From Aussie garage to unicorn: How SafetyCulture continues its climb in an ever-changing environment

November 13, 2020  |  Channa Steinmetz

SafetyCulture, Crossroads Arts District, Kansas City

Starting from humble beginnings, SafetyCulture earned its membership in the Australian unicorn club this year with a $1.3 billion valuation, said Nick Topping.

“Our CEO and founder Luke Anear actually founded the company [in 2004] out of his garage in Townsville, Australia,” said Topping, who leads the marketing and business development teams in the Americas for SafetyCulture. The company has had a growing presence in Kansas City since first arriving in 2016.

Founder: Luke Anear

Founding year: 2004

Amount raised to date: 149.4 Million

Noteworthy investors: Blackbird Ventures, Tiger Global Management, Index Ventures, Scott Farquhar (Atlassian co-founder)

Current employee count: 62 in Kansas City; 415 internationally

Elevator pitch: SafetyCulture is a workplace safety and quality platform that uses their application, iAuditor, to collect consistent data, standardize operations, send reports, identify failed areas and get problems resolved through checklist software. 

The software startup — which focuses on workplace safety and quality — has been successful in growing its ability to adapt to needs in an expanding market, Topping noted. 

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, SafetyCulture has taken steps to offer relevant and new material for its clients and beyond. 

“We started digitizing government and CDC guidelines from around the world into checklists, so that people could access those easily,” Topping explained. “We developed a COVID hub where people could do safety checks just for COVID.”

Such COVID resources are offered through SafetyCulture’s flagship product, iAuditor — an application that simplifies the auditing process by allowing workers to effectively manage safety and quality from a mobile device. 

Safety is priceless, Topping said, noting SafetyCulture offers a free version of iAuditor. The paid service, which offers deeper insight, is available to schools at no cost.

“We actually made [iAuditor] free to all schools nationwide,” Topping said, “which has been a really cool initiative to see schools using it to do safety checks and help students get back to school safely.”

SafetyCulture’s resources cross nearly all businesses and organizations, he said.

“You typically think of a checklist for safety quality in high-risk industries like construction, mining or manufacturing,” Topping noted. “But with the pandemic, there’s high risk everywhere — from going into an elevator to a coffee shop.”

“So we’ve seen a shift in various businesses looking at quality assessments,” he continued. “Clients can use our product as a competitive advantage to win back customers and also help keep employees safe.”

Listening to the client

To keep up with relevant COVID-based materials, SafetyCulture has continued to hire, specifically within their Customer Success Team who works closely with customers to identify needs and optimize effectiveness.

Nick Topping, SafetyCulture

Nick Topping, SafetyCulture

“There’s also been no furloughs or layoffs within the company,” Topping added.  

SafetyCulture made its first acquisition in September with EdApp — a global training company. Topping sees the company continuing to grow through customer feedback and acquisitions that make sense, he said. 

“We got feedback from customers that inspections and checks go hand-in-hand with training,” Topping said of SafetyCulture decision to acquire EdApp. “So we have a mobile training tool that allows [companies] to do quick training from a distance.”

Click here to read about SafetyCulture’s acquisition of a “micro-learning” application.

From surviving to thriving

To help organizations prepare for success in the post-pandemic world, SafetyCulture is playing host Nov. 18 to a virtual summit, “From Surviving to Thriving.”

The summit is expected to cover how businesses can capitalize on recent shifts through adaptability and innovation, as well as insights from the leadership of SafetyCulture, Topping noted.

“We have some really great speakers,” Topping shared. “There’s Captain Sully who’s the pilot behind the ‘Miracle on the Hudson,’ Capt. Scott Kelly, who’s a NASA astronaut who dealt with adapting in space, John McAvoy who went from behind iron bars to becoming an Iron Man, and so many inspiring others.

“All these people were ordinary people who did extraordinary things because they adapted and changed; that is really the theme of the event,” he continued. 

Click here to register for SafetyCulture’s free virtual event, 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Nov. 18 on Zoom.

 

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

        Startup Road Trip: Patent-packed PowerBox puts productivity at the press of a button

        By Tommy Felts | October 22, 2019

        Startland’s 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. PITTSBURG, KANSAS…

        Wendy Guillies, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation

        Kauffman, ECJC: Stagnant US entrepreneurship is a diversity issue that throwing money at Big Business won’t fix

        By Tommy Felts | October 19, 2019

        Women, people of color, and rural residents remain punished by systemic barriers to starting businesses, said Wendy Guillies in a nationwide call to action that unites powerful Kansas City entrepreneurism advocates.   “America’s economy is out of balance. We’ve got businesses that have become too entrenched and powerful, while people and communities across America are being…

        Tin Ho, Lean Start Lab; photo courtesy of the University of Missouri-Kansas City

        KCultivator Q&A: Tin Ho skewers failure, beetle larvae on path to building stronger founders

        By Tommy Felts | October 19, 2019

        Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. The KCultivator Series is sponsored by Plexpod, a progressive coworking platform offering next generation workspace for entrepreneurs, startups, and growth-stage companies of all sizes. Startup challenges aren’t limited to products and processes, said Tin Ho.  “My…

        Photo by Dan Gold

        Eliminate the wait: JoCo-based DashNow offers diners mobile pay, check-splitting tech

        By Tommy Felts | October 18, 2019

        Joseph Layne was tired of waiting. Seated at a busy restaurant, he stirred the mental ingredients for DashNow, a mobile-based service allowing diners to pay-and-go without waiting on a server to swipe a credit card or make change. “I realized I had been sitting there 10 minutes [waiting for the bill], while there was a…