Zego exit, investment wins reflect critical need for startups to look outside KC, co-founder says

May 10, 2019  |  Tommy Felts

San Diego Bay, photo by Daniel Guerra

Homegrown is great, Adam Blake said, but at some point scaling companies must explore the world of resources and dollars available outside the metro.

Adam Blake, Zego

Adam Blake, Zego

“Kansas City has a lot to offer — plenty of talent, great place to live and quality of life, helpful mentors, etc. — but I would say it’s a requirement for startups to expand beyond KC,” the Zego co-founder said. “While the venture scene in KC is on the right track, it’s still not in the same league as places like the Bay Area, New York and Los Angeles.”

Blake’s recent experience — raising $2.5 million for Zego, followed by securing a $500,000 bridge round — was just the beginning. The smart home technology firm announced an exit earlier this week: in the form of an acquisition by PayLease, a San Diego-based leader in the property management industry. Terms of the deal were not immediately disclosed.

Click here to read more about the Zego acquisition.

“I think we did a good job showing outside investors there are venture-backable companies in KC,” Blake said. “We had a handful that invested in Kansas City for the first time.”

Paylease began as a potential coastal partner for Zego, but eventually transformed into a buyer.

“This transaction is another example of how quickly a globally competitive tech business can be built in Kansas City,” said Ed Frindt, principal at KCRise Fund, one of Zego’s early Kansas City-based investors. “Having a Vista-backed, industry-leading company like PayLease see the value of Zego’s platform further raises KC’s profile as a place where ambitious founders like Adam and [Zego co-founder] Clay [Coffman] can scale rapidly.”

It was the second exit in about a month for a KCRise Fund portfolio company to a coastal buyer, Frindt said, referencing the late-March $100 million investment in PayIt by New York-based Insight partners.

Click here to read more about the PayIt deal.

Investments from outside Kansas City are nothing new. Of the 50 firms on Startland’s 2018 list of Top Venture Capital-Backed Companies, about 70 percent of the more than $436 million in capital investments came from beyond the metro.

Click here to see the Top VC-Backed Companies list.

“Those who already have a higher percentage of capital from outside of Kansas City probably are the more mature companies on the list,” said Darcy Howe, founder and managing director of the KCRise Fund in a Startland analysis of the 2018 list. “They’re able to get their initial funding in town, build something sustainable from that initial funding and have enough pattern recognition to institutional investors that it overcomes the idea of ‘Where are they located?’”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    MECA Challenge engages KC students in entrepreneurship

    By Tommy Felts | September 3, 2015

    For two years, MECA Challenge has been working with Kansas City’s students to instill an entrepreneurial mindset. This fall, organizers are all-in with the first of five MECA Challenges of the season set for tomorrow, Friday, at Blue Valley CAPS. The program is a one-day event for student groups in which they work on teams with…

    ‘No regrets’: KC startup Knoda closing its doors

    By Tommy Felts | September 3, 2015

    Rather than lamenting the death of their company, a team of startup founders is drawing valuable lessons from their entrepreneurial experience and forging ahead. Kansas City-based Knoda — which created a social platform allowing users to make, track and rank various predictions — recently announced to users that it was going to shut down operations.…

    Without further ado, LaunchKC announces top 20 finalists

    By Tommy Felts | September 2, 2015

    After weeks of application reviews, LaunchKC has announced the top 20 contenders in their Kansas City-based grant competition. With a special kudos to Kansas City, 12 of the top 20 are from the metro area. Of the remaining eight finalists, seven are from seven U.S. states; and one from Santiago, Chile. Three of these non-Kansas City…

    GigaPower coming to northeastern Johnson County

    By Tommy Felts | September 2, 2015

    AT&T announced this week that the company is expanding availability of U-Verse with GigaPower, its latest high-speed internet service aiming to compete against Google Fiber. The service is coming to Fairway, Mission Hills and Prairie Village, the company announced Monday. GigaPower appeared in the Kansas City metro area in February in parts of Kansas City,…