Redivus Health earns ticket to Germany-based accelerator thanks to seeds planted by Plug and Play

October 26, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

Jeff Dunn, Redivus Health; photo courtesy of Pipeline

Plug and Play promised regional connectivity when the international network of accelerators announced plans for a Topeka-based program, and it’s already paying off for one Kansas City-grown startup — before the Kansas accelerator even launches. 

Jeff Dunn, co-founder of Redivus Health; 2016 at the Sprint Accelerator

“Don’t ever turn down an opportunity to meet somebody or be introduced to somebody — because you never know where things are going to lead,” said Jeff Dunn, CEO of Redivus Health, revealing an unexpected connection to Katrin Bridges, senior vice president of innovation at The Greater Topeka Partnership. 

A March conversation with Bridges connected Dunn to Plug and Play and last week landed him in the latest cohort for its 12-week Munich, Germany-based Startup Creasphere program in partnership with Roche Diagnostics. 

“They were looking for a solution to support sepsis and there wasn’t a fit at the time,” he explained, noting the capabilities of Redivus Health’s technology — which aims to serve as a GPS for healthcare providers, providing them with interactive guidance in times of critical decision making. 

“This collaboration could lead to multiple collaborative opportunities with our software and their company,” Dunn said.

Click here to learn more about Redivus Health. 

News of the startup’s participation in a Plug and Play program came the day after Bridges and a selection committee virtually hosted 10 startups, each vying for a spot in the first cohort of Topeka’s Plug and Play Animal Health and Agtech accelerator. 

Katrin Bridges, Greater Topeka Partnership

Katrin Bridges, Greater Topeka Partnership

“It’s going to take a couple of days to make that selection, but the cohort is going to pick up very shortly after,” Bridges told Startland News, noting a newly-promised climate of innovation in Topeka is rapidly taking hold — with the selection of developers for its innovation campus expected by the end of December, as a viability study draws to a close. 

“It feels absolutely awesome. Brings a little tear to my eye,” she joked, referencing the work it’s taken to bring Topeka into regional conversations on innovation and to establish the city as a hub for entrepreneurship. 

“[Through work with Plug and Play] we became part of the global community of innovators pretty much overnight. It was two years in the making,” Bridges continued. “By rolling out this program, we are now one of those communities on this planet that takes innovation seriously.”

Work to establish Topeka as an innovation presence hasn’t gone unnoticed by corporate partners, with Evergy signing on as the third and final founding partner for the Plug and Play program, Bridges added. 

The energy giant joins Cargill and Hill’s Pet Nutrition in supporting the program. 

“Those founding partners have a big influence and a big say in which startups get selected and those criteria are mainly based around strategic priorities for those partners,” she explained. 

“The idea is to create pilot projects with them and really create those partnerships that allow those startup companies to flourish and for the corporate partners to get access to good deal flow, good external innovation, and innovative products and services that would take potentially much longer to develop internally.”

As Topeka’s innovation rapidly comes online, Dunn’s accidental exposure to its resources sends a positive message of what’s to come, he said. 

“I talked to a [Kansas City-based] founder last week about whether he should have a conversation with Plug and Play and one of their partners and I very transparently told him there’s a lot of conversations you have that lead to dead ends — I would say this Plug and Play opportunity is one to plant some seeds and watch them grow,” Dunn recalled. 

“I would say don’t ever turn down that conversation —  especially if you’re introduced to these folks,” he added. “I’m a testament to something that can happen through those multiple conversations.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Sulaiman Z. Salaam III, Suli4Q

        R3AL potential: Why Suli4Q’s work in KC doesn’t stop with the final track on his Top 10 hip hop album

        By Tommy Felts | May 25, 2021

        A wildly successful 2020 for indie performer Suli4Q wouldn’t mean as much if the entertainer, entrepreneur, and evangelist for Kansas City prosperity didn’t also focus on impact in the real world, he said. “In my journey, my biggest goal in reaching my full potential is being able to visibly see the changes that I’m having…

        The Next Paige Agency

        Talent agency plans Next Paige in Kansas City’s story; a $50K grant could bring dream closer to reality

        By Tommy Felts | May 25, 2021

        A shift in the arts and entertainment world is allowing Kansas City creatives to step into roles they’ve long deserved, Elaina Paige Thomas said, looking back on a performance career — and new opportunities — that reflect childhood dreams dancing toward reality. “It has been a journey and I never imagined being here this quickly,…

        Ward Morgan, founder of CivicPlus; photo by Taylor Irby, The Manhattan Mercury

        How a $290M investment from Insight Partners is expected to accelerate Kansas govtech company’s expansion

        By Tommy Felts | May 25, 2021

        Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. A…

        Father-son restaurant partners Carlos Mortera and Carlos Mortera, Poio

        ‘Not Mexican enough, not American enough’: How a KCK restaurateur found his identity through food, family

        By Tommy Felts | May 22, 2021

        Born in Mexico, Kansas-raised Carlos Mortera is defined by two, sometimes-conflicting cultures, he said — a contrast that led him to question his own identity, but ultimately answer with culinary creations that reflect a diverse Kansas City experience. “When I was younger, I struggled with feeling like I’m not from either place,” shared Mortera, who…