Former Google, Uber exec joins maker of Pokémon Go — and he’s building a team of developers in Lawrence
December 7, 2021 | Blythe Dorrian
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.
Brian McClendon developed his passion for technology playing video games like Pac-Man and Asteroids as a child in Lawrence. Now, years after working to help create Google Maps and Uber in Silicon Valley, he’s joined a leading game developer to activate tech jobs in his home state.
Niantic — a San Francisco-based augmented reality (AR) company known for the popular games Ingress and Pokémon Go — is hiring for McClendon’s new engineering squad with its eyes on talent in the Bay Area, Seattle, London and Lawrence (where he plans to build the team as the company’s senior vice president of engineering for AR, Research and Mapping).
Click here to see openings at Niantic.
“The mission of Niantic is to build games and technology that motivate people to get outdoors, whether that is gameplay, activities, or making the outdoors a better experience,” McClendon said.
“Pokemon Go’s motivation is to go out, get steps, visit places, and find things in the real world,” he added. “GPS puts you on the map, but we want to do more than that. The game and the company have collected a large set of points that are interesting, not just stores and businesses.”
Moving back to Kansas
McClendon returned to Lawrence about five years ago with his wife, investor Beth Ellyn McClendon — with whom he leads the seed stage investment firm Free State Forge — because of their appreciation for the city. Another bonus: his mother, brother, and reconnected friends from school live in the area.
“For 30 years, I was in California, but I was always saying how I could move back here,” he said. “At least 25 of those years, I had plans to look for real estate, but I didn’t execute on it until 2017.”
One of McClendon’s goals for his hometown engineering team is to increase the local tech footprint, he said, noting Lawrence doesn’t have many tech employers besides the University of Kansas.
Now in bloom Niantic recently released a new game called Pikmin Bloom, a companion app that rewards players for being outside. Users are challenged to grow Pikmin characters and make flowers bloom. So far, McClendon said, the app has received great feedback. Click here to explore Pikmin Bloom.
“There are 777 tech companies that I know of, and more than 250 startups in the KCMO/ Kansas area,” he said. “Tech employment is critical for long-term growth because it creates jobs by generating high-growth companies.”
The first Lawrence-based position with Niantic was posted online within the past two weeks, McClendon said, with senior positions currently prioritized.
“I am part of the platform team,” he said. “We’re not only building platforms for Niantic, but for all other game and application developers to use. My goal is to make something that is widely used. I would like to do the same for augmented reality.”
One exciting aspect of recruiting is that McClendon can potentially reunite with people he collaborated with in the past, he said.
“I enjoy working with technology teams,” McClendon said. “If I am going to work for a company remotely, I want a team locally because I enjoy day-to-day design and technical conversations. I am hiring this team because I enjoy working on tech problems. That is something I have spent 30 years doing, and I don’t want to stop.”
Developing for years
McClendon studied at KU to become an electrical engineer. His father, a math professor, pushed him to excel at mathematics.
He spent the first 10 years of his career building graphics as a part of Silicon Graphics in Silicon Valley.
“That exposed me to high-end applications but also game development,” McClendon said. “The Nintendo 64 was developed on the desk next to me.”
The experience showed McClendon what he could do with 3D power on PC computers. In 1998, he started Intrinsic Graphics. Its first demo was so compelling the team made it a separate company, Keyhole, in 2001.
In 2004, Keyhole was acquired, and it became Google Earth. From there, McClendon went to work for Uber for two years. He became interested in creating games where exercise is a focus.
“As I got older, physical fitness became a life extension argument,” McClendon said. “These games motivated me to walk more and visit places. I now successfully average around 12,000 steps a day, which I did not do before.”
Part of a new era to come
Along with the new position at Niantic, McClendon teaches at KU. About 150 students completed a course about startups shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I have helped get several of them jobs in Silicon Valley based on introductions,” he said. “I will continue to help place students both locally and in companies I know around the world.”
Once Niantic begins looking for workers for entry-level positions, local universities in Kansas and Missouri — including his alma mater — could provide some of the best candidates, McClendon said.
When he was graduating from KU decades ago, McClendon never expected the trajectory tech would take him or the world, he said.
“I don’t think any of us in 1986 could have conceived the impact of the internet or the impact of Moore’s Law,” McClendon said. “We are now carrying super computers in our pockets, and we don’t care. We can talk to it, and play games with it. Everybody has it.”
His lingering question: Where will technology take us in the next 10 to 20 years?
“I have theories, but the only way to know is to be part of it,” McClendon said.
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
Featured Business

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Topeka recruited dozens of Filipino teachers for local classrooms; at year’s end, the district hopes they’ll stay
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. TOPEKA — Although international educators are not new to the state’s capital city, Topeka welcomed about 50 teachers from the Philippines this past school year to address shortages within the…
Startup ideas are here, but does Kansas have the risk capital to get them to the next level?
Eight early-stage Kansas entrepreneurs sat across from Midwest-based investors this week at Aspiria NOW in Overland Park, engaging in rapid-fire, “speed dating” style meetings aimed at moving their ventures closer to real investment. “We’re seeing just a great inflow of companies, especially at the early stage, come in just high levels of sophistication and awareness…
‘Buy, buy, buy while we can’: This KC toy store is stockpiling Christmas gifts now as tariff reality unwraps
Brett Goodwin and Alan Tipton are feeling even more thankful right now for the large, dry basement at The Learning Tree — the independent toy store they own in Prairie Village — amid worries over tariffs on Chinese imports and how they’ll impact prices from toy manufacturers. The best they can do to prepare: stockpile…
KC’s pro pickleball team getting new $6.5M home near Arrowhead, Kauffman Stadium
A long-awaited redevelopment project in Kansas City’s stadium corridor is transforming the former CoCo Key Water resort into a vibrant destination pickleball facility with eight indoor courts, a full-service bar and restaurant, a coffee shop, and event spaces. It also will be home to the Kansas City Stingers, a professional team in the National Pickleball…



