DC-based digital SWAT team descends on KC as Social Driver for mission-based clients
August 30, 2019 | Rashi Shrivastava
From being included in selfies to getting tagged on social media posts, carving a digital footprint is the best way for social movements to gain traction, said Thomas Sanchez, CEO and co-founder of Social Driver.
“We are the digital heavy hitters. I always kind of talk about us as almost being like the SWAT team for digital,” Sanchez said of his Washington D.C.-headquartered digital marketing firm, which he co-founded with Anthony Shop in 2011.
Digital is the DNA of mission-oriented campaigns, said Sanchez whose company provides such services as website design, social media, digital advertising, and creative content to help clients engage and inspire their stakeholders. Most of Social Driver’s clients are non-profit organizations or socially-minded companies that believe their digital presence and creative social promotion are more than just add-ons, he said.
Click here to learn more about Social Driver.
Both Shop and Sanchez grew up in the Kansas City area, they said, and were ecstatic to be a part of the 2018 Back2KC program, which annually invites a curated group of highly skilled former Kansas City-area residents back to the city to reintroduce them to the growing innovative spirit and creative culture of the metro.

Thomas Sanchez, Social Driver; Darcy Howe, Back2KC; and Anthony Shop, Social Driver
“We have deep connections in Kansas City, and over the last eight years, we’ve grown all without any outside debt or any outside investment,” Sanchez said about the speedy growth of Social Driver and expansion this spring into a new office in Kansas City’s Crossroads Arts District.
Back2KC, now a program of the Kansas City Startup Foundation — which also is the parent organization of Startland News — asks participants like Sanchez and Shop to reinvest in Kansas City through mentorships, direct investments, partnerships, local job creation or relocation.
When technology and creativity meet, magic begins to brew, said Orion Kincaid, the director of user experience at the Kansas City office.
“We’re starting to see a lot more social integration with physical web projects to help clients really transform their brands,” he added.
Clients like Country Hill Motors, American Academy of Family Physicians and Fike Corporation in Kansas City want to know how to build more traction for people to support their cause, Sanchez said.
“Our clients are looking for a long-term partner,” Sanchez said. “They may have a project that is for today, but they’re looking for somebody who’s going to come in with flexible ideas, and strategies that might be at their budget level.”
The firm uses strategies based on social media trends and offers solutions that have been tried and tested with clients at multiple locations including Chicago and Seattle, he said.
Developing an augmented reality experience through filters on Instagram and Snapchat, as well as using chatbots to have one-one communication, are among recent successful methods, Sanchez said.
“A lot of companies don’t share the secret sauce with their clients, but we think the project’s going to ultimately be successful when the client can take over parts of that project as it gets moving,” he explained.
The co-founder was recently elected as the secretary of The Trevor Project, a national non-profit organization that aims to prevent suicide and provide crisis intervention to the LGBTQ community. Social Driver launched a digital campaign called #loveSDelivered, which helped raise $2000 for The Trevor Project, according to a news release.
“We actually also started a philanthropic initiative with our company called the Driver Foundation, through which our team members can support causes that are really important to them,” Sanchez added.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn
This story was produced through a collaboration between Missouri Business Alert and Startland News.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Sickweather storms market with overfunded $1M crowdfunding campaign amid flu season
An illness forecaster is never more valuable than when the threat of a widespread virus is high. This year’s severe flu season, however, is only one of the leading contributors to Sickweather’s uptick in interest — and its recent oversubscribed $1 million crowdfunding campaign, said founder Graham Dodge. “We learn a lot every cold and…
Fund Me, KC: Operation Breakthrough hopes to burn into STEM gap with laser cutter
Editor’s note: Startland News is continuing its ‘Fund Me, KC’ feature to highlight area entrepreneurial efforts to accelerate businesses or projects. If you or your startup is running a crowdfunding campaign, let us know by contacting news@startlandnews.com. Today’s featured campaign from Operation Breakthrough spotlights a campaign by the nonprofit childhood development center to boost its…
designWerx makes room for growing makers in North Kansas City
A home garage workspace can be a lonely, stifling place for a maker trying to grow his or her business, said Pam Newton, who is leading the artistic vision for designWerx, a new coworking space and incubator specifically for makers in North Kansas City. “You’re alone constantly. Sometimes it’s hard to get motivated,” she said.…
KCultivator Q&A: Tyler Enders talks his biggest failure, the ‘Made In’ concept and Obama
Seated amid vintage mosaic tile and striking black-and-white portraits by Kansas City photographer Cameron Gee, founder Tyler Enders seems at home within the walls of the Made in KC Cafe. He’s an art lover with a finance degree — not to mention one of the minds behind Made in KC, a retail showcase for local…

