How many fans packed parade route for Chiefs? Crowd counting a touchdown for KC’s EB Systems
February 15, 2020 | Austin Barnes
While a sea of red greeted Chiefs players Feb. 5 outside Union Station, many fans skipped the official victory rally honoring the world champion football team — opting instead to fight for their right to party nearby, according to crowd data from an emerging Kansas City startup.
“Harsh weather and a drunk driving incident on the parade route may have been contributing factors to this trend,” EB Systems told Startland News, detailing data points it had collected during the historic parade and rally — which media reports said drew nearly 1 million people to city streets throughout the day.
The startup’s electronic beacons — small devices that use proximity Bluetooth technology to detect the presence of people — tracked the size and scope of the crowd that grew despite bitter temperatures and a dusting of snow. Their observations revealed some fans spent a total of 13 hours on Union Station grounds.
Thanks to beacons affixed in such spots as the rooftop at Messenger Coffee and to an AT&T cell signal booster at Union Station, EB Systems data showed the parade drew the most fans during a peak between noon and 1 p.m., with 77,000 gathered at Union Station and 22,046 in the Power & Light district — with tens of thousands more gathered in spots downtown and around the Crossroads Arts District.
“Now when the Chiefs — knock on wood — have their Super Bowl parade next year, or the year after that, they can use this data to basically say, ‘OK, we see some spikes and dips in this area at this time,’” Jon Ruiz, co-founder and CEO of EB Systems, explained of benefits the tech company’s platform offers customers.
“[Organizers can ask,] ‘Do we need more porta potties? Do we need to put more officers on duty? Do we need to alter our busing routes and shuttles that we were running?’” he added.
Dips in crowd size in the Power & Light and 18th and Grand areas seemed to follow the progression of the parade, the company noted, indicating many fans still braved the cold to get a glimpse of Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes and the Lombardi Trophy, then left the route rather than attend the Union Station rally.
How does EB Systems’ technology work? Check out a video at the bottom of this story.

Brendan Waters and Jon Ruiz, EB Systems
Crowding into the smart tech market
Accurately detecting and analyzing crowd numbers can greatly impact revenue for large events and festivals, Ruiz said. The Feb. 5 parade provided a unique opportunity to prove EB Systems’ ability to track such data as the nearly six-year-old company aims to scale.
“We looked at 2020 as our big scale-up year. And what could be a bigger event or scenario than the Chiefs winning the Super Bowl [and having a] parade?” he laughed, highlighting ways in which timing is everything for growing startups.
“We looked at it and said, ‘We might get this opportunity again next year … but we also might never get another opportunity to test our technology on such a massive scale.’”
EB Systems also deployed two electronic beacons at Power & Light for Super Bowl Sunday — a test run days before the parade. The data revealed fans spent an average of 11 hours celebrating the Chiefs and more than 24,000 fans gathered around the big screen at game time — 5,000 of which showed up between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. Feb. 2.
With a pre-existing working relationship with the city’s downtown council and experience with such local events as Boulevardia, getting electronic beacons installed in time for the parade was as smooth for EB Systems as scoring a touchdown appears to be for Mahomes, Ruiz noted.
“We’re at the point now where the technology is strengthened. We have a good analytics and big data team working with us and we’re getting some good insights out of the data. … It’s been pretty fun for us,” he said.
EB Systems technology stands to dramatically alter data collection in the smart home and IoT space, Ruiz detailed, citing a nearly three-year project with the City of Dallas that’s greatly contributed to the company’s growth.
“Dallas is starting to use it and say things like, ‘We just invested $100 million renovating this building for the new Holocaust museum; how’s this going to drive up not only traffic around us — but for more investment around this area?’” he said in example of ways EB Systems technology can help shape the smart city landscape.
“Now they have data to say, ‘We saw an uptick of 20 percent more traffic in this area after the museum opened. Let’s open some condos around here to see if we can drive that up or try to get people to move here.’”
Proven on the road, programmed at home
While working with a major U.S. city like Dallas has been exciting for the startup, Kansas City will always be home, Ruiz said.
“I’m a [University of Missouri-Kansas City] Entrepreneurship Scholar grad, [my co-founder] Brendan [Waters] is a [University of Kansas] grad. We grew up here in Kansas City. We started the company when we had a year left in college and we’ve pretty much bootstrapped it,” he said of the startup’s history.
E-Scholars, 1 Million Cups, and the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation are but a few of the building blocks that led to the growing success of EB Systems, Ruiz added.
“[1 Million Cups] was one of the first ways that we were able to network and connect with folks and actually meet our first client,” he said. “I took free programming classes at the Kauffman Foundation and actually learned how to program and help build the first version of our mobile app that way.”
Waters also participates with Growth Mentoring Services through the Enterprise Center in Johnson County.
The co-founders wrote their own patents for EB Systems and have prioritized maintaining ownership of the company and developing themselves as thought leaders in the computer software and IoT space, they said.
“I think that shows that we know what we’re talking about and we know how to innovate in this space and are hopefully creating a product that will scale up and become pretty huge,” Ruiz said.
Click here to learn more about EB Systems.
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
Candidates: Unchecked property crime against businesses driven by prosecutor’s failure to hold offenders accountable
Melesa Johnson, Tracey Chappell share their solutions for combatting recent uptick in break-ins at Kansas City businesses Editor’s note: Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker is not seeking re-election, so it’s an open race for her countywide seat. Democrat Melesa Johnson and Republican Tracey Chappell are running in the 2024 general election with a vote…
A simple sauce passed down six generations is headed to your table; Lenexa man says that’s his family’s great legacy
Jack Williams’ dream of seeing his great-grandmother’s picture in every grocery store across the country is one step closer to reality as the Lenexa entrepreneur’s jars of Grandma Morrelli’s pasta sauce — emblazoned with her photo — hit Kansas City shelves. “I’m trying to honor her and family traditions,” he said, describing how the venture…
Bingo with lingo: Black culture reshaped history (and how we talk); this board game revives a timely story of KC pride
A board game originally conceived in the wake of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1969 assassination is making a revival in 2024 — thanks to the Kansas City entrepreneur who created it and remains committed to keeping Black history alive. SLANG-A-LANG!™ returned to shelves earlier this year, said Irene Carter, noting the game was born out…
Here’s how a new data dashboard could help KCMO redirect funds to small businesses
A new data dashboard built to better understand Kansas City’s business needs — and guide the city’s response — is not only revolutionary for the metro, said Nia Richardson, it could be the first of its kind, period. Small business advocates already are calling it a win. “I don’t know of any other city or playbook…




