “The biggest thing I’ve learned in the music industry is that if you’re not authentic, it is not sustainable — you’ll burn out fast. During the pandemic, I lost a lot of friends because I was very vocal about…
Pitch contest winners salute PHKC as fourth cohort wraps; $15K in prizes awarded to small businesses
A winning night at The Porter House KC’s pitch event this week expands opportunity for more than just the company taking home the biggest check, said Taylor Burris. AI Hub — led by Burris and her husband, James Spikes — earned first place and $8,000 in the competition, which also marked the completion of PHKC’s…
KCRise Fund closes $34M Fund III with ‘hyper-local’ focus; Here are its first four investments
A third venture capital fund — expected to invest $34 million in 20 more tech startups across the Kansas City region — builds on KCRise Fund’s thesis that high-growth local companies are the key to investor success, said Ed Frindt. It’s a competitive advantage that swells with each wave of funding, he added, announcing the…
These makers and vendors aren’t buying the scarcity mindset: ‘There’s a way for us all to eat’
A new vendor fair aims to unite people from all corners of the city and promote collaboration among the local vendor community, said entrepreneur and event organizer Dontavious Young. “I see a lot of events in Kansas City that are geared toward a specific type of crowd, or a specific type of culture, or a…






























