No code needed: OP software startup’s app-building platform targets businesses big and small
December 30, 2020 | Channa Steinmetz
Building an app from scratch is a costly and time-consuming project, said Shawn Black, the co-founder of Abbacore — an Overland Park computer software company that specializes in helping consumers collect and share data through its own app, Ai Connect.
“Customers that need a specific solution — instead of spending months on the development table and then producing an app in its first year — they can come to us,” said Black. “We can make the app look like their own. We can add forms, documents and presentations, any surveys or polls. We can create those in [Ai Connect] and have [the customer’s application] up and running in a couple of weeks.”
How’s that timetable possible?
Abbacore already has about 90 percent of any given app built, and then is able to tailor the remaining 10 percent to the customer’s needs, said Black.
“One of our previous hospital clients wanted to provide pregnant women with a way to record their daily food intake,” explained Aaron Butler, Abbacore’s other half and co-founder. “We created a solution where the hospital clinician could manage her clients. Then, her clinical trial folks collected that data on the app, and it was stored in a secure cloud that we can link into.”
Click here to learn more about Abbacore.
To put it simply: Ai Connect allows businesses and organizations to create their own app — without any coding.
Possibilities within the custom app include sharing documents, taking polls, collecting data, creating presentations and tracking assets.
A free demo version allows prospective customers to look around the app and see what materials have already been created, Black explained. Creating with and downloading Ai Connect (formerly known as InBound) requires the purchase of a license — based in a monthly subscription model, he added.
“Once you get in the app, you actually see that we pre-built a bunch of sample industry forms and data collection tools,” Butler explained. “Once you’re subscribed, you can use [those forms and tools] as a starting point, and modify it from there.”
“We’re looking forward to seeing what people do with the product,” Black noted. “And remember, this is a platform. So if you took the products and you created a super great form, we feed that back into the product for everybody else to use. It is really a community product.”
Before Ai Connect launched in early October 2020, the duo worked primarily with enterprise businesses through Abbacore — founded in 2009 — to create applications for them, Butler noted.
“We’ve worked with businesses that have had unique problems and solved them with unique solutions,” Butler said. “Now our goal is to take those solutions to the commercial space and have it be something that any company can have access to. It doesn’t matter how small the company is.
“This is a HIPAA secure platform and product,” he continued, “which means PII information is secure; encryption; secure transfer — all that kind of stuff is available for how we store data in the cloud.”
With the COVID-19 pandemic creating a stronger dependence on technology, Ai Connect could be a great benefit to small businesses that need its services immediately and for a limited amount of time, Black said.
Ai Connect also includes a COVID-19 tracking form to help business with contract tracing, Butler added.
“You could have a bar with an iPhone at the door,” Black said, giving an example of how the platform could be used as a response to the pandemic. “With [Ai Connect], employees can scan the customer’s license and know exactly who is in their bar. Bar managers can also use the app to track the cleaning of the bar and which employees work when.
“It really has the core of what we started 11 years ago — and that is to collect data and to present that data through analytics.”
AI connect is available on the App Store.

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Biz class to barista: UMKC student’s mobile matcha cart hand-whisks crowds of thirsty fans
Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter. HerCafe, a matcha business founded by a University of Missouri-Kansas City student and her friend, has found success with its weekend…
Tim Tebow to entrepreneurs: Embrace the heavy lift if you want to reap life’s real profits
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Business should be about driving impact, not just scoring another win, said former NFL quarterback Tim Tebow — challenging Midwest entrepreneurs, community builders, and investors to consider outcomes that boost others, not just one’s personal pocketbook. “Probably everybody in this room has been super blessed with skill sets, resources, relationships, opportunities, companies,…
Here’s how a Prospect renewal project invests in both those who built KC and the city’s future
Economic development initiatives are measured not just in buildings, but in opportunity, said Melissa Patterson Hazley, lauding the use of the Central City Economic Development (CCED) Sales Tax Program to transform underutilized parcels in Kansas City into modern, energy-efficient housing that support long-term neighborhood vitality. “Projects like Prospect Summit represent the intentional work of making…
Fusing talent, passion: Serial founder trades his Screamin Cow for offshore talent hiring platform
Brad Starnes’ itch to lean into a newly realized pain point at the end of 2024 led to the acquisition of his Screamin Cow Marketing Group and the launch of another passion project, the former UMKC Student Entrepreneur of the Year shared. With the move — which sees Screamin Cow transitioned to Builders of Authority…



