Corral raises $1.38M to expand virtual fence solution’s US hoofprint; M25, Grit Road beef up deal
January 24, 2024 | Startland News Staff
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.
LINCOLN, Nebraska — Agtech pioneered by a third-generation rancher-turned-startup founder has corralled an oversubscribed $1.38 million funding round with backing from a healthy herd of regional investors.
Corral Technologies, a Nebraska-fed company that provides best-in-class virtual fencing solutions, on Wednesday announced the round led by Chicago-based M25 with participation from Grit Road Partners and Invest Nebraska.
Jack Keating, a ranch hand for 15 years on his family’s cow-calf operations ranch in Nebraska, launched Corral in 2019. He imagined a better way to herd cattle using technology and started experimenting with modified dog collars — combining his deep industry knowledge with tinkering and experimentation.
“Corral is set to achieve significant milestones in 2024,” Keating said. “We will be deploying our commercial collars to producers across approximately 25 states. We are expanding our team and adding to our sales, customer success, and engineering departments. It will be the first year when Corral is projected to pass $1 million in sales.”
Additionally, a new collar design set for release in 2025 promises enhanced durability and reliability for Corral’s devices and the company is continuing to roll out new analytics and features on the software front geared toward elevating producer profitability, Keating added.
The backbone of this industry — the ranchers leading cow-calf operations — have been underserved in terms of technology solutions that will save them time, hard work and improve the quality of their land and cattle, he continued. One of the biggest pain points has been effectively rotational grazing their cow-calf pairs, especially when it comes to setting up and maintaining cross fences, corralling their cattle and trying to improve their utilization rates per acre yield.
“Typically we steer clear of agtech as ranchers generally avoid adopting new technology, but the interest in Corral has created a virtual stampede of demand,” said Victor Gutwein, managing partner at M25. “Whether it be enabling fewer ranch hands to work a broader area, increasing herd size while more sustainably grazing existing land or just more effective herd management, Jack and the Corral team have bucked the trend and already have sales across all the major beef producing states.”
The company will use the funds to fulfill production, expand the team and continue to refine the product’s hardware and software. Corral plans to launch a rancher-dealer network which currently consists of 15 ranchers across 10 states.
“The virtual fencing space is one we’ve been monitoring for a few years now and we’re excited to say we believe the industry is finally ready to adopt this technology,” said Ben Williamson, managing director at Grit Road Partners and Corral board member. “It’s clear to us that there’s no one better to understand the customer and capture this opportunity than Jack and the team he’s built.”
RELATED: Grit Road plants $11M venture fund to cultivate homegrown ag tech solutions across Midwest
Featured Business

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Pride outside: How the outdoor industry is missing out with a $1 trillion LGBTQ+ blind spot
“You can’t be what you can’t see,” said adventurer and speaker Mikah Meyer, quoting activist Marian Wright Edelman last week in Kansas City. Representation of LGBTQ+ consumers and entrepreneurs formed a thematic trail throughout the recent Mid-America Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce awards luncheon where Meyer made keynote remarks. His borrowed quote also reflected…
nbkc launches Entrepreneur in Residence incubator: ‘I have a whole company behind me’
Less than a year after its inaugural Fountain City Fintech accelerator debuted, nbkc bank has launched a new incubator program designed to tackle common banking industry problems with start-up-style ideation, problem solving, and tenacity, said Megan Darnell. The goal: building new companies along the way, the nbkc program manager said. “Kansas City has every single…
Investors, students find potential and power in High School eSports League
Benjie Lewis saw potential in eSports from the beginning — first as a mentor, then an investor, he said. Rapidly evolving from recreational pastime to official leagues and high school sports programs, the competitive multiplayer gaming concept has created a new space for startup opportunity, he said. “When I was growing up … they weren’t…
Startup advocates to next mayor: Make KC more attractive to tech talent, women, innovation
Months of candidate forums are complete. The door bells have been rung. Selfies taken. As the Kansas City mayor’s race heads to the polls Tuesday, the candidates are all business when it comes to courting the startup community’s vote. Jolie Justus — who has branded herself as the next “neighborhood mayor” — and Quinton Lucas…


