2024 Startups to Watch: EB Systems tracking toward mainstream adoption at major events across KC, US
January 3, 2024 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Editor’s note: Startland News editors selected 10 Kansas City scaling businesses to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch list. Now in its ninth year, this feature recognizes founders and startups that editors believe will make some of the biggest, most compelling news in the coming 12 months. The following is one of 2024’s companies.
Click here to view the full list of Startups to Watch — presented with support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, and independently produced by Startland News.
[divide]
Kansas City is the perfect testing ground for EB Systems’ electronic beacon technology, said Jonathan Ruiz, noting lessons from the spring 2023 NFL Draft, as well as the city’s highly-anticipated host duties for the coming Copa America games in 2024 and World Cup games in 2026.
“It’s super fortunate that we’re here in KC,” said Ruiz, CEO of EB Systems. “We’re in the right place, right time.”
[pullquote]
Elevator pitch: Our beacon technology is changing the way events, businesses, and entire cities learn from and connect with crowds.
- Founders: Jonathan Ruiz, Brendan Waters
- Headquarters: Kansas City, Missouri
- Founding year: 2015
- Current employee count: 5
- Funding to date: $64,000
- Noteworthy investors: LaunchKC
- Noteworthy programs completed: LaunchKC, Pipeline Entrepreneurs, PurePitch Rally
[/pullquote]
He and co-founder Brendan Waters have been working in different aspects of electronic beacon technology since 2015, Ruiz continued. But it’s only since relaunching their event technology platform over the past year that EB Systems has really taken off.
In February 2020, the co-founders started to gain momentum around crowd tracking and used their technology at the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade. But then the pandemic shut down large events for a while.
“It was almost a blessing in disguise for us,” Ruiz explained. “It made us sort of regroup and refocus and we were able to use our intellectual property to do things like contact tracing and emergency management systems. It really helped solidify our technology to capitalize on this opportunity with large scale events that are back and bigger than ever.”
“Even some of those leads that we had in 2020 are coming to fruition now,” Waters added. “And it’s really expanding from there.”
EB Systems — a winner of the 2022 LaunchKC grants competition — uses mobile apps, proximity-based sensors and wearable Bluetooth devices to create real-time location, reporting, and alerting systems.
Crowd flow at events raises a lot of questions, Ruiz noted. Sure, event managers will know how many tickets were sold or how many participants signed up for an event, but the impact is bigger than just their footprint.
“With our technology, we’re able to quantify for event planners, and quantify for their big brand sponsors who want to know how many people walked by my booth or my sign,” he explained. “It’s almost like we’re doing website impressions but for the physical world, and so people are really excited about that.”
“We’re providing that data that they don’t currently have without infringing on anyone’s privacy,” Waters added.
But they aren’t just using the technology to collect data, shared Ruiz, a member of the 2023 Pipeline fellowship. EB Systems can also connect with the crowd, using its Bluetooth technology to do proximity-based engagements and promotions.
“We’re talking like real-time scavenger hunts and tour guides,” he added. “So we’re getting to that point.”
In the past year, EB Systems — which won $14,000 at the 2023 Pure Pitch Rally — has started to gain traction with large-scale events, Ruiz and Waters said, deploying their beacons at the NFL Draft and Chicago Marathon, plus helping the City Market, the Crossroads, and the City of Dallas gather data for economic development.
“It just gave us more legitimacy,” Ruiz continued. “When we were at the Michelob Ultra beer truck at the Chicago Marathon and I pulled up our dashboard estimating how many people walked by their booth, it’s like I invented fire in front of their eyes. They were like, ‘What? We’ve always wanted this; we need this.’”
Ruiz and Waters plan to begin 2024 by using their technology at the CES conference in Las Vegas, they shared, and then focus on events like the London Marathon, Chicago Marathon (and other tertiary events), and the Copa America in Kansas City.
Plus they want to continue to build partnerships locally within Kansas City and push forward with Phase 2 of connecting with crowds.
“It’s great that we’re becoming synonymous with these massive events,” Ruiz added.
[divide]
Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2024
[slide-anything id=”696451″]
[divide]
Startups to Watch 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

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
ECJC relocates office, updates brand
The Enterprise Center in Johnson County is shaking things up. The non-profit organization that connects entrepreneurs to the resources they need to grow revealed Thursday an updated website, brand identity, and new office location. “This move is the culmination of a long, strategic transition to ensure that as Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community changes, we change…
Former Sprint COO LeMay dishes on KC capital, failure
There are few people in Kansas City more connected into the area’s investor, corporate and startup community than FarmLink CEO Ron LeMay. Also now managing director of Kansas City-based OpenAir Equity Partners, LeMay frequently sees the successes and failures of the metro area’s capital landscape. The former Sprint COO recently spoke with dozens of Kansas…
RFP365 partners with Kansas City, raises $950K
On the heels of a six-figure raise, area tech firm RFP365 recently landed the City of Kansas City as a client for its software that eases the request for proposal process. The company’s deal with Kansas City was born from the city’s “Innovation Partnership” program, which affords entrepreneurs the opportunity to “test drive” their technologies…
Study: Gov should take long-term approach to grow new businesses
A recent study by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation reports that while governments have long supported entrepreneurship, new business creation is waning. The study — Guidelines for Local and State Governments to Promote Entrepreneurship — found that new businesses comprised about 8 percent of all U.S. businesses in 2011, down from roughly 15 percent in the…




