Boddle scores $25K AT&T Aspire audience award thanks to tough love on duo’s most difficult pitch
December 9, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Just because a pitch is tough doesn’t mean it won’t payoff, said Clarence Tan.
“Smiles will take you miles,” Tan, CEO and cofounder of Boddle Learning, said of his and co-founder Edna Martinson’s latest pitch at the AT&T Pitches and Purpose contest in San Francisco — the pair’s most difficult presentation to date, they said — during the close of the AT&T Aspire Accelerator.
Click here to read more about Boddle’s participation in the Aspire accelerator, which also included a $100,000 investment from AT&T.
Chalk full of big wigs like Mark Cuban, owner of the Dallas Mavericks, and packed with guests from around the world, the cohort’s final showcase ultimately brought Boddle — a platform that gamifies math practice and assessments using adaptive learning — an additional $25,000 injection as the winner of the AT&T Aspire audience award, Tan noted.
The win was a direct result of perseverance and wouldn’t have come without the guidance of Martinson, Tan explained.
“To most of the people who have met Edna, they see her as a super sweet and agreeable person,” he said of his business partner and wife.
“…In between [my] poorly done pitch at rehearsal and the final pitch, she was flat-out honest, with little blows spared, and got me to notice and fix everything from tone, specific inflections, sounding ‘too rehearsed’ and stretched me way out of my comfort-zone,” he recalled of ways his pitch of the EdTech company took new form.
“The end-result was a pitch that felt like someone’s close friend telling a story — at least that was what I was told by the audience afterwards,” Tan said.

Clarence Tan, Boddle Learning, Startup Crawl KC
A mission-first team, the win is a testament to the couple’s commitment to building Boddle and making life easier for students and teachers, Tan added.
“We seldom have disagreements when it comes to difficult decisions because there is usually a clear choice that points to the ‘right thing to do,’” he said. “I wouldn’t quite call it a culture just yet, but this attitude gives us very little room for excuses when it comes to uncomfortable tasks.”
One task that won’t bring debate for Boddle: expansion, Tan said. The prize money will allow the startup to grow its team.
“We’re bringing on team members for sales and curriculum and learning sciences,” he said. “We have some amazing and dedicated individuals helping us with those roles along the way and this additional prize money will get us one step closer to [hiring them] on a more permanent basis.”
“We have had amazing support from the Kansas City entrepreneurial community, which we are so grateful for. [I’d like to give] a special shout out to ECJC’s Pitch Perfect for coming in with the early prep-work, amazing mentors, and coaches,” Tan said, highlighting local resources that prepared Boddle for a run in the Aspire accelerator and that have positioned the company for growth in 2020.
“At this stage, Boddle is ready to serve more elementary teachers and students in Kansas City, so introductions and meetings with principals, teachers, curriculum and math directors, and other decision makers would help us make a bigger impact in our Kansas City classrooms,” he added, noting ways the community could help Boddle further gain momentum.
“They say the first dollar is the hardest and it would have been much harder for us to get that without AT&T Aspire’s guidance and help,” Tan said. “The accelerator was definitely the second best highlight of 2019 — second to our wedding, of course.”
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
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
His fitness app pays users to workout, but what they really want is body transformation, founder says
Jasper Sanders founded Deposit The Work to incentivize users to stick with their fitness goals, he shared, but now he’s emphasizing accountability with the app’s latest feature. “The whole idea behind CoachConnect+ is providing a platform for individuals who are stuck on their fitness journey, unsure on where to start, [or] don’t know how to…
Troost coffee shop ‘broken into pieces’ by collision; caffeinated supporters jump to action
A community of customers and neighbors is rallying behind Anchor Island Coffee this week after a pickup truck barreled into the front entrance of the tropical-themed breakfast spot at 41st and Troost. Fortunately no one was injured in the after-hours incident, said co-owner Armando Vasquez, who noted he was the last person to leave the…
KC innovator’s anti-itch spray so natural it was discovered on a front porch lab
Homindy founder Ronan Molloy discovered the benefits of his company’s itch relief spray somewhat by accident. During the summer of 2020, Molloy volunteered to participate in a clinical study for a tea with all-natural ingredients that was supposed to reduce inflammation in his right knee. At that time, he was president of the Innovation Stockyard,…
KC capital implants cattle tech startup with fuel to scale, expanding IVF labs, headcount
Livestock production has seen a remarkable transformation since Kerryann Kocher was growing up on her family’s sixth-generation farm in northeast Iowa, the Vytelle CEO said. Instead of just selecting the cow that looks best and bringing in the neighbor’s bull for breeding, as she remembers it, Kocher and Vytelle — a Kansas City-based precision livestock…


