Paperboy to tech founder: How Jake Seaton returned to Kansas to help save the family business (and local news)

March 19, 2021  |  Channa Steinmetz

Jake Seaton, Column

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.

MANHATTAN, Kansas — Hailing from a prominent regional newspaper dynasty, Jake Seaton always knew he wanted to spend his career solving challenges in the ever-changing industry, he shared.

Column is the first collaborative public notice platform helping journalists, governments and legal services work together to inform their communities.

“My family has owned the local newspaper in Manhattan since 1915 and has gradually expanded the business to about 10 other Midwestern communities over the course of five generations. I grew up around the struggling newspaper business which has been dealing with all of the challenges in the age of the internet,” said Seaton, who founded Column in 2019.

Column is a software platform that facilitates and simplifies the public notice process for governments, newspapers, journalists and readers. The tech company aims to help make the information from public notices both accessible to citizens and proactively distributed to their communities.

“We are used by media businesses that have to work back and forth with local government officials. [Column] is a suite of tools that helps the media business administer the public notice process with all their customers,” Seaton explained, noting that when he spoke to those who worked with his family’s newspapers — notably including the Manhattan Mercury — they shared their pain points around the process and requirement of public notice.

Click here to learn more about Column and how the platform works.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Jake Seaton (@jakeseaton0)

What is a public notice?

Public notices are information postings notifying the public of government-related activities that might cause a citizen to take action. Traditionally, public notices have been published in newspapers. Examples of a public notices include: government contracts, foreclosures and unclaimed property.

In early 2020, Seaton recalled, he was driving around rural communities in Kansas, begging newspaper publishers for meetings amid their busy days. A year later, Column signed an official partnership with U.S. publishing company McClatchy, which has an operation encompassing such regional publications as the Kansas City Star and Wichita Eagle. 

“Through our partnership with [McClatchy], we’ll be rolling out the platform to help them administer the public notice business in a subset of those major U.S. cities,” Seaton said, noting Column also is going live in Miami, Sacramento, California, and Raleigh, North Carolina. 

So far, user testimonials have been overwhelmingly positive, Seaton said. 

“When folks start using our platform, we get to watch months and years melt off their faces because they no longer have to do [public notices] the old fashioned way,” he stated. “Both for the local businesses and the large enterprises, the response has been really great.”

One of the best decisions Seaton has made for his company: bringing the Column team to Kansas during its founding days, he shared.

“Getting started in Manhattan gave us the opportunity to have so much first-hand experience with the people who were going to be using our platform,” Seaton said. “We were able to develop empathy, understanding and an intimate knowledge of the problem we were solving and the people who were interacting with it.”

Click here to read more about why Jake Seaton started a tech company in Manhattan, KS.

At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic shutdown, Seaton made the decision to be a remote-first company, he noted. Although he spent a majority of 2020 in Manhattan, his team of 12 is located across the globe. 

“Most of our work now is very asynchronous; we use a lot of recorded videos and written memos,” Seaton noted. “We try to reserve synchronous video time for team building, socializing and education because we think people are Zoomed-out at this point. It has forced us to really adapt and innovate in the ways we work together.”

For the rest of 2021, Seaton expects to grow the Column team, with current openings in engineering and customer support.

“Other than that, we plan to focus on continuing to support our users and identifying opportunities to build new products that are of value to them,” he added. 

Seaton dropped out of Harvard in 2015 to help start Quorum Analytics, he said. He’s since returned to Harvard to finish his bachelor’s degree in computer science, and has also worked as an engineer on the Google Cloud Platform. Column has been the perfect opportunity to combine his acquired skills and lifelong passions, Seaton said. 

“The opportunity to work on something that my family has been involved with for so many generations — that uses the skills I’ve built through an education in computer science, working at a large technology company like Google, starting a software platform with the folks at Quorum — is really invigorating,” he shared. “It’s what yanks me out of bed in the morning.”

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

      2021 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Saroj Gupta, MyDigiRecords, pitching at the Futures Group during the Comeback KC Ventures Innovation Showcase

        When a global health crisis exposed ‘broken’ systems, these KC startups jabbed back

        By Tommy Felts | May 21, 2022

        Patients need easier access to their medical records, said Saroj Gupta, stressing the life-threatening outcomes for individuals who might miss important vaccinations — or erroneously obtain multiple doses — because of poor or hard-to-find documentation. “We call ourselves a developed country, but our healthcare system is so broken,” said Saroj Gupta, the founder and CEO…

        Clarence Tan and Edna Martinson, Boddle Learning

        AT&T deal brings head-to-head ‘Pet Battles’ to Boddle in a first for the KC-made edtech app

        By Tommy Felts | May 20, 2022

        A new collaboration between Boddle Learning and AT&T hopes to keep students plugged into learning long after they’ve unplugged from the classroom.  “With summer break quickly approaching, it’s important to help kids maintain knowledge outside of the classroom,” AT&T said in a release announcing its teamed up with Tulsa-based, Kansas City-born Boddle to introduce new…

        Gov. Mike Parson, R-Missouri, speaks at Union Station during the announcement of Meta's new $800 million data center in Kansas City

        Budget bump to $31M would help MTC attack its 16-point plan for Missouri entrepreneurs; funding fate rests with governor

        By Tommy Felts | May 20, 2022

        A key funder of initiatives like Digital Sandbox KC and LaunchKC could see its own fortunes rise if Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signs a budget that includes $31 million to boost technology, entrepreneurship and innovation efforts in the state. The Missouri legislature last week passed a budget that would dramatically up the Missouri Technology Corporation’s…

        Danielle DuPree, Ennovation Center

        Ennovation Center taps hometown entrepreneur to lead Independence-based resource hub

        By Tommy Felts | May 20, 2022

        Support is in place for entrepreneurs looking for customized services, the Ennovation Center said Friday, announcing a new executive director already at work at the Independence-based community resource. “I love helping entrepreneurs grow their business,” said Danielle DuPree, who began her role leading the Ennovation Center in April. “My passion lies in working with small…