Acquiring company: Homebase’s KC team will make valuable workforce, leadership additions

October 20, 2023  |  Tommy Felts

Homebase Quext image

Homebase’s acquisition by an industry leader in the smart home space this week gives its Kansas City team a greater voice in redefining the future of living, said Blake Miller, sharing details of what the exit means for the talent at his Crossroads headquarters.

“We’ve created an entirely new category in an industry (real estate) that traditionally has rejected technology,” said Miller, who founded Homebase in 2016 and now serves as chief product officer at Texas-based Quext. “It’s been an incredibly long and hard journey, but we literally are just getting started.”

Quext and Homebase announced the acquisition on Tuesday. Financial details of the deal are not being disclosed.

RELATED: Premiere Kansas City startup acquired by Texas-based IoT leader in proptech industry

Homebase team members

While headquartered in Lubbock, Texas, Quext maintains a national and internationally dispersed workforce. Homebase’s current team — roughly 35 people, with all but one based in Kansas City — make valuable additions to the Quext family, the company said. 

Quext expects to integrate the Homebase team into a common organizational structure as key contributors in the Quext enterprise. Along with Miller as CPO, numerous leaders from the Kansas City startup will resume leadership roles in this new common organization, according to Quext.

For Homebase — a smart building tech platform — work remains, Miller emphasized, no matter how their efforts are branded moving forward.

“There are barely one million ‘smart’ apartment units out there, with the definition of smart being very loose,” he said. “It’s incredibly validating and exciting to partner with a group like Quext to continue building out this vision of the future of living. We have the people, product and resources to impact housing in incredible ways.”

Quext and Homebase’s individual solutions are each both innovative and differentiated in the multifamily industry, Miller said.

By working to integrate the technologies, “this unified platform will enable customers to choose from Quext’s unique LPWAN-based network with an embedded thermostat hub, a Homebase-style hub-less WiFi network solution, or a redundant path combination of these services,” thus utilizing and building on the Homebase’s platform for fast and exponential development growth.

Click here to read a blog post from Blake Miller on how the acquisition reflects a new era of smart communities.

“I’m immensely grateful to our dedicated team, loyal clients, strategic partners and investors who over the years showed unwavering support while we did something incredibly hard: create a new category in tech with Connected Buildings,” Miller said in a Tweet announcing the acquisition.

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

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        World War II veteran experiencing a virtual Honor Flight using Healium and T-Mobile technologies

        Healium partners with T-Mobile, transporting veterans to DC memorials via virtual Honor Flight

        By Tommy Felts | May 12, 2021

        Veterans living in rural America can experience the sights and sounds of the nation’s war memorials in Washington D.C. thanks to a Kansas City-area startup’s virtual reality technology, powered by T‑Mobile 5G. “We are losing our World War II veterans at a rate of hundreds a day, and sadly many may not live long enough…

        Jonathan O’Neil Cole, Pendulum Studio, and Tim Bowman, Compass Resources, Troost Village Development

        Watch: Troost Village duo go behind the scenes of four-year development in historic East KC neighborhood 

        By Tommy Felts | May 11, 2021

        Editor’s note: The following story includes the first video in a four-part series taking a look under the hard hats at the Troost Village development, a $162 million project on Troost Avenue, the city’s longtime racial dividing line. Videos in this series are expected to debut on Startland News as the project unfolds. The finished…

        KC’s long-running online indie music magazine just debuted in print; why its founder saved advertising for the black-and-white page

        By Tommy Felts | May 11, 2021

        Flashy digital ads and gimmicky marketing schemes aren’t telling the stories (or singing the praises) of artists who run counter to Kansas City’s mainstream, said Aaron Rhodes, founder of a niche music magazine newly hitting the streets this spring. Readers shouldn’t be fooled, Rhodes said. His underground approach to ad sales for Shuttlecock Music Magazine…

        Leah Hermida, The Windmill KC

        Leah Hermida brought coffee home to KCK; her Windmill KC cafe already needs more space

        By Tommy Felts | May 8, 2021

        In the shadow of the Kansas City skyline, new entrepreneurial energy is brewing in Wyandotte County, the childhood home of Leah Hermida.  “I knew the community really well,” Hermida said from her pandemic-opened, Turner-based coffee shop, The Windmill KC, noting she grew up in the city before eventually relocating to Overland Park. “I worked locally…