Nine months after KC startup’s exit, its new owner adopts ‘Zego’ name, identity
February 11, 2020 | Startland News Staff
Acquiring Kansas City-based Zego was a smart move for its new owner, the San Diego company said Tuesday — and a decision so impactful that the evolving tech platform is taking on the name and personality of the exited smart home startup.
“We are excited to take the next steps in our company’s evolution,” said Dirk Wakeham, CEO of the newly rebranded Zego (powered by PayLease). “The Zego story will continue to be one of increased innovation and growth as we work with our customers to free them to go above and beyond for their communities.”
Zego — originally built in Kansas City by co-founders Adam Blake and Clay Coffman as a solution in the smart apartment space — was acquired in May 2019 by PayLease, a leader in the property management industry.
Click here to read more about the Zego exit.
The plan: integrate Zego into PayLease’s broader platform to become an end-to-end, mobile-first solution that unifies critical resident touch-points — from payments and utilities, to communication and smart devices — into one app.
“[Zego’s] tech-forward resident engagement platform, mission, and sleek modern style embodied everything PayLease was hurtling toward,” Zego (powered by PayLease) said in a release. “In such a short time frame, it’s become a vital part of our identity.”
[pullquote]
Did you know?
An inaugural Techstars Kansas City graduate founded as “CasaiQ,” Zego’s early investors ran the spectrum of the local and national investment scene: The KCRise Fund, Techstars Ventures, Zoloz CEO Toby Rush, and ShotTracker co-founder Davyeon Ross.
[/pullquote]
Blake continues to serve as an advisor at the newly rebranded company, while Coffman serves as director of product for the Engage and Smart product lines.
“We contemplated many other names for ourselves. But in the end, we kept circling back to what was already part of us. Zego,” the company said. ‘Not only do we have existing emotional and capital investment in the name, it is a strong word. Memorable. Limitless. It has a built-in dynamism and brings to mind a sense of power, efficiency, and simplicity. All qualities that are reflected in our PropTech solutions.”
With a 17-year track record in residential real estate, San Diego-based Zego (powered by PayLease) boasts more than 250 employees and processes more than $15 billion in payments annually across 12 million units nationwide and has been recognized eight times as one of the Inc. 500/5000 Fastest Growing Private Companies.
“To be honest, shedding the PayLease name was an emotional process. But we’re feeling really good in our new skin,” the company said. “We’ll always be fond of the PayLease name and feel nostalgic about the time it represents for us. But it was simply too limiting for the company we’ve become. Now we feel more authentic to who we are. Our name and identity will withstand who we are today and who we’ll become going forward.”
Click here to read more about PayLease’s decision to rebrand to Zego.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘This is the dream’: Starty Party turns up the volume on Kansas City tech, collaboration (Photos)
It isn’t a party without the people, said organizers of the Starty Party, gathering a crowd of startup veterans, early stage founders, investors and community leaders Wednesday for a one-night celebration of innovation — set against the backdrop of homegrown music and vibes. “This is amazing,” said Melissa Vincent, CEO of Pipeline Entrepreneurs, from the Starty…
KC preps for World Cup all-nighter, taste testing 23-hour drinking window for summer games
Entrepreneurs want to tap into all the potential business they can when an estimated 650,000 visitors descend on Kansas City for the World Cup, said Jim Ready, detailing plans for a temporary expansion of alcohol sales in KCMO to accommodate a global audience in June and July 2026. The move is more of a stress…
Kauffman narrows Uncommon Leader contenders to five finalists from community orgs
Kansas City leaders advancing toward the Kauffman Foundation’s high-profile impact award all demonstrate bold, creative, and inclusive leadership, said Dr. DeAngela Burns-Wallace, announcing five finalists for the inaugural honor. “Each of these leaders reminds us that one person can make a difference, and that compassion and dedication can change the lives of the people we…
KC-built app locks down vulnerable users’ data before they can share it with online scammers
He’s a startup founder today, but a protective brother first, said Danny Moran, describing how his sister with special needs motivated the launch of an app to protect vulnerable people engaging in a digital world too often filled with bad actors. “She’s been scammed online multiple times over the past 10 years, causing significant financial…

