How a no-touch copper tool built in Lenexa could be a tipping point for safe contact amid COVID

November 11, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

CuRVE Shield, Micro Mini Metal

Editor’s note: The following is part of a three-part series spotlighting U.S. military veterans who also are Kansas City entrepreneurs.

Innovation is at an all-time high as COVID-19 continues to create new market categories, said Shawn Tipping, noting the pandemic has raised new awareness about the thin barriers between health and sickness. 

CuRVE Shield, Micro Mini Metal

CuRVE Shield, Micro Mini Metal

“We’ve never had a frame of reference for how bad a virus can get. Now we do,” Tipping, co-founder of Micro Mini Metal, said of the consumer experience amid the lingering outbreak and why it’s driving sales of personal protective equipment and tools — like the company’s COVID-curated CuRVE Shield and CuRVE Striker — through the roof. 

Built in Lenexa using 100 percent copper — a metal that boasts natural antimicrobial effects — the CuRVE Shield helps users open doors, punch elevator buttons, and pay at gas pumps among other uses, without physically touching foreign surfaces. 

The CuRVE Striker does the same, the only difference being it’s copper alloy composition — known to kill such viruses as SARS, MRSA, and Ebola, Tipping said — and manufactured in Connecticut. 

Click here to shop the CuRVE line of products or for more on their benefits and uses. 

CuRVE Shield, Micro Mini Metal

CuRVE Shield, Micro Mini Metal

“This was a product that didn’t even exist. There was no touch tool back six, seven, eight months ago,” Tipping said of lucrative market opportunity and real-world problem solving in action. 

CuRVE Shield, Micro Mini Metal

CuRVE Shield, Micro Mini Metal

“I sat down at my kitchen table and drew it out at about 3 a.m.,” he recalled of the ideation process at the onset of COVID. “I took a picture of my drawing and I sent it to a friend of mine at KC Proto. I texted it to him about 4 a.m. and pretty much the next day I had a 3D printed copy of the tool.”

With virtually no kinks to work out and dozens of uses, CuRVE was swiftly patented and ready for market, Tipping added, noting a secondary problem the team behind the CuRVE products needed to overcome: cross contamination. 

“We also came up with another product called the Copper Companion. Nobody else was doing this either — still nobody’s doing it — and we’re selling a ton of them,” he said of the small, copper infused pouch that holds the CuRVE tools. 

Shawn Tipping, Micro Mini Metal

Shawn Tipping, Micro Mini Metal

“When you drop the tool in there after you’ve used it, the metals go to work and make sure everything’s dead on it. More importantly, you’re not using the tool and then sticking it in your pocket and cross contaminating your wallet, your phone, and everything else.”

A tough time for entrepreneurs, Tipping — who also founded Game Plan Experts, a disaster and emergency preparedness company — credits a portion of his success to time spent in the U.S. Air Force. 

“My military experience helped guide me in the concept of, ‘Don’t quit, just keep moving forward,’ and I think that’s probably the biggest thing,” he said, adding two additional co-founders also boast military service records — another in the Air Force and one in the Army. 

“[The pandemic] really just gave us time to sit back and look and say, ‘Hey, how can we help?’” Tipping said, drawing parallels to service-based values still instilled in the founding partners. “We figured something out that is useful and people appreciate it.”

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.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        2016 Sprint Accelerator

        Sprint Accelerator firms hiring, offering meet-and-greet

        By Tommy Felts | March 1, 2016

        The new firms at the Techstars-led Sprint Accelerator program are already growing. While many are looking for interns, seven of the 10 mobile tech companies in the three-month accelerator are looking to hire staff. The companies, which entered the Kansas City-based accelerator on Feb. 22, each nabbed $120,000 in capital as part of the program,…

        autism behavioral therapy Pathfinder Health Services

        Behavioral health startup announces acquisition, name change

        By Tommy Felts | March 1, 2016

        Behavioral health tech firm ABPathfinder is blazing a new path thanks to a recent acquisition. In addition to a name change, the Overland Park-based firm announced Thursday that it purchased Phoenix-based Ensure Billing to beef up the company’s services. The new entity has rebranded to become Pathfinder Health Innovations. Acquiring an insurance billing company allows…

        New $20M fund supercharges VC dollars in Kansas City

        By Tommy Felts | February 29, 2016

        In conjunction with a metro-wide effort to boost the area economy, Kansas City will soon have a new co-investment fund that aims to accelerate early-stage businesses. As part of the KC Rising economic initiative, the “KC Rise Fund” hopes to improve a common gripe in Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community that there’s not enough capital to…

        Cut the crap: How to discern worthwhile advice

        By Tommy Felts | February 29, 2016

        In my early days as an entrepreneur, I ran into a lot of consultants who claimed to be “experts” and guaranteed they could help me out. Then I’d do some fact-checking and discover they were neither reliable nor experts, and their advice wasn’t worth the space in our email inboxes. In the last few years,…