Google’s $100K cash prize keeps Healthy Hip Hop dancing toward ‘Tik Tok for kids’ status
October 16, 2020 | Channa Steinmetz
With a new cash infusion from the Google Black Founders Fund, Roy Scott said Healthy Hip Hop is ready to perfect the next generation of its youth entertainment and education tech, strengthen the company’s sales and marketing efforts and hire a C-suite level employee.
“We found our niche in the tech space, and it’s how we can continue to grow,” said Scott, co-founder and CEO of Healthy Hip Hop, a startup that pivoted from liver performances to an online platform in its ongoing evolution.
Founders: Roy Scott and Wes Smith
Founding year: 2017
Amount raised to date: $1.38M
Noteworthy investors: Google, Techstars, Missouri Technology Corporation
Current employee count: 2 full time, 2 part time
Elevator pitch: Healthy Hip Hop is an online platform that infuses hip hop culture with education, innovative technology and positive attributes to improve learning environments and behaviors for young students. “The Sesame Street of the 21st century.”
The $100,000 awarded from Google Black Founders Fund is part of the global tech giant’s initiative to expand support for Black-owned businesses.
“When I got the news, I was super excited,” Scott said. “And not only are they giving us this cash award, they’re giving us access to all the resources in their ecosystem — from Google Ads to Firebase to the Google Play Store — they are really tying us in.”
The news follows Healthy Hip Hop’s recent run in the Techstars Social Impact Accelerator in Atlanta, graduating this summer.
“While I was going through that program, that’s when I got connected with the Google for Startups Accelerator, which led me to learning about the Black Founders Fund,” Scott explained.
Click here to learn about Google’s initiative on supporting Black founders.
Healthy Hip Hop also is working toward completion of a $1 million seed round of fundraising — on track to close in November, Scott noted.
Pivoting ahead of COVID pays off
While the music and entertainment industry is taking a significant hit during COVID-19, the pandemic has actually been advantageous to the children’s music-based platform, Scott said.
It was already nearly all-digital.
Healthy Hip Hop launched the beta version of its app in January, as well as continued to develop its digital platform, he said.
“So now, we can scale to reach more parents and more teachers,” Scott said. “Things actually worked out in our favor because when schooling went online, more teachers and parents were looking for more resources to keep their children engaged … We were able to continue to do more pilots, continue to bring on more users and really validate our product market fit.”
Knowing before COVID-19 that live performances were not a sustainable and scalable revenue model, Healthy Hip Hop started developing its online platform in 2017 — a journey now culminated by its 2020 application launch.
Click here to read about Healthy Hip Hop’s backstory.
A safer platform for a mobile generation
Along with the application’s education and music resources, children are encouraged to embrace their creativity. With social media platforms such as Tik Tok and Instagram Reels taking off during the pandemic, Scott said that Healthy Hip Hop’s app provides a safe space for children to make videos.
“Kids love to create their own dance videos and dance challenges, and a lot of the time they are doing so on Tik Tok,” Scott said. “But as we’ve seen, Tik Tok has had some issues with security, and not only that, but anyone can access your child.
“Within the Healthy Hip Hop app, kids can still create these dance challenges, but we’ve created our safe circle technology,” he continued. “So that way, their videos are only shared privately with friends, family and educators. It’s been well-received.”
Currently at 5,000 active users, the app is continuing to provide Scott with data to assess feedback and plans for a hard launch in the first quarter of 2021.
The Healthy Hip Hop application can be found on Google Play or the App Store.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
The Loop KC deepens leadership bench as it expands Millennials professional network to new cities
With a transition in leadership in the mix, a still-budding network for young professional in Kansas City — and beyond — is just getting started tapping into its potential, The Loop KC’s founder said. “Nothing is really by young people, for young people. Networking groups can be exclusive or cost too much for some people…
ULAH merging stores, moving women’s brand into seamless, new one-stop shop experience
Fans of LUNA by ULAH — a retail shop featuring an on-trend mix of ready-to-wear women’s apparel, accessories, gifts and home accents — will soon find the brand’s curated offerings two doors down in the Woodside Village live/work center on Rainbow Boulevard. The store is in the final planning stages of relocating to a space…
‘We’re all in it together’: Lulu’s Thai Noodle Shop wraps family flavors with team work ethic
A staple of Kansas City’s emerging food scene for 27 years, Lulu’s Thai Noodle Shop’s growth and popularity wouldn’t have been possible without Malisa Monyakula’s team, the chef and owner said. “I’ve had amazing people working with me since the beginning; people continue to gravitate toward helping me with my vision,” said Monyakula from the…
No easy snapback: Why this former Chief is helping military veterans get on horseback
Kendall Gammon doesn’t know what it’s like to adjust to life after the military, he shared, but the former Kansas City Chiefs long snapper is familiar with losing a sense of identity and community upon leaving the NFL after 15 years. “I always talked about the fact that it was the best temporary job I’d…


