Tinder founder boards advisory team as StoryUP closes oversubscribed $1M+ round
September 12, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Building a global company requires boots on the ground, Sarah Hill said as she waited to board a flight to Kansas City, hours after the close of her startup’s first million-dollar funding round.
“Once the Kansas City investors hopped in, that’s when it came to be oversubscribed — we were just delighted,” said Hill, founder and CEO of StoryUP Studios, maker of Healium — a drugless, VR-based solution for stress and anxiety.
Click here to read more about Healium and StoryUP Studios.
Carrying a total of $1.3 million, the funding round will see the Columbia, Missouri-based startup increase its sales and marketing efforts and explore new product development. A slew of other growth-related opportunities will help the company fuel ongoing pilots that use Healium’s technology to treat conditions beyond anxiety, Hill explained.
A different kind of stress, raising the round required worldwide hustle, she added.
“It’s ironic that I’m talking to you while running through an airport,” Hill said in reference to a whirlwind year of travel that’s seen her pitch Healium to investors across the globe.
“My team was in Thailand shooting a project for Google. We were in D.C. a couple of weeks ago shooting an experience at the Korean War Memorial. The other part of my team is in D.C. at a military vendor day, showing the product to the military and the government. We were in Amsterdam with the Global Entrepreneurship Summit,” she detailed, pinpointing but a few of the stamps on the startups passport.
“If you want to build a global brand, you have to meet people where they are and we’re fortunate that people outside of Missouri are discovering our products,” Hill said.
A direct result of such a philosophy: Healium’s winning pitch at SXSW in March, which put the startup in direct contact with Sean Rad, founder of Tinder and the newest member of the StoryUP advisory board, Hill revealed.
“[Rad] is a brilliant product mind. He built the top-grossing non-gaming, mobile app in the world,” she said. “That level of product consult is incredibly valuable for us.”
With global reach and growing allure for tech talent, StoryUP is just getting started, Hill said.
“[Our success] says that the Silicon Prairie is not just ripe — it’s bursting at the seams,” she added.
“If a company in Columbia, Missouri, can get blue chip clients or its products can raise $1 million, can develop the world’s first real computing platform that’s powered by wearable interfaces, how might we be able to build on that so that other companies can develop tangentially related products?” Hill said of the way her company could serve as an example that tech needs no coast.
Doubling up on success, the funding round closed the same day StoryUP joined the inaugural cohort of the Launch Health accelerator — a LaunchKC program in partnership with Nueterra Capital which will help the startup establish even deeper Kansas City roots, Hill explained when asked if she’d consider relocating to the metro.
“You know, never rule out anything. We already have deep roots in the Kansas City area. So, that’s always a possibility as we continue to scale up and grow,” she said.
Click here to learn more about the Launch Accelerator and how its elevating women-led startups.
StoryUP plans to release additional information about the funding round, including a look at its Kansas City-based investors, on Sept. 16.
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

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Wonka of Wax: Dark times melt into quirky joy for Brandon Love’s Crumble Co
With scents as varied as “Lavender Lemonade” and “Drunken Unicorn,” Brandon Love’s Crumble Co. burns in a unique — Love would say “joyful” — space within the candle market. A wide grin spreads across the 21-year-old founder’s face as he notes the name of the wax melt spreading aroma throughout his loft apartment at One…
Football tech startup Lazser Down scores big with NCAA championship game
When two out-of-state foes face off Saturday at Children’s Mercy Park, the NCAA Division II Championship game will still host a hometown team. The title game — between West Florida University and Texas A&M University-Commerce — features local tech created by Lazser Down, a Kansas City-based startup that created a new down marker system that uses…
Plexpod acquires Think Big Coworking, expanding KC footprint
Plexpod isn’t playing. Amid Kansas City’s competitive coworking market, Plexpod is doubling down with the acquisition of Think Big Coworking’s 1712 Main Street location, Plexpod founder Gerald Smith said. The acquisition adds more than 30,000 square feet of space to Plexpod’s already large footprint in the area and forges a new partnership between the two…
Raaxo takes shape after pivot from Aphrodite Bra Co’s body scan concept
Despite its use of body-mapping technology, Aphrodite Bra Company wasn’t the right fit for customers’ needs, said Carlanda McKinney, founder of the newly rebooted custom intimates company Raaxo. “Aphrodite had been stuck in the starting-up space,” she said. “We’d never really gotten enough sales or enough traction to say, ‘We’re launched,’ or, ‘We’re in business.’…

