2019 Startups to Watch: Pepper secures defense against invasive Chinese-made devices
January 14, 2019 | Austin Barnes
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.
Pepper’s elevator pitch: Pepper is an independent, multi-tenant Internet of Things communications platform. What Nest or Ring, or these other sort of big brands do to deploy connected, consumer devices –– what they had to build to enable that device to communicate with the user is this massive communications infrastructure –– that’s what Pepper is. The difference is, Pepper is independent. For everyone who doesn’t want to spend $10 million on a platform and build it, they use Pepper.
Intruders are infiltrating homes across America. Slipping quietly through front doors, cleverly cloaked in the tech of loyal consumers, explained Scott Ford.
Founders: Steve Bosch, David Bottoms, Scott Ford
Founding year: 2014
Amount raised to date: $15 million
Noteworthy investors: KCRise Fund, Leawood Ventures, GXPI (Evergy), Royal Street Ventures, OpenAir Equity Partners
Current employee count: 22
“Most consumer devices in the marketplace have communications platforms that are in China or owned by Chinese national companies –– which is a bad thing,” said Ford, CEO of Pepper IoT.
Having identified a growing need for device defense, Pepper is a highly disruptive company ripe for growth in the new year, Ford elaborated of the company’s focus on American-made products.
“As the market evolves to realize that you can’t have data from your camera going to China, those manufacturers and retailers and others who are in the IoT business will be required to look for a domestic partner to enable those services,” he said. “And frankly, we’re the only one that exists.”
Click here to read about Pepper’s cyber security solutions.
Dramatic growth in 2018 has poised Pepper to further gain steam in 2019, Ford said, revealing the company found the majority of its 500,000 user base last year.
Ford anticipates multiplying company partnerships and subsequent client reach, alongside Pepper’s number of users in the new year, he added.
“To be a startup company on the leading edge of one of the biggest technology advancements of our time is exhilarating,” Ford said in anticipation of the future at Pepper. “The fact that we are disrupting a major set of activities that are extended inside of the U.S. by a foreign national government is –– it’s super exciting.”
Ford optimistically sees Pepper as having the potential to be a company that serves as a catalyst in the growth of the Kansas City Startup Ecosystem, he said of the company’s rising star in the IoT space.
“We are very proud to enable and to do our part to elevate [startups] in a way that hopefully [they] can benefit from successes that we’ve had in the global marketplace,” he said.
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

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Hyperloop One on display in KC: Imagine being first-ever passenger to ride its 600 mph pod (Photos)
While not a single passenger has yet stepped foot aboard Virgin’s Hyperloop One, that doesn’t mean the technology isn’t more realistic than ever before, explained Jay Walder. “People can’t really imagine what it would feel like to go 600 miles an hour,” said Walder, CEO of Virgin Hyperloop One — which pulled onto the track…
Social Side Effect: Ex-KC influencer lands commercial with Patrick Mahomes (but building an Instagram brand isn’t magic)
Editor’s note: Social Side Effect is an ongoing profile series that identifies the intersection between social influencing and entrepreneurship People follow Ian Merzwinski on Instagram because they like him, the social influencer said as he explained the importance of personal brand building. “The best thing that you can do is just be consistent,” Merzwinski, founder…
Replica’s $11M round: Alphabet-owned urban planning tool hits the streets as KC-based spinout
Kansas City is suddenly home to a new, heavy-hitter-backed startup with a built-in $11 million in Series A funding, Nick Bowden announced Thursday. Replica — a next-generation urban planning tool by Sidewalk Labs (itself a smart city firm owned by Alphabet, the parent company of Google) — has been spun out into its own standalone…
From KC to Down Under, expanded LEANLAB attracts education innovators to latest fellowship
Ten companies arriving Friday to LEANLAB Education’s latest fellowship are expected to be met with real-world classroom partners from nine school systems in the Kansas City metro and Colorado. “When those closest to the issues in education — teachers, parents and students — have access to cutting-edge innovators and researchers, they’ll be able to collectively…
