RFP360 doubles in size since December; team back under one roof with move to new space
August 2, 2019 | Tommy Felts
RFP360 is coming full circle, said Stuart Ludlow, as the software company he co-founded with David Hulsen in the Kansas City Startup Village once again levels up to accommodate a swelling team and increasing market demand.
“We’re moving into a place — scale and scope — that Dave and I envisioned,” said Ludlow, who also serves as lead engineer at RFP360. “In the early days, we were so focused on getting one foot in front of the other. Now, you look up and seven years have gone by and all of the sudden we realize we’ve gone a really long way. And we can see how much further we have to go.”
The Kansas City-based company, which streamlines the repetitive and often arduous request for proposal (RFP) process with a software-as-a-service platform, moved this week to a new office space at 8700 State Line Road in Leawood.
Having already outgrown the Startup Village — a now-defunct, largely informal cluster of startups that developed in a single neighborhood after the launch of Google Fiber in 2012 — RFP360 previously operated offices in Waldo and at Plexpod Westport Commons with its team split nearly equally between the sites.
“Now all 41 of us are finally coming back under one roof,” Ludlow said, reflecting on the new space, which isn’t expected to reach capacity until the startup hits about 80 employees.
“Our first two employees are still here,” Ludlow added. “Two sales reps — Bryce Gilman and Patrick Fields — worked in the Startup Village with us. They moved over to Waldo when we had six people with us. And now they’ve seen us get to 41, moving to this 11,000-square-foot, very modern office designed by an architectural company.”
Click here to read why RFP360, formerly RFP365, was named one of Startland’s Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2018.
Expansion of the team comes as RFP360 experiences natural year-over-year business growth, as well as the impact of a funding round and cash injection in December, Ludlow said. The headcount was just 18 before the round, he detailed. The strategic investment from Five Elms Capital also helped spur the hiring of former Perceptive Software executive David Lintz as RFP360’s first CEO.
Increased market opportunities have played a significant role in the company’s upward trajectory, said Lintz, with the startup moving beyond connotations related to its name.
“People tend to hear that and say, ‘OK. You do something with RFPs.’ And they’re going to define us based on what they know [about RFPs],” Lintz said. “As you get into different industries — financial services, higher education, government — and then some of the departments within them, you see that what we solve for with RFPs really takes on all shapes and forms. But our technology is applicable beyond the traditional RFP — to a lot of business transactions that are related to RFPs: security questionnaires, requests for qualifications, DDQs [due diligence questionnaires]; you get into a lot of nuanced sub-processes.”
“We’re built for the future,” he added. “Getting space that accommodates our team is a step forward.”
The startup’s first day in its new home was Thursday, Lintz said, noting the space should hold RFP360 for a couple of years.
“We always think in terms of a future state, but we never go more than two years out because it’s impossible to predict just how fast we might grow,” he said.
The move also comes just months after RFP360 was named one of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce’s 2019 Top 10 Small Businesses. Surprised by the honor, Lintz said, the team has welcomed its lasting effects.
“From a business standpoint, it’s just been great,” he said. “Candidly, we’ve gotten a lot of great exposure: active sales opportunities across Greater Kansas City, and probably most importantly, a lot of visibility to potential employees. People are starting to find us. Everyone wants to work for a winner, and we couldn’t have purchased the kind of awareness that came with the honor.”
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kansas City to play tech teacher again with gigabit conference
Kansas City’s years of experience with gigabit will once again allow it to play Internet instructor. Thanks to popular demand, non-profit organization KC Digital Drive announced that it will host the second-annual Gigabit City Summit May 16 – 18. The summit will welcome dozens of cities to learn from Kansas City’s experience with gigabit Internet…
Regional Roundup: VC valuations, bootstrapping
Welcome to our new series called Regional Roundup. Every couple weeks we’ll pull together compelling articles, podcasts, videos and more related to startups and innovation in the region. Let us know what you think, and send us any ideas or content that you’d like to share. Sit back and read (or listen or watch) some…
Events Preview: TEDxUMKC
There are a boatload of entrepreneurial events hosted in Kansas City on a weekly basis. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, investor, supporter or curious Kansas Citian, we’d recommend these upcoming events for you. WEEKLY EVENT PREVIEW KC Roundtable Annual Holiday Party When: December 3 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm Where: The Well Come celebrate the end of…
Startup Families: Teenage tech tribulations are a lesson in patience
Running a tech startup and working on a new innovation can prove to be challenging for anyone. But running a tech company with millenials in your home can be pure torture when that technology is on a teen’s favorite appendage: a smartphone. I’ve spent the early days of building my company, Video Fizz, at our…

