Transportant picked a lane; now the Lenexa bus tech startup wants to conquer even more of the road
March 11, 2025 | Taylor Wilmore
From the driver’s seat, Martin Staples is steering Lenexa-based Transportant toward rapid growth with its real-time, tech-driven approach, he said, bringing greater safety, communication, and efficiency to school buses and expanding the startup’s reach beyond its Midwest home region.
Fueling Transportant’s plans to leave coast-to-coast tracks — and beyond — will be key, said Staples, who serves as the company’s CEO.
“Our goal is to invest in more sales reps and marketing to take our Kansas City success nationwide,” he said. “We already have customers in New Jersey, New York, Washington, and California, but we want better coverage across the U.S.”
To support its growth, the company launched a $1 million funding round with more than 70 percent already secured from existing investors, Staples said, emphasizing the role starting from the middle of the country has played in establishing the Transportant’s tech upgrade for school buses.
Traditional bus safety has been outdated for decades, with previous innovation advancements relying on hard-drive-based camera systems that need to be manually accessed for footage, the CEO explained. Transportant’s solution includes real-time streaming, GPS tracking, and other tools that improve student safety and operational efficiency.
“Kansas alone has over 35 percent market share,” Staples said. “The product fills a gap the market didn’t have.”
“With ours, you get live streaming plus a full suite of tools, GPS, turn-by-turn directions, and ridership tracking, so students don’t get off at the wrong stop,” he added. “The community welcomed that.”
Staples also stressed the value of real-time information: “If something happens, schools need to react immediately. Our system makes that possible.”
Transportant’s platform also includes a red-alert button for bus drivers, allowing schools to access live video and audio during incidents, and a parent app that provides real-time updates on their child’s location.
Giving momentum more tread
Transportant has already equipped about 2,800 school buses and serves more than 300,000 students across the U.S. The company’s technology is having a positive impact on schools.
According to customer feedback provided by Transportant:
- The parent app has led to up to an 80-percent reduction in parent calls to the school about students riding the bus.
- Schools have reported a 50- to 75-percent reduction in student incidents on the bus, thanks to the use of Transportant’s live cameras to support bus drivers.
- Schools also reported a 75- to 100-percent reduction in students getting off at the wrong stop with Transportant’s solution.
The company set up a Customer Advisory Board two years ago to ensure its product meets the needs of school districts, Staples said.
“We’ve always stayed close to customers,” he added. “[The advisory board] helps us develop real solutions to their problems.”
Scaling up with a strategic partnership
A partnership with RWC Group — initially announced in April 2024 — is boosting Transportant’s efforts to expand beyond its Midwest base; already bringing its technology to school districts in Arizona, Oregon, and Washington.
“We have several opportunities taking off,” Staples said. “Litchfield was our first Arizona customer, and because of RWC, we’re expanding into five other states.”
“School districts want to know their investment will last,” he added. “It’s all about building trust.”
ICYMI: Transportant’s newest partnership gets KC startup’s smart dashboard onto more school buses
In its commitment to helping districts of all sizes, Transportant recently launched a new consulting service called Transportant Solutions. The service offers small districts, with limited staff, a fractional transportation consultant to manage their system.
“Many small schools, with under 30 buses, have very limited staff,” Staples said. “One person was the superintendent’s assistant and also managed transportation, she had no time. Now, we provide a fractional expert to monitor their system and handle the work.”
He pointed out how this service meets a big need
“For many districts, transportation is just one of many responsibilities,” Staples said. “We take that burden off their shoulders.”

Taylor Wilmore
Taylor Wilmore, hailing from Lee’s Summit, is a dedicated reporter and a recent graduate of the University of Missouri, where she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Journalism. Taylor channels her deep-seated passion for writing and storytelling to create compelling narratives that shed light on the diverse residents of Kansas City.
Prior to her role at Startland News, Taylor made valuable contributions as a reporter for the Columbia Missourian newspaper, where she covered a wide range of community news and higher education stories.
2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC Pinoy parks restaurant in West Bottoms, plans fiesta of Filipino flavors
KC Pinoy’s new spot on Genessee Street in the West Bottoms was an opportunity that just fell into Chrissy Nucum’s lap, said the owner of the Filipino food truck turned brick-and-mortar restaurant. “I wanted something where there’s a sense of community within whatever area we choose,” said Nucum. “When the West Bottoms Kitchen decided to…
Curb appeal attracts investors to $850K round for real estate tech firm RealQuantum
A year of steady growth will help Kansas City real estate tech firm RealQuantum end 2018 with the close of its first round of seed funding — securing $850,000 in investments, revealed Mark Davis. “We closed a couple of times actually — people just kept showing up at the last minute wanting in,” Davis, RealQuantum’s…
Battery Tour energizes Sunshine Boxes with global vision to power developing economies through music
AY Young’s recent Battery Tour generated enough money to send two of 17° 73° Innovation Co’s Sunshine Boxes to Haiti — the first step in a partnership between the two ventures with common goals, the energetic founder said. “[We] just realized that we were trying to kind of do the same thing as far as…
LaunchCode leader: Your city never stood a chance of landing Amazon’s HQ2
[Editor’s note: This guest column first appeared on the Silicon Prairie News tech and entrepreneurship blog. It is republished here with permission from the author, St. Louis-based Daniel Fogarty, vice president of growth at LaunchCode, which operates its workforce development program in Kansas City.] After months of waiting, it’s finally confirmed Amazon will split its…




