N-GAGE founder gets a grip on weight-lifting pain points (without giving up his day job)
December 20, 2019 | Austin Barnes
N-GAGE GRIPS will have found success as a startup when Matt Leadbetter’s oldest son thinks he’s cool.
“I remember thinking, ‘I have this thing in my head, I just need to make it,’ and I was kinda thinking at the time, ‘Wouldn’t it be cool if when my little boy gets older, he’s impressed with the fact that I’ve made something?’” recalled Leadbetter, founder of N-GAGE GRIPS and vice president of commercial banking at Bank Midwest.
Such a thought came three years ago, he told Startland News just days after the first orders of N-GAGE GRIPS — a set of attachments which slip over barbells and help align and stabilize joints while lifting — reached customers.
Click here to shop N-GAGE GRIPS.
“I’ve lifted since I was in junior high, over half my life, and I got to a point as I have gotten older where you have more pains kind of creeping on you,” he said of literal pain points that drove him to create N-GAGE GRIPS.
While a desire to help others with similar ailments isn’t waning, Leadbetter doesn’t plan to give up his day job. Instead, the founder is content building N-GAGE GRIPS as a hobby business.
“I spend, sometimes, 50-plus hours a week in my job. And [I’m focused on] getting where I want to be [with N-GAGE GRIPS] and at some level I’ve accepted that I’m doing what I can,” he said, noting he’s built a solid foundation for the company that should be easily sustained so long as he prioritizes putting out a quality product.
“I started realizing that you don’t have to [quit your job] to scratch that [entrepreneurship] itch,” Leadbetter said.

N-Gage Grips by N-Gage
Formally launched in November and ahead of Black Friday, Leadbetter has turned his focus to deploying a solid marketing strategy for N-GAGE GRIPS which will largely include the help of social media influencers.
Click here to check out N-GAGE GRIPS and other gift ideas in Startland News’ 2019 Holiday Gift Guide.
Beyond building brand awareness, Leadbetter hopes aspiring entrepreneurs will see his story and realize anyone can start their own business — it just takes drive, he said.
“After you have kids, responsibilities start to stack up, you maybe get a little more conservative,” Leadbetter said. “I always wanted to do my own thing at some point. If you read startup blogs or watch videos, there’s this whole idea that if you have a full time job, you will have to jump ship. That was where my mind was for awhile, [but you don’t.]”
Family ties to entrepreneurship — all local to the Kansa City region — also proved such a goal could be accomplished with the right amount of tenacity, he noted.
“I’ve always grown up knowing [entrepreneurship] is an option,” he said. ‘I’ve been exposed to an entrepreneurial mindset — probably more exposed to the entrepreneurial landscape than others in my position [at Bank Midwest.] It’s all helped me [get here.]”
Providing for his family and building a company he can pass on to his children is a gift Leadbetter couldn’t be more pleased with as customers begin responding to the impact of N-GAGE GRIPS, he added.
“I hope they see the example I have been able to set and I can show them they can make their own way and they don’t have to be relying on somebody else for a paycheck,” Leadbetter said.

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Document: FarmLink raises additional $24.6M for ag tech
Ag tech startups in Kansas City are plowing a promising 2016. Kansas City-based FarmLink recently secured nearly $24.6 million in investment capital for its farming technology, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing. The company offers a suite of tech services for farmers, including analytics platform TrueHarvest and machinery sharing platform MachineryLink Sharing. TrueHarvest…
‘PayIt’ up: Kansas City gov tech startup registers $4.5M investment
Like the dozens of people around him, John Thomson’s 2013 wait at the Missouri Department of Motor Vehicles had him aggravated. It was such a pain — watching the queue slowly subside while working on his phone — that the entrepreneur did what innovators do: he built a company to alleviate the chore. Fast forward…
Sporting Innovations reveals name change
Sports tech company Sporting Innovations is kicking off 2016 new branding. The company announced Monday that it’s changed its name to “FanThreeSixty” to better reflect an “ongoing transformation” and to better connect to its software platform of the same name, FanThreeSixty CEO Robb Heineman said. “We feel the timing is ideal for evolving our brand…
Local students win national design contest for Royals World Series trophy
When it comes to baseball, in appears Kansas City is still on a hot streak. Three students from Pembroke Hill School recently beat out dozens of professionals in a national contest to design a World Series trophy for the Kansas City Royals. The 11th-grade students — Samuel Hrabko, Raghav Parikh, and Momin Tahirkheli — entered…

