Bungii hires former C2FO exec for CFO role; startup delivers on new consumer demands
November 21, 2022 | Tommy Felts
Ratcheting through the stages of a growing startup is easier with an experienced professional under the hood, said Ben Jackson, drawing upon the comparison of scaling to “chewing glass while staring into the abyss.”
“Companies fundamentally change as various revenue thresholds are surpassed,” said Jackson, co-founder of Bungii. “A seed stage company looks completely different from a Series A stage, the same applies for Series A vs Series D. These changes require evolution in processes, management, governance rhythms and overall sophistication.”
Click here to learn more about Bungii’s funding and other businesses featured in Startland News’ 2022 Kansas City Venture Capital-Backed Companies report.

Ben Jackson, Bungii, right, speaking at Startland News’ Innovation Exchange in June 2019; Photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News
Bungii on Monday announced startup veteran Kerri Thurston has joined the Overland Park-based tech-enabled delivery platform as its first chief financial officer. Thurston previously served as the longtime CFO at C2FO — one of Kansas City’s largest and most-funded scaling companies — as well as global controller at Garmin.
“Having someone who has been through it before — and can help us avoid common obstacles and pitfalls — was the No. 1 thing on my list,” said Jackson. “I look forward to seeing how her thumbprint on our company will accelerate our success.”
Thurston, who also is a member of the Forbes Finance Council, an invitation-only community for senior-level sales and business development executives, began her work with Bungii in early November — but was already well acquainted with the startup.
She was among the executives who interviewed Bungii for C2FO’s incubation program shortly after the startup relocated to Kansas City from Manhattan where Jackson and co-founder Harrison Proffitt founded it while at Kansas State University.
Leawood-based C2FO — an on-demand working capital platform providing equitable access to low-cost capital — provided early incubation space for Bungii in 2016 and 2017, and Thurston and the team maintained a relationship, even after she left C2FO in June. That later proved serendipitous as Jackson searched for a CFO.
“I scheduled a quick call with Kerri to get input on a business question; she wasn’t even on my radar as a candidate at the time,” Jackson recalled. “While we were wrapping up the discussion, I casually asked her what she’s looking for in her next adventure. She probably had no idea but she almost perfectly described Bungii.”
Bungii’s platform unlocks large item, same-day delivery for retail partners to drive incremental sales and increase customer satisfaction.
“While it doesn’t necessarily seem like it on the surface, Bungii and C2FO have a lot in common,” Jackson said. “Both are marketplace companies that partner with some of the largest companies worldwide. Marketplaces are a unique animal but throwing in Fortune 500 companies to the mix only adds complexity. Having someone like Kerri, who fundamentally understands this type of business, join our team is a tremendous win for every Bungii stakeholder.”

Kerri Thurston, then-CFO at C2FO, speaks at Startland News’ 2019 Kansas City Venture Capital-Backed Companies reception; Photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News
Altering course
Thurston’s arrival comes as Bungii builds upon a dramatic pivot forced by the pandemic. The startup no longer is targeting consumers specifically to say “Download our app and initiate a Bungii” to help move a large item, Jackson explained.
“We’re partnering further upstream — at the point of purchase — and the decision and action isn’t coming from the consumer, it’s coming from the business,” he said.
Changing the strategy follows a shift in consumer behavior and the resulting retail challenges, Jackson said. During COVID, in-store purchases dried up in lieu of online shopping. With that came a reliance on quick delivery and shipping.
And while consumers now expect that all purchases should arrive nearly instantaneously, big box retailers without a fleet of last-mile vehicles aren’t as prepared as Amazon to deliver on those demands, Jackson said.
“They just want it to show up — same day or next day — on their doorstep,” he said of customer expectations. “Big and bulky is becoming a life or death crisis for retailers nationwide.”
Bungii is uniquely aligned to offer a solution, Jackson said, detailing how the startup partners with such retailers to offer white label delivery in select markets to get large items from the store to a customers’ home.
“For our partners, this is no longer a nice to have; it’s a need to have. And it’s becoming a key part of their offerings to customers,” he said. “We have the technology. We have the processes. We have hundreds of drivers in each market that really eliminates the friction of buying in store, figuring it out yourself, or leaning on a third party logistics provider.”
Click here to learn more about Bungii for Business.
New markets and margins
Bungii’s shifting focus also means changes to the way it markets itself — messaging now targets potential Bungii drivers, not app users — and even where and when it expands to new cities across the U.S.
“We’ve taken a systemic and disciplined approach from a geographic footprint perspective, and expansion today is driven solely based on partner demand,” Jackson said.
With the infrastructure to recruit and train drivers quickly, Bungii can enter a market with greater ease once it identifies a go-live date with the partner, he said. That includes building sophisticated, custom API integrations with companies to seamlessly integrate the delivery process into retailers’ existing systems, Jackson said.
“Retailers want to focus on their core business: selling products,” he said. “They don’t want to have to figure out how to create their own on-demand big and bulky fleet to deliver their products.”
Bungii is positioned on the front end of a tectonic shift in retail, Jackson emphasized, and its ability to react and adapt in the face of the pandemic “could not have turned out better.”
“Every retailer is rethinking or completely rebuilding their supply chain,” he said. “Being in a place to recover with them has opened the door to C-level meetings with the largest logistics companies and retailers, resulting in another year of triple-digit growth.. And we’re more strongly positioned: higher margins, higher retention.”
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

2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Fans packed Chiefs rally, one didn’t come home; citywide trauma from shooting won’t heal quickly, grief expert says
Trauma and grief come in waves, said Mindy Corporon, foreshadowing a long road ahead for those impacted — directly and indirectly — by Wednesday’s shooting near the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl victory rally. Like many across the region, Corporon, co-founder of the Merriam-based nonprofit SevenDays foundation, was watching the Chiefs parade on TV when…
Black leaders need to earn a ‘thriving wage’ before they can help others; an Evergy-backed cohort could help them ascend
A new program backed by entrepreneur support groups and Evergy aims to raise household income by at least 30 percent for participating Black professionals, nonprofit founders, and entrepreneurs, said Craig Moore II. “The ultimate goal is making sure you’re a leader who can do more than show up and talk about community — you have the…
Last to know, first to go: ‘Out of touch’ ballpark plan leaves Crossroads small biz owners feeling betrayed
Unlike many of her Crossroads neighbors — hoping to draw in crowds of football fans still riding high from Kansas City’s Super Bowl win — Jill Cockson’s business wasn’t open during Wednesday’s Chiefs victory parade. Candidly, jersey-clad sports enthusiasts aren’t really within her typical customer profile, the James Beard-nominated owner of Chartreuse Saloon said, and…
Royals want Crossroads ballpark open by 2028, calling up ‘generational’ impact on newly linked arts district, downtown
A late-to-the-game East Crossroads site is expected to take shape as the new home of the Kansas City Royals if voters approve the extension of a stadium sales tax that would help support the $2 billion downtown ballpark project. Ending months of speculation, majority owner John Sherman and team officials announced on Tuesday the ball…



