New $750K investment round for Lula comes with partner in apartment management
February 5, 2019 | Elyssa Bezner
Closing a $750,000 seed round is even more impactful with a strategic partner like Worcester Investments, said Lula founder Bo Lais.
“We did have three other private investors, that were minority investors with two of them local, but it’s [become] more than just investment with [with Worcester],” said Lais, CEO of the Overland Park-based home services tech startup. “When you’re raising money, [it’s crucial to] find investors that really believe in what you’re trying to do and share your vision.”
Click here to read about Lula’s partnership with Platinum Realty.
Worcester — a KC-based real estate investment company — approached Lais in October with an idea to add property managment tools to the single family-focused platform, he said, explaining the integration of Lula into the firm’s beta-stage resident and landlord communication tool, Super Renter.
Through Super Renter, residents get immediate answers to questions and can pay rent, Lais added, noting the integration of Lula is expected to provide the ability to request maintenance repairs as well.
“Until this point, we’ve really been focused on the single family homes in that [business-to-consumer] model in which we’ve got traction,” said Lais, explaining Lula’s position before Worcester. “We were seeing revenue growth month over month, but it had been slower than we had hoped.”
Lula is now onboarding 250 of the 3,500 apartments managed by Worcester with plans to take the full amount by the end of 2019, said Lais, noting the multi-family space is expected to produce a new revenue stream through a cost per unit per month model.
“Once we work out the kinks and we feel like our product is ready to roll, we plan on selling our platform to other partners and selling this type to other property managers by the end of 2019,” he said. “We expect by that by the end of 2019 and especially in 2020, to really ramp up our revenue numbers significantly.”
Single-family consumers are still very much a significant piece to Lula’s base, he added, noting the expectation to enter into at least five additional markets by the end of 2019 to effectively “capture the Midwest.”
Finally executing on platform roll out in St. Louis and Arkansas is top of mind, Lais explained, with further plans to move Lula into Wichita, Tulsa, Chicago, and Austin markets.
“We’re actually hiring more people so we can accomplish that quicker,” he said.

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
New Black & Veatch accelerator bent on changing the world, powered by LaunchKC
A new accelerator powered by LaunchKC is Black & Veatch’s attempt to “create the world that we want,” said Hyleme George, director of the freshly announced IgniteX CleanTech program. “It’s a world that we want to invest in to accelerate the adoption of sustainable infrastructure,” George continued. “What that means is a world where there’s…
Blockchain KC event aims to put Kansas City on the map for crypto thought leadership
Kansas City is running low on blockchain-fueled innovation, said Shekhar Gupta. “I want to see Kansas City as one of the top places where people think about blockchain,” said Gupta, chief technology officer of Overland Park-based SaaS firm Asuun, and organizer of the inaugural Blockchain KC conference. “I have a big map on my wall…
‘Heartbreaking but empowering’: Nipsey Hussle’s life, death inspire entrepreneurs to action
The Marathon will continue, Wesley Hamilton said, echoing tens of thousands of mourners now pledging to keep alive the transcendent entrepreneurial spirit of rapper-turned-community leader Nipsey Hussle. Hamilton, founder and executive director of the KC-based nonprofit The Disabled But Not Really Foundation, was among a dozen or more Kansas City entrepreneurs in Los Angeles Thursday…
Inmate to business founder: Determination, Incorporated adds partner with lived experience
Determination, Incorporated’s new partner in compassion places a new lens on the impact the prison-to-founder non-profit could have, said Kyle Smith. “I’ve gotten this non-profit this far, but I can’t do it alone,” said Smith, founder of Determination, Incorporated, which uses entrepreneurship to curate new opportunities for formerly incarcerated people, on the addition of his…
