2020 Startups to Watch: Boddle evolves from mere gamified edtech to vital classroom tool

January 22, 2020  |  Elyssa Bezner

Edna Martinson and Clarence Tan, Boddle

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.

Education needs an overhaul and Boddle Learning is driving the change from the front of the classroom, declared Edna Martinson. 

9) Boddle

Elevator pitch: Boddle is a game-based learning app that makes practice and assessments fun for students and easy for teachers in elementary classrooms. The platform utilizes adaptive learning technology to help students who are behind catch up by identifying and addressing gaps in foundational skills, and challenges students who are ahead by providing the right level of rigor to accelerate learning.

• Founders: Clarence Tan, Edna Martinson
• 
Founding year: 2018
Amount raised to date: $300,000
Noteworthy investors: AT&T Aspire
Programs completed: Sprint Accelerator, AT&T Aspire Accelerator, ECJC Pitch Perfect, LaunchKC, OHUB.KC
Current employee count: 14 (5 executive team, 9 contracted)

“Its eye-opening to see the need and the ways that we can improve Boddle to create something that teachers would love to use in their classrooms,” explained Martinson, co-founder of Boddle which she’s helped build alongside her husband, Clarence Tan. 

Placing practicality above redundancies, Boddle’s strategy for growth is heavy on relationship building, placing the startup ahead of its competitors, explained Tan. 

“A teacher was literally like, ‘Hey Clarence, I don’t care about the fancy stuff. I just want to know who is struggling and what they’re struggling on,’” he recalled of the interaction that came as a direct result of Boddle’s presence in area schools. 

“Now they choose us over our competitors, because that was the exact information they needed.”

Such a presence with customers has helped Boddle establish itself as an increasingly essential tool in the evolution of the modern education model, Tan continued, adding the strategy is what will carry the company through 2020 as its team grows. 

Director of learning and chief technology officer positions are expected to expand as Boddle also works to beef up its sales force ahead of anticipated fund raising, the pair revealed. 

“There’s a lot of value that we provide at the individual level, but ultimately it’s about the adoption [of Boddle,],” he said, noting how important exposure to the platform will be for the startup in 2020. 

Participation on the AT&T Aspire Accelerator in 2019 — which resulted in more than $100,000 in funding for the startup — will continue to drive momentum for Boddle in 2020, sending Martinson and Tan to SXSW where they will heavily market the startup to educators and continue to perfect their pitch. 

Click here to read more about AT&T Aspire’s investment in Boddle.

An additional focus on tech and education conferences as well as continued participation in the OHUB.KC accelerator — which has already netted the startup a $5,000 investment with the potential for $50,000 on the line — are expected to further fuel growth and marketing efforts. 

Establishing active partnerships with teacher organizations and schools at the district level will also drive growth for the startup in 2020, with many big conversations underway in Kansas City, the duo revealed.

Startups to Watch in 2020

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

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    This 11yo kidtrepreneur is skipping past lemonade stands, taking Nelson’s Flavorades straight to the store

    By Tommy Felts | February 11, 2022

    A shot of flavor is headed for Hy-Vee as the grocer gives a KCK-raised kidtrepreneur the chance to stock his sellout product in a limited run. “It’s amazing,” Nelson McConnell, the 11-year-old owner of Nelson’s Flavorades, said of the opportunity to sell his lemonade blends on store shelves. Beginning Saturday, customers can visit the Mission…

    Jonaie Johnson, Interplay, competing in the Season 1 of "The Blox"

    One of KC’s top emerging founders joins cast of new reality TV show for startups; see who else is competing

    By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2022

    Twenty startups picked to live in a house — competing in a series of entrepreneurship games for a reality TV show — could’ve been a nightmare, said Jonaie Johnson. But the bootstrapped creator of a KC-built smart dog crate was up for the challenge, she said. “Spending a week in a mansion with a bunch…

    Season 1 cast of "The Blox"; photo courtesy of Weston Bergmann

    MTV veteran’s new docu-series crowns ‘greatest startup on The Blox,’ evolving reality TV beyond ‘messy’ sensationalism 

    By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2022

    The premiere of a 17-episode, gamified entrepreneurship challenge marks a pivot in reality TV — as “Shark Tank meets Top Chef” within a competition show that focuses more on startup development than sensational conflict. “We weren’t prepared to go down a ‘messy’ reality TV path, because we don’t want to exploit or hurt entrepreneurs. But,…

    "All Boys Aren't Blue," published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR); overset: Andrews McMeel Universal Kansas City headquarters

    As book banning spreads across US, one KC media company calls out specific threat to diverse creators

    By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2022

    The Kansas City publishing powerhouse behind many of the nation’s most-beloved newspaper comics — from Calvin & Hobbes and The Far Side to Garfield and Peanuts — this week raised its voice amid a growing push to condemn book bans flaring up across the country. “Books are safe harbors, where the freedom of expression and…