2020 Startups to Watch: backstitch shifts tech conversation to company culture, communication
January 22, 2020 | Anna Turnbull
Editor’s note: Startland News selected 10 Kansas City firms to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch list. The following is one of 2020’s companies. Click here to view the full, ranked list of Startups to Watch.
Employers can win the fight against disengaged workers, said Jordan Warzecha, noting the battlefield stretches from right outside his company’s Crossroads offices to the coasts and beyond.
Elevator pitch: Backstitch provides organizations in effective technology to communicate better to their employees.
• Founders: Jordan Warzecha, Stefanie Warzecha
• Founding year: 2012
• Amount raised to date: $2.45 Million
• Noteworthy investors: Serra Ventures, KCRiseFund
• Programs completed: Techstars Sprint Accelerator Class of 2016
• Current employee count: 17
“Every week it seems we are discovering a new company that is based right in our backyard that is a perfect fit for our technology,” said Warzecha, co-founder and CEO of growth-stage Backstitch — a startup that aims to mitigate the impacts of poor internal communication by helping companies engage their employees directly, a problem costing companies upwards of $36 billion a year.
“We feel like we are still just scratching the surface of the type of customers that we serve,” Warzecha said, noting the startup has long placed its focus on companies with massive employee rosters — and Kansas City has plenty.
2020 will see the startup take on a new position, placing emphasis on aiding businesses as culture around communication continues to shift, he added.
“What separates us in the market is our investment in customer success. It is not just, ‘Here’s technology, go run with it.’ Its, ‘Here is technology and we are going to strategically work with you on how to implement it,’” explained Warzecha.
Click here here to connect with Backstitch.
The development of new resources for customers at large/enterprise national and multinational companies will further drive growth for the company in 2020, made possible by the success of a recent funding round, which included participation from the KCRise Fund.
All in all, 2020 is about growth for the startup — which relocated to Kansas City from Detroit in 2016 — and the path to success is clear, Warzecha said.
“We are growing on all fronts: sales, development, and customer success. For us, we provide a leading-market technology … What separates us in the market is our investment in customer success.”
Strategic partnerships and team growth will also fuel the year ahead, Warzecha noted, citing experience gained in 2019 as a driver for what’s to come.
1) United American Hemp
2) Tesseract Ventures
3) ELIAS Animal Health
4) Healium
5) Fishtech
6) Draiver
7) Backstitch
8) Stenovate
9) Boddle Learning
10) Destiny
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

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Chris Boyle wants you to reach for kombucha on instinct; his plan: make it as accessible (and tasty) as your favorite beer
Daily Culture Kombucha’s expansion is not quite as effortlessly self-replicating as the scoby that powers the Kansas City brand’s bold, full-bodied flavors — but a commitment to consistency and authenticity has fermented a strategy founder Chris Boyle said keeps his company on the tip of consumers’ tongues. “We’ve just been growing,” Boyle said, noting Daily…
Olathe restaurateur brings comfort food home from the Mediterranean (starting with falafel bowls)
Summer Salem looked around her city for an authentic Mediterranean restaurant and found a gap in the Olathe marketplace. So a year ago she began planning one of her own. She teamed with her husband, Abraham, who also is a partner in a downtown Kansas City Mediterranean restaurant. But the recipes would be Summer’s own.…
Cook to CEO: Chad Offerdahl sticks to Big Biscuit basics as breakfast industry trends funky — ‘That’s not us’
Chad Offerdahl’s journey with The Big Biscuit didn’t start in an office — it began in the kitchen, explained the CEO of the fast-growing, locally owned breakfast brand. That’s where he first learned the classics that define the company, its mission and the menu. “I started as a cook,” said Offerdahl. “I trained in the…
How this founder’s hobby (plus a little trouble) became Oak Park retail incubator’s biggest success story
“Big Chunky Blankets” — soft as a baby’s cheek and custom knitted in any color of the rainbow — folded into the foundation of what would become Maryann Nzioki Hult’s resilient, nearly pandemic-proof foray into entrepreneurship. They put local Tabu Knits on the online map of must-have-items, and then became the seed of two Johnson…


