2019 Startups to Watch: Homebase building smart tech for a connected world

January 14, 2019  |  Austin Barnes

Homebase

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.

Homebase’s elevator pitch: Homebase.ai is a smart living, residence experience platform powered by the Internet of Things for apartments and student housing.

Homebase.ai aims to make Kansas City smarter, Blake Miller said with confidence.

9) Homebase.ai

Founder: Blake Miller
Founding year: 2016
Amount raised to date: $2 million
Noteworthy investors: JE Dunn, Sunflower Development, The Brain Family
Programs completed: Kansas City Innovation Partnership Program
Current employee count: 22

“You’ve got the traditional property management software and then you’ve got the new Internet of Things and smart home, smart building technology,” said Miller, founder of Homebase. “We’re kind of right in the middle of that where we’re bridging the gap. That’s where some of the major disruption happens, because we can automate a lot of processes.”

Committed to the development of smart cities, Miller formerly led the public-private partnership that honed the Kansas City Smart City initiative. The experience has made him no stranger to building businesses with innovative legs, he said humbly, noting that startups have become his life.

“The smart city framework that got deployed as a part of the first phase along the street car, was a framework of connectivity. We were putting in public wifi sensors, things like smart lighting and all these sorts of things as well as resident engagement applications.” he said of smart city innovation in Kansas City. “We are now applying that into buildings, which are basically like a microcosm [of smart living.]”

Click here for more about Miller’s work with smart cities.

Blake Miller

Blake Miller

Miller’s presence on the founding teams of such startups as Think Big Partners has also helped him gain necessary leadership qualities that could guide Homebase toward becoming a force for disruption, he said.

“We’re going to make people happier,” Miller said. “We’re going to help make property owners a lot more money. We’re going to because all of our cities are made up of buildings and being able to be a part of that, those things are really important to Homebase. But you know what, we really recognize it and we literally are creating a future. That’s what really motivates us.”

Breaking traditional molds, Homebase solidified its base as a company of the future in 2018, Miller said in reference to the company’s presence in more than 15 buildings — now wired as smart spaces — compared to just one in 2017, he explained.

“That sets us apart from a lot of our competitors who are really focusing more on just trying to have the smart home inside of an apartment and not thinking about the entire smart building,” Miller said

Powering up through momentum gained in 2018, Homebase could add as many as 30 buildings to its smart portfolio in 2019 — all of which are currently under construction and set to come alive by early 2020 — Miller 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

        Mark Davis, RealQuantum, at LaunchKC

        Curb appeal attracts investors to $850K round for real estate tech firm RealQuantum

        By Tommy Felts | November 29, 2018

        A year of steady growth will help Kansas City real estate tech firm RealQuantum end 2018 with the close of its first round of seed funding — securing $850,000 in investments, revealed Mark Davis. “We closed a couple of times actually — people just kept showing up at the last minute wanting in,” Davis, RealQuantum’s…

        AY Young, Battery Tour, sunshine boxes

        Battery Tour energizes Sunshine Boxes with global vision to power developing economies through music

        By Tommy Felts | November 27, 2018

        AY Young’s recent Battery Tour generated enough money to send two of 17° 73° Innovation Co’s Sunshine Boxes to Haiti — the first step in a partnership between the two ventures with common goals, the energetic founder said. “[We] just realized that we were trying to kind of do the same thing as far as…

        Daniel Fogarty, LaunchCode

        LaunchCode leader: Your city never stood a chance of landing Amazon’s HQ2

        By Tommy Felts | November 27, 2018

        [Editor’s note: This guest column first appeared on the Silicon Prairie News tech and entrepreneurship blog. It is republished here with permission from the author, St. Louis-based Daniel Fogarty, vice president of growth at LaunchCode, which operates its workforce development program in Kansas City.] After months of waiting, it’s finally confirmed Amazon will split its…

        AbdulRasheed Yahaya, Local Legends Gaming

        VIDEO: Local Legends makes brick-and-mortar play with new Westport gaming center

        By Tommy Felts | November 26, 2018

        A popular E-Sports startup plans to level up sooner than its founder ever envisioned — putting Local Legends Gaming on Main Street. But this time, it’s wheels up, said AbdulRasheed Yahaya. “We really want to introduce Kansas City to the big, E-Sports brand and how social [gaming] really is,” Yahaya said of his new brick-and-mortar…