Column raises $30M with a mission to make public information systems more valuable

August 25, 2022  |  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 — Jake Seaton founded Column because he felt like he was possibly the only person who could, the budding Sunflower State founder said.

As a fifth-generation member of a Kansas newspaper family with a computer science degree and experience in entrepreneurship, Seaton launched a solution that would streamline a pain point for many journalists — public notices.  

“The newspaper is the required distribution channel for really important notices of decisions and events and transactions that are happening in communities all around the world,” said Seaton, the founder and CEO of Column. “By building the technology to underpin that process, we can help with an important revenue stream that supports a lot of local journalism.”

Column is a public benefits company that provides software to streamline the placement of public notices for governments, newspapers, journalists and readers. The company, which launched in 2019, recently closed its Series A round with $30 million, led by Lux Capital.

“Our platform is now used by tens of thousands of government agencies, legal service businesses and private citizens who are required by law to publish notices with their local newspapers,” Seaton said. “We serve everyone from small town clerks, to the Arizona attorney general’s office, to the city of Miami’s planning office to major U.S. media enterprises. They are using this system at scale to manage millions of dollars worth of public notice transactions. We’ve been very focused from a product perspective on optimizing that user experience.”

Click here to read more about Jake Seaton’s family newspaper legacy that started in Manhattan, Kansas. 

With the $30 million, the fully remote Column team is looking to accomplish three objectives, he said.

First: scale the company’s core public notice business.

“We are in the early innings of rolling out our platform with a handful of major media enterprises that are beginning to use it at scale,” Seaton noted. “We have to have the resources to do that.”

Second: invest in building features that add value to the transactions that require public notice.

“Everything from building for the foreclosure process performed by local law firms — to the procurement process that governments are embarking on when they notify the public — to the state management process that a private citizen may be placing about after they’ve had a death in the family,” Seaton explained. “We’ve seen an opportunity there, from what we’ve built so far with newspapers, to build our a platform that helps facilitate a larger number of those transactions.”

Third: build the Column application programming interface (API). 

“It is the first-ever application programming interface to enable the submission and dissemination of public notices — as well as the consumption of those notices by machines that will be able to talk to each other and subscribe to real-time streams of public interest information,” Seaton said. 

The API is planned to extend far beyond public notices, Seaton said, but he hopes that it will serve as the blueprint for a variety of public information systems.

Column company retreat at the Snowpine Lodge in Alta, Utah, in 2022

Seaton and his team, which has grown to nearly 50 employees spread across five continents, unveiled Column’s mission statement: make public information systems more valuable — beginning with public notice. 

“As a public benefit company, that is actually written into our charter purpose,” Seaton said, noting that Column’s public benefit status shapes the business decisions he and his team make — such as providing free websites for the display of public information or convening advisory boards across their community of users.

Seaton attributed Column’s success thus far to his team of individuals who want to use their talents and technical skills to solve problems for the public benefit.

“It’s all about the people,” he said. “Many of our team members have worked together before and others have come to us inspired by the problem we’re solving and the impact we want to have. Everyone unified around the company’s mission and sees this opportunity to build a really great and scalable business. It has been super motivating and inspirational.” 

For Kansas City entrepreneurs who are interested in or building technology in public information, Seaton encouraged connecting with him and his team.

“Tell us what you’re building for this industry because there is probably a way for us to work together because this technology we’re building is going to touch a heck of a lot of processes that happen within the American government and legal system,” Seaton said. “We know that there’s a really great culture of wanting to solve problems like this and knowledge on how to build great companies [within the Kansas City community].”

Click here to connect with Jake Seaton on LinkedIn.

Column company retreat at the Snowpine Lodge in Alta, UT on July 20, 2022.
Kim Raff for Column

With Column being a global, remote-first team, Seaton continues to talk about Column’s Kansas origins and how it all began with a newspaper in Manhattan, Kansas, he shared.

“I hope that building the software can be the continuation of my family’s multi-generation legacy in the newspaper business, while also being a substantial public benefit technology company — that is something that has never really existed before,” Seaton said. “There are not many venture-backed public benefit companies, and the opportunity to build and scale one of those having started from the family business just feels very unique and special.”

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

      2022 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        David Roberson and Jared Meek at Adelante Thrift

        Why an Evangelical church in KCK opened a thrift store to build leaders in its immigrant-rich neighborhood 

        By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2022

        The heart and purpose of Mission Adelante is to develop and empower community members — especially its neighbors who come from backgrounds far from Kansas City, said Jared Meek.  “We started Mission Adelante in 2005 to really reach out to the immigrant and refugee community in our neighborhood. We focused a lot on individual transformation,…

        Analysts speak during the HCS Major Kansas City 2022, a bracket-style Halo tournament, at the Kansas City Convention Center

        Halo championship arrives downtown as KC-built esports team ‘pioneers a dynasty’

        By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2022

        KC Pioneers gain support of Chiefs, Charlie Hustle and other hometown household names for its #MyCity campaign as Kansas City hosts major esports tournament  It’s time to showcase Kansas City’s esports and tech community on a global scale, said Mark Josey — and what better way to do so than with a worldwide tournament hosted…

        Myron McCant, KD Academy, celebrates after being named a finalist for the 2022 Small Business of the Year honor

        Meet the KC Chamber’s Top 10 for 2022: One will be the next ‘Small Business of the Year’ 

        By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2022

        From a rapidly expanding restaurant chain to a 24/7 daycare facility to a workforce training and information technology leader building a statewide footprint, the finalists for the 2022 Small Business of the Year award run the gamut of forward-thinking Kansas City ventures, said Joe Reardon. “Every year I become more and more impressed with our…

        Mitch Case, More Than A Meal, talks with Deb North, Yes! Athletics, during the Chamber's Small Business Showcase at Union Station

        Three-way tie: Public vote mixes ‘Fan Favorite’ small business honors between meals and more

        By Tommy Felts | April 27, 2022

        A trio of Kansas City small businesses is sharing the Honeywell Fan Favorite Award this week after wowing the public during the Chamber’s recent candidate showcase at Union Station. “The rules can be bent,” said Eric Wollerman, president of Honeywell Federal Manufacturing and Technologies, announcing the three-way tie in the lead-up to the Greater Kansas…