Freightquote, Edison Factory founder-turned-investor touts ‘work ethic worth investing in’
March 21, 2019 | Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts
Raise and raise relentlessly. Because in business, the sun won’t shine every day, Tim Barton told a room filled Wednesday morning with entrepreneurs and investors eagerly seeking support and insight at the 20th InvestMidwest Venture Capital Forum.
The former CEO of Freightquote, who saw a $365 million exit for the company in 2014 before launching Edison Factory and such ventures as Edison Spaces, Edison District and Menlo Food Labs, spoke from the perspective of a founder-turned-investor, he said.
“When I find entrepreneurs who want all the control and don’t want [me as an investor] to have any input, I think that that’s the lesson — let them have their ball and go away. Just don’t deal with it! ‘Going once, going twice’ … ” said Barton, asked about his investment strategy during a Q&A session that followed his keynote address at the funding forum.
Narrowed from a list of 140 applicants, five Kansas City startups were among 36 companies from 15 states chosen to pitch their work to a collection of investors during Wednesday’s InvestMidwest event.
Area startups in the spotlight included; Overland Park-based hauling app Bungii; Olathe-bred immunotherapy solution ELIAS Animal Health; Kansas City-sourced electronic medical record service iShare Medical; Overland Park insurance efficiency software RiskGenius; and Kansas City-run hearables creator EAR Micro Bionics.
Click here to read more about Bungii and Risk Genius — two of Startland’s 12 Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2019.
Keep reading after the photo gallery.
Barton lauded the Midwest startup and investment communities in his InvestMidwest morning keynote remarks.
“If you look at the West Coast and all of [those] Tech Crunch deals and everything else, it creates a bit of a frenzy and everybody wants to be a unicorn and everybody wants to drink the West Coast Kool-Aid,” he said of opportunities startups have in Kansas City and across the region. “I don’t really feel that way in Midwest — as a Midwesterner — and I think of building businesses for cashflow. I think of building businesses to create opportunities for customers, for employees — or every participant in a business.”
Such a mindset helped Barton build Freightquote to exit — without an exit being his end goal, he said.
“I would say in hindsight it’s nice to sort of reap what you sow. You’re building businesses and investing in businesses. Everybody likes an exit, right? I mean, they’re better than the alternative,” Barton told a chuckling crowd. “I aspired to try to build [Freightquote] much, much bigger, much, much longer than it needed to be. And I could have probably sold it five years earlier, seven years earlier. … [But remember] you’re building businesses either to be the acquirer or to be acquired. So, I think it’s important for advisors … to remind [founders] of that bargain that you make when you invest [you want your money back.]
Citing cash on demand, there’s no shortage of funding available to midwestern founders — so long as they put themselves out there and create opportunity, Barton added.
“When I raised a Series A round for Freightquote in ’98 or ’99, the West Coast guys who did invest we’re saying … ‘What are you doing in Kansas City? We don’t do that. That’s just bad!’”
The volume of employees Barton needed to grow his company couldn’t economically be found in California, he said.
“Today, every California tech company is moving their jobs to Austin, Denver, Nashville, Kansas City, anywhere but California,” Barton said. “The reality is, there is good tech, there is good ecosystem stuff in California, but the Midwest is a place with hardworking people that show up for work at 8 a.m. and leave at 5 p.m. That work ethic is worth investing in.”
Seeking investments for his own projects Wednesday, Barton slipped in a quick pitch for his latest venture — the Edison District — an Overland Park ideation complex that will boast office space, retail shops, living, dining, and event spaces. It’s a spin-off of his already successful Overland Park shared office Edison Spaces project with co-founder Matt Druten, he explained.
“We started this concept before WeWork was really a household name. … There wasn’t flexible office space for startups,” he said. “We started Edison Spaces specifically in the suburbs, because we figure if you have two to four people in a startup and you’re in the suburbs, you don’t really want to drive to downtown anywhere.”
An innovative addition to the often corporate feel of Johnson County suburbia, Edison District has become the central focus of Edison Factory — Barton’s investment and consulting firm, dually headquartered in Kansas City and Austin, Texas. Click here to learn more about Barton’s adventure in building the Edison District.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
She’s one of the Chamber’s biggest ‘Superstar’ success stories; Why your company could be the next
Editor’s note: The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce is a non-financial partner of Startland News, which serves as the media partner for the Small Business Superstars program. The Small Business Superstar program did more than convert Jannae Gammage into a new Chamber member, she said; it exposed her to the power of opening doors…
Report: Plans for Keystone innovation campus on East 18th collapse as interest, deals expire
Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by CityScene KC, an online news source focused on Greater Downtown Kansas City. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for the weekly CityScene KC email review. An ambitious proposal for a Keystone Innovation District campus on East 18th Street has experienced a major setback with…
Celebrity investors, KCRise Fund back $9M strategic seed for Overland Park NFT startup
Banking a $9 million round — including the backing of billionaire Mark Cuban, LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman, the co-founders of Rotten Tomatoes and regional venture capital firm KCRise Fund — CryptoSlam announced Wednesday a new wave of support for blockchain technology and a Kansas City startup operating within the open metaverse. Overland Park-based CryptoSlam, a leading…
New in KC: How Travis Kelce lured Pennsylvania startup inventXYZ (and its team) to Kansas City
Editor’s note: New in KC is an ongoing profile series that highlights newly relocated members of the Kansas City startup community, their reasons for a change of scenery, and what they’ve found so far in KC. This series is sponsored by C2FO, a Leawood-based, global financial services company. Click here to read more New in KC profiles. Nikil Ragav’s journey to…









