Beach-loving couple hopes to dissolve fear of sharks with Shark OFF repellent bracelets
January 10, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Saving limbs, lives, and long-villainized, cartilaginous creatures of the sea — it’s the mission behind a first-of-its-kind Overland Park startup, Shark OFF, said Shea and Geoff Geist.
“You’re more likely to get killed by a cow. You’re more likely to die falling out of bed,” said Geoff Geist, half of the husband-wife duo who founded Shark OFF, explaining how shark attacks aren’t nearly as frequent or dramatic as Hollywood paints them.
“Our mission is primarily around [helping beach-bound travelers] lose the fear and love the ocean — and get back to enjoying the beach,” he added.
Such a mission is making waves in the metro as the Geist duo launches their shark repellent jewelry — an often confounding concept for consumers and investors far from oceans in the Midwest, the Geists said.
“You can watch people kind of processing. The gears grind to a halt,” Geoff Geist recalled of interactions with those he tells about Shark OFF — a $30 bracelet that emits 1.4 volts of electricity, repelling sharks and protecting divers, surfers, and swimmers. It’s a product the couple envisioned while lying in bed, watching a TV documentary about sharks, he said.
“Mike Rowe from ‘Dirty Jobs’ was interviewing [Dr. Patrick Rice] who pioneered [technology involving the shark repellent properties of magnets and rare earth elements] — and of course, they’re trying to save the sharks, right? Shea and I looked at each other and we’re like, ‘How is this not in every surf shop, every beach store, in every place in the world — you know? This would be a great thing for people to use to get over their fear of sharks.’”
Click here to learn how you can buy Shark OFF.
Deep diving, the duo swiftly began research on sharks, ocean life, and the technology Rice had developed, recalled Shea Geist.
Research quickly revealed the technology had only been used to reduce shark bycatch in commercial fishing and not to block interaction with humans. It was a milestone discovery for the duo as they explored ways to bring Shark OFF to market, she added.
But there are limitations, they said.
“What we don’t want people to think is that they can jump into a feeding frenzy of sharks and nothing’s gonna happen. Sharks are a wild animal,” Shea Geist said, reiterating that sharks aren’t motivated to kill humans — they only bite people to see if they’re food, she explained — but the risk will always exist.
The tide shifted for Shark OFF when the couple was accepted into the Kauffman Foundation’s FastTrac program — aimed at aspiring entrepreneurs with the business skills and insights, tools, resources, and peer networks necessary to build their companies — during which time the product was largely developed, they said.
Landlocked doesn’t mean limitations for the Kansas City entrepreneurs. Developing a product with largely coastal benefits in the middle of the country, has its benefits in the form of support and resources — like the FastTrac program, they said.
The couple is also of the belief Shark OFF can serve as an education tool for those not used to tropical climates, they explained.
“Our market is here in Kansas City,” said Shea Geist. “[We’re marketing to someone] with enough disposable income to travel to the beach for vacation [but who maybe doesn’t understand the risks associated with sharks]. … I know it does sound kind of counter intuitive, but people like surfers and divers and people who live on the coast understand how unlikely it is to get bit by a shark.”
The couple believes Shark OFF can serve also as a social enterprise. Ten percent of all profits are donated to The Ocean Clean Up — a non-profit organization geared toward ridding the world’s oceans of plastic, Shea Geist said.
“One of the things we’d like to do is eventually partner with them to take that plastic and find a way to recycle it so that we can actually use that in our bracelet,” she said of her hopes for the future.
A wave of change yet to crest, Shark OFF newly launched a Kickstarter campaign with the goal of becoming more widely available through Amazon and other retailers as the year comes to a close, Shea Geist said.
“We think that [Shark OFF] will reduce the demonization of sharks. So, if you’re not afraid of something, you’re less likely to hate it and you’re less likely to stand by and let it get slaughtered,” she said.

Shark OFF
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Novel Capital teams with Crux KC to offer growth-focused marketing to early-stage tech companies
An exclusive partnership between two Kansas City-based innovators is expected to help remove a traditional financial hurdle to business growth, said Ethan Whitehill, president and chief strategy officer for the KC Chamber-lauded marketing firm Crux KC. The collaboration between Crux and Overland Park-headquartered capital provider Novel Capital is expected to offer B2B SaaS and tech…
Neighborhood smart cans help Kansas Citians save the planet from their kitchens
Newly introduced composting technology is already turning new ground in Kansas City, Kristan Chamberlain said, with more solar-powered compost cans arriving later this spring across the metro’s urban landscape. Her social venture, KC Can Compost, installed three of the devices in October — free to use for KCMO residents wanting to deposit their soil-making food…
Voodoo Volleyball bounces back in OP: Father-daughter duo doubles as new venture’s setters
Quinn Austin put several sports to the test as a preteen — racing from basketball practice to softball to volleyball. But she latched on to just one. “Volleyball. It was my sport. Everyone was having a good time,” she said. “We just loved the cheers — a cheer when we got a hit, a cheer…
Black farmers are losing ground in the fight to feed their communities, advocates say
More than a century of systemic land dispossession and discriminatory practices has left Black farmers with less than 0.6 percent of U.S. farmland — less than a third of the 16 million acres they operated in 1910, according to local urban farming advocates. They gathered Tuesday at Independence Boulevard Christian Church to confront this history…

