Meet 5 new startups bolstering KC innovation (now with a funding boost from Digital Sandbox)

January 8, 2025  |  Startland News Staff

Digital Sandbox KC Q4 2024 winners: Alex Snook, CEO, and Errick Quartucci, COO, On | Sight; Erin Minoski, founder and owner, KaBloom; Zack Edwards, president, Xogos Gaming; Mitch Mabrey, founder and CEO, Resonus; and Rich Chungong, founder and CEO, Produce Matrix

Just-announced funding for a handful of fresh tech ventures is expected to help Kansas City founders who already are poised to make a significant impact in their industries, from health care to government to education.

Digital Sandbox KC has accepted five new startups into its program. Each is expected to receive up to $20,000 in project funding, as well as critical access to mentoring and the vast network connected to the UMKC Innovation Center and Technology Venture Studio, which houses Digital Sandbox KC.

Among the just-funded startups is Kansas City-based Resonus, a timely and timeless political information platform meant to effortlessly connect users to their local government by curating targeted conversations with officials and neighbors about the topics they care about most.

The company is led by cleantech innovator Mitch Mabrey, who previously co-founded the now-exited Spear Power systems.

“Digital Sandbox KC will enable the development of our Resonus Conversations software so that select Kansas City area residents will be able to try it this spring,” said Mabrey, CEO and founder of Resonus.

The five new Digital Sandbox KC companies have demonstrated exceptional potential for growth and innovation, and their inclusion in the Sandbox reflects the organization’s commitment to fostering technological advancement and entrepreneurship in the region, said Jill Meyer, senior director of Technology Venture Studio. 

“We can’t wait to see how this latest round of startups will accelerate,” she said. “They have demonstrated that they have innovative solutions that can impact their industries, and we’re excited to help them along the way. Digital Sandbox KC is ready again to fuel innovation in our metro and bolster the entrepreneurial ecosystem.”

Click here to submit an idea and pitch to the Digital Sandbox KC team.

In addition to Resonus, the newly funded companies include:

  • KaBloom (Erin Minoski), Mission, Kansas — A digital health startup offering a new app-based alternative to speech therapy, built to be a more convenient option for parents and children. Based on a parent-coaching model, speech language pathologists (SLPs) empower parents by providing support, strategies and feedback they can implement within their daily routines to provide intervention on a flexible but consistent basis.
  • On | Sight (Alex Snook), Spring Hill, Kansas — Streamlines driver check-in and digital load organization and tackles freight fraud for shippers in the trucking industry.
  • Produce Matrix (Rich Chungong), Kansas City, Missouri — Local farmers-market vendors face challenges with inefficient sales and administrative processes, while customers lack access to fresh, nutrient-rich foods and education on their value. Produce Matrix addresses these issues by streamlining vendor operations with easy-to-use inventory management and accessible payment options, making local products more readily available in the digital age.
  • Xogos Gaming (Zack Edwards), Liberty, Missouri — The new wave in educational technology, transforming education by combining the excitement of gaming with the power of personalized learning. The startup’s mission is to engage students using a gaming platform that offers educational games, safe social interactions and a unique reward system.

Startups funded through this quarter’s investment from Digital Sandbox KC join 220 other startups that have received support from the program since 2013.

Click here to read more about the impact of the Sandbox in the latest Digital Sandbox KC Impact Report.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2025 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Image courtesy of Generation Esports

    Esports orgs target more diversity in gaming; Mayor Q to join weekend ‘Among Us’ stream to boost message

    By Tommy Felts | August 13, 2021

    Two Kansas City esports organizations are uniting behind one jersey to help make the rapidly expanding online gaming community more accessible to students in Title 1 schools across Missouri. “Esports brings kids together who might not otherwise have the chance to be a part of a broader community,” said Mason Mullenioux, CEO of Generation Esports…

    Missouri Gov. Mike Parson meets with company leaders at Columbia-based EquipmentShare in January 2020 to discuss state government investment in Missouri innovation

    Missouri angel tax credits? New grants? Show-Me State tech advocates researching next generation of incentives for entrepreneurs

    By Tommy Felts | August 13, 2021

    The future of entrepreneurial support in Missouri could hinge on what those in the trenches say are the state’s biggest barriers to startup success, said Jack Scatizzi, announcing a new data-driven effort to reshape Missouri’s strategy for cultivating innovation. “The initiative will include quantitative and qualitative aspects that will be incorporated into a strategic plan…

    Matthew Marcus, Good KarMa Capital

    KC tech guru, startup advocate talks cryptocurrency’s value: ‘History doesn’t always repeat itself, but it often rhymes’

    By Tommy Felts | August 13, 2021

    Cryptocurrency eventually will cause the most significant exchange of wealth mankind has ever experienced, Matthew Marcus forecast, and the web developer-turned-startup community organizer hopes to help others get involved early.  “We are essentially in the early 1990s of the internet. The same way we talked about the internet and email 20-some years ago, will be…

    Fahteema Parrish, Parrish & Sons Construction

    Watch: Meet the band of local contractors behind the development of Troost Village 

    By Tommy Felts | August 12, 2021

    Editor’s note: The following story includes the second 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. Click here…