2019 Startups to Watch: Bungii driving toward coast-to-coast on-demand hauling service

January 14, 2019  |  Tommy Felts

Bungii

Editor’s note: Startland selected 12 Kansas City firms to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch list. The following is one of 2019’s companies. Click here to view the full, ranked list of Startups to Watch.

Bungii’s elevator pitch: Bungii is an app that puts a pickup truck at your fingertips to help move, haul and deliver stuff around town. We’ve been compared to popular ride sharing app, but instead of moving people, we move people’s stuff.

From a humble, but bright and modern office overlooking a wooded area of Overland Park, Ben Jackson heaps praise upon his team at Bungii.

1) Bungii

Founders: Ben Jackson, Harrison Proffitt
Founding year: 2015
Amount raised to date: $4 million
Noteworthy investors: Perceptive Equity, Platform Ventures, Sandy Kemper, Kevin Winkley
Current employee count: 18

His co-founder, Harrison Proffitt, is in Miami opening a new market — the fifth for the sharing economy startup. An original seed investor, Kevin Winkley, is now CFO, a veteran advisor who helps with day-to-day operations after running a $40 million division at EMC, and later building and selling two multi-million-dollar software companies.

“Our team combines young, hungry talent with a track record of proven success,” said Jackson, president and co-founder. “We all graduated from business school — for whatever that’s worth today — and really pursued our passion for being entrepreneurs. I could rattle off 100 reasons for why we’ll continue to execute at a high level, but the No. 1 thing going for us is simple: We just want it more.”

Take Josh Camacho, for example, Jackson said. At 23, Camacho — a fellow Kansas State University graduate — turned down a $130,000 salary and a West Coast promotion to join Bungii.

“At that time, we could only offer him a $30,000 salary, with no insurance, no benefits,” Jackson said. “We didn’t even have an office.”

Today, Camacho is Bungii’s vice president of operations — a critical role for a startup dependent not only on technology but on the logistics of a network of human drivers who respond to Bungii users’ requests for hauling assistance.

Click here to read more about the origins of Bungii.

Ben Jackson, Bungii, LaunchKC

“The world is changing and rapidly moving toward sharing economy on-demand models,” Jackson said. “You can see what Uber and Airbnb have done. The next major market to be completely reinvented is the delivery space. Bungii spent the past two years laying the foundation, and now the pieces are in place for us to rapidly scale. This is a $148 billion market and Bungii is disrupting it.”

Investors like the company’s exceptional revenue growth, he said.

“We averaged a 27 percent compounded monthly growth rate in gross revenue for 2018,” Jackson said. “In addition, we’ve signed agreements with national retail chains, including World Market, Big Lots and Costco. We’re operational in five major markets — all while maintaining a net promoter score of 87, which is 76 points above industry average.”

For context, he added: “Out of all the Fortune 500 companies, USAA has the highest net promoter score at 80.”

On the cusp of another major funding round, Bungii also is running multiple pilots with national brands, Jackson said. While the programs have been “extremely successful,” he said, details remain under wraps for now.

With Bungii operating in Kansas City, Atlanta, Washington, D.C., Baltimore and (as of December) Miami, Jackson said users can expect the startup to launch at least 10 additional major markets in 2019.

“By the end of the year, we should be operating coast to coast,” he said.

Startups to Watch in 2019

1) Bungii
2) ShotTracker
3) RiskGenius
4) Metactive
5) Pepper IoT
6) Signal Kit
7) Life Equals
8) Bellwethr
9) Homebase.ai
10) Tea-Biotics Kombucha
11) SquareOffs
12) Zohr

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2019 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Whizz Bang

        Three fathers bring Whizz Bang potty-training game to market through Make48, Handy Camel

        By Tommy Felts | September 7, 2018

        The Whizz Bang gamifies potty training and saves the bathroom floors of all parents, said Amy Gray. The device, which hooks on the underside of a toilet seat lid, emits a LED light target at the bottom the bowl. Once hit, the device plays musical praise, said Gray, the head of sales for Handy Camel,…

        Reconciliation Services

        Reconciliation Services hopes to heal trauma in the heart of stigmatized Troost corridor

        By Tommy Felts | September 6, 2018

        Commanded by Scripture, David Altschul journeyed into parts unknown, said his successor, Father Justin Mathews.   In the mid-1980s, a philanthropic pull tugged at the heart of Altschul — a white, insurance salesman from Johnson County — and eventually led him into the distressed, history-rich neighborhoods that lined Troost Avenue on the east side of…

        Thelma's Kitchen

        Thelma’s Kitchen cooks up pay-what-you-can cafe concept to preserve community

        By Tommy Felts | September 6, 2018

        Twenty people once filled the kitchen of Thelma Gardner’s apartment in search of their next meal. Their hunger for food fueled her hunger for humanity, recounted Father Justin Mathews as he sat sipping coffee in the newly opened Thelma’s Kitchen. The pay-what-you-can restaurant — located inside of the Reconciliation Services building at 3101 Troost Ave.…

        Alvin Brooks at Operation Breakthrough bridge

        Operation Breakthrough bridge over Troost symbolizes ‘real community’ at an intersection

        By Tommy Felts | September 6, 2018

        With reflection in his voice, Alvin Brooks paused. “The city has to be a partner,” the Civil Rights activist and veteran Kansas City Police Commissioner said as he spoke of the redevelopment of Troost Avenue — the well known racial dividing line, that has long isolated the east side of the Kansas City metro from the…