Bellwethr grows $2.5M in seed funding, building two-city talent base between KC, Manhattan
June 12, 2019 | Austin Barnes
A $2.5 million seed funding round will infuse Bellwethr with more than cash, said Matt Moody.
“We’ve been able to find some high quality talent and the big thing now is to apply that, build out the product more and start selling even faster,” Moody, founder and CEO, said of Bellwethr’s alignment for rapid growth.
Bellwethr’s elevator pitch: Software firm using artificial intelligence and machine learning to eliminate the need for technical expertise in web development and the inevitable site adjustments that have to be made to tailor to customers.
Previously, Bellwethr had amassed $120,000 in funding, Moody revealed at the time the company was named one of Startland’s 2019 Kansas City Startups to Watch.
Click here to find out where Bellwethr ranks on the annual Startland list.
The seed round was led by Royal Street Ventures, a Utah-based venture capital firm with a heavy Kansas City presence, Moody noted.
Other noteworthy investors include KCRise Fund, Techstars — the accelerator program Bellwethr successfully completed in 2018 — and angel investor Beth Ellyn McClendon, along with Karen and Paul Fenaroli, through the Minerva Fund, Moody said.
Moving beyond the raise, Bellwethr will work to build out its engineering and sales teams, while developing new products, Moody said.
Among such products and services is Retention Engine — a service designed to handle the cancelation of consumer accounts or subscriptions and work to solve problems while offering solutions that help companies avoid subscriptions, the company outlined in a release.
Much of the Bellwethr’s current engineering talent has joined the company — dually located in Manhattan and Kansas City — from K-State, Moody explained.
“It seems like the trend is, you know, after graduation to head towards Kansas City,” said Moody, who hails from the neighboring city of Wamego. “It’s a nice thing for us to be able to kind of handle the two. We can have people start with us and then if they decide they want to move, we’ve got the team in Kansas City as well.”
Mounting momentum, Moody said the injection has greatly impacted Bellwethr’s ability to onboard two VFA fellows in 2019.
Click here to read more about the VFA fellows set to join Kansas City companies over the summer.
“We closed on some of the money earlier in May and so we started hiring. We surprisingly had a lot of talent coming in even before the VFA process opened up,” he said. “They have their masters, experience in machine learning. We’ve been able to find some high quality talent!”
Bellwether has doubled its revenue since graduating the Techstars program in 2018, Moody said, noting that he expects the company to maintain upward momentum.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
VIDEO: How KC-built Engenious Design is scaling with stealth to atmospheric heights
Editor’s note: Engenious Design is a financial supporter of Startland News. This video feature was produced through a paid partnership. From life-saving medical devices to unexpected innovations taking orbit, Engenious Design — a white label manufacturing and design firm headquartered in Prairie Village — might be Kansas City’s best-kept success story, teased Chris Justice, principal…
VC summit: It’s a great place to ‘keep your head down and build’ — but is ‘KC nice’ slowing potential?
Building a startup in Kansas City comes with a mix of unique benefits and challenges, said serial entrepreneurs Riddhiman Das and Toby Rush, who both agreed the local ecosystem is enjoying “significant” momentum — while pushing the startup scene to be “more aggressive and more brutally honest.” “When you’re on an exponential growth curve, whenever…
Winners revealed: LaunchKC awards $300K in rebooted grants competition
LaunchKC’s cornerstone grants celebration returned Tuesday after a four-year hiatus, awarding six Kansas City startups — from gaming and edtech to IoT and healthcare — with $50,000 each in non-dilutive grants. “A win for these companies is a win for Kansas City,” said Becca Castro, strategic initiatives manager for the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas…
‘Perfect is the enemy of progress’: KC founders say the right time for entrepreneurship is now — even if mistakes are inevitable
Early in John Thomson’s entrepreneurial journey, the PayIt co-founder realized no one had all the answers, he shared; and anyone who waits until they feel comfortable enough to start a business will be waiting forever. “We’re all imperfect, certainly fallible. You’ve got to keep going and not worry about perfect. Perfect is the enemy of…


