MoCannaHub lights up information prohibition; launches cannabis resource-finding app

June 28, 2019  |  Austin Barnes

Andrew Ellis and Matt Blake, Gaudete Development, MoCannaHub

Rolled in entrepreneurial opportunity, tech companies shouldn’t be afraid to take a hit of the growing marketplace that is cannabis, said Andrew Ellis, explaining the methodology behind MoCannaHub — the app that connects curious consumers with experts and information of various strains. 

“Some of the platforms out there are banning cannabis-related content,” explained Ellis, president and founder of Gaudete Development — the creative agency behind MoCannaHub. 

“Without naming names, I would say the largest, most recognizable names in social media … [are] blocking cannabis pages and information,” he said.

(Under pressure from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, social media sites like Facebook, Instagram and Twitter have restricted content related to cannabis, according to Forbes.)

While such behavior can’t be blamed on a single company, Ellis and co-founder Matt Blake noted censorship issues have become increasingly baked into the strategy of platforms where users are encouraged to embrace their First Amendment rights, he said. 

“Being able to get information can be difficult. So we’re bringing it all together in a hub for patients — but also the physicians that are certified [to prescribe medical marijuana], the dispensaries that will be coming online in early 2020 and then the service providers,” Ellis said, highlighting the way MoCannaHub stands to burn down societal judgement in the midst of a modern-day prohibition. 

“One of the things that we gleaned from [MoCannBizCon in St. Louis] … I mean, everybody started their sentences with ‘I wish’. ‘I wish there was a place where all the stuff you just mentioned existed,’” added Blake. 

Click here to download MoCannaHub from the Apple app store or here to visit the android marketplace.

Enlightened, the pair rode the high of consumer affirmation and pushed forward with MoCannaHub — a product that when used correctly could revolutionize education in the cannabis space for Missourians, they said. 

“It’s a source of information on how to become a patient, how to get certified, how to have their medical conditions verified, how to find a physician that will certify their condition and eventually — as dispensaries come online, how to find a dispensary,” Ellis said in example of the way the app serves a cannabis cache. 

As more consumers begin to accept cannabis as a common place good, they’re often in the weeds when it comes to product safety and certifications. With MoCannaHub, the smoke is cleared, acknowledged the pair. 

“There’s a lot of examples out there of what to do and how to do it correctly, what’s worked and what’s not. Missouri seems to be really on the right track, to doing it and doing it right,” Ellis said. “ … The state itself has guidelines in terms of submissions … we’ll put them up on the hub as a listing [to ease app users frustrations.]”

Education needs in the cannabis space will hold steady as the industry evolves, Blake added. 

“This is such a new and really exciting opportunity that I think everyone’s going to be amazed when the studies  — they’ve kind of been suppressed over the last 50 to 100 years — when the testing really starts to come out about how beneficial cannabis can be for people’s health, pain management, diet, any and all types of human interaction,” he said of the way he sees the landscape evolving and the need for MoCannaHub along with it. 

As CBD shops continue to line corners and growers begin to harvest hemp in open fields outside the metro, the retail high surrounding cannabis isn’t expected to come down anytime soon, the pair said. 

Navigating the role tech companies could play in the growth of an emerging industry  — not in stifling it — is a big task that could hold significant impact, Blake said. 

“Following the rules, complying with the law, that’s where some of the tech innovation is happening and has happened in providing systems to the industry participants that have to follow a big set of rules,” added Ellis. “They’re tracking a plant from seed to sale. Think about all the growers and all the plants and all the dispensaries … just tracking all that data in itself is a challenge. So that’s what we’re seeing the tech industry kind of step up.”

Tackling financial problems for growers, dispensers, and their counterparts could prove to be tech’s biggest asset in the space, he said. 

Click here for an in-depth look at another woe for cannabis based businesses: the struggle to secure bank backing.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2019 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Plaza food hall returns with Lula’s, Guy’s, J. Rieger and more KC foodie favorites inside

        By Tommy Felts | August 18, 2025

        A hotel food hall — just up the hill from a main artery of the Country Club Plaza — is planning a restaurant rally this week; reopening its shared culinary experience with some of the Kansas City food scene’s biggest local brands and a food hall rarity: full-service. Under new management, a new name, and…

        Fit Truk shifts gears, building mass by scaling custom-built mobile gyms across US

        By Tommy Felts | August 15, 2025

        Fit Truk has traded its hometown workout circuit for a manufacturing floor and an international sales map. The Kansas City-born company is now producing custom-built mobile gyms for clients across the country and abroad. “We have three different models of trucks,” said Josh Guffey, co-founder of Fit Truk. “We have trucks going out all over…

        Down to vibes: Fans of fellow their musicians form Kansas City dream pop group Silvee

        By Tommy Felts | August 15, 2025

        Kansas City’s lineup of creative talent plays best when musicians can plug into bands where they’re needed most, said Sky Cowdry, describing an inclusive local music scene built on shared resources, and sounds. Silvee — a singer-songwriter-driven dream pop group infused with rock and roll (and set to perform at Tuesday’s Small Biz to Watch…

        ‘Economic eviction notice’: Property owners decry tax spike as ‘death sentence for small business’

        By Tommy Felts | August 14, 2025

        Critic of tax office says Jackson County is betting most property owners hit with inflated bills are too intimidated to appeal State lawmakers could be Jackson County business owners’ last hope, said Ian Davis, testifying Wednesday in the Missouri state capitol about spiking property tax assessments that have seen entrepreneurs hit with increases of up…