Investors laud emerging founder’s expertise as CarePilot logs $2.5M for AI healthtech tool
June 24, 2025 | Tommy Felts
It’s rare for a regional venture capital firm like KCRise Fund to invest in an entrepreneur just out of college, the Midwest-focused firm told Startland News, detailing the remarkable talent that led it to join an early round for Joseph Tutera’s digital health startup.
Overland Park-based CarePilot recently announced a $2.5 million seed round led by coastal investor Mucker Capital. The round also notably included investment from KCRise Fund, which touted founder Tutera’s impressive understanding of how to build a tech enterprise.
His company uses smart healthcare tech — an AI coding assistant that listens and charts details during a provider’s patient visits — to keep the focus on care, not notetaking. It’s an innovation well-timed to market conditions, said Ed Frindt, managing director for KCRise Fund, noting Tutera’s keen positioning for the company’s products.
“CarePilot is more than an AI transcription tool — it’s a thoughtfully built solution addressing a genuine pain point, especially in rural and underserved healthcare settings,” he continued. “As the healthcare industry moves toward value-based care, the need for efficient, accurate, and scalable clinical documentation and coding systems has never been more critical.”
Tutera, who began building CarePilot while as a finance student at Texas Christian University and graduated in 2024, said he is excited to partner with investors who share his team’s vision for the future of healthcare.
“CarePilot is building smarter healthcare technology so providers can stop thinking about technology altogether,” he said. “Our first step toward this future is the announcement of our second product: CarePilot ProblemAssist. It’s also our first agentic tool, which helps providers identify appropriate diagnoses and code visits in real time.”
The startup offers the first AI-native clinical interface for Electronic Health Records (EHRs), providing a “touchless” experience that automates more than 90 percent of provider EHR time — streamlining administrative tasks and reducing burnout. CarePilot focuses on enhancing clinical documentation, coding, inbox management, and chart finalization, addressing widespread inefficiencies in today’s healthcare IT systems.
“CarePilot’s integration with multiple EHRs and its automation of administrative tasks positions it well to capitalize on this transition, reducing clinician burnout and improving outcomes,” said Frindt.
KCRise Fund’s involvement in CarePilot’s seed round marks its 10th investment from its Fund III, and aligns with the firm’s region’s experience in the healthcare IT sector, particularly with EHRs, he noted.
“We’re looking forward to supporting the CarePilot team as they continue to build,” Frindt said.

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
InvestMidwest says in-person capital conferences are back; returning to Kansas City in 2024
A long-running investment conference that previously showcased Kansas City startups to crowds of regional and national funders is expected to resume its in-person events this spring in St. Louis. The InvestMidwest event series — which rotates between Missouri’s two major startup hubs — is set to return to Kansas City in 2024. Exact dates for…
Endeavor could bring its global capital network to KC startups; leaders weigh its local need
Leaders from the Heartland division of Endeavor on Monday gave local entrepreneurs a first look at capital, resources, and programming that could come to Kansas City as the global nonprofit considers expansion into the region. During the preview event, organized as part of Global Entrepreneurship Week, representatives from Endeavor’s regional office in Northwest Arkansas discussed…
Jason Sudeikis’ rockstar karaoke fantasy returns: Here’s why Thundergong! matters to homegrown ‘Ted Lasso’ star
Kansas City is the “secret sauce” in the recipes for Thundergong! and Big Slick, said Jason Sudeikis, who helps host the two high-profile events. The Overland Park native and “Ted Lasso” star was in Kansas City Friday to promote the annual Thundergong! fundraiser for Steps of Faith Foundation — returning Saturday at the Uptown Theater.…
Triple (stitched) threat: Olathe apparel shop brings design, sewing, printing in-house with shirts hitting store shelves soon
Adam Worrel’s vision for a fabric-to-finish apparel and screen printing business is finally sewing itself together — nearly 4,000 miles from where it began — with a label made in KC. First formulating the idea in 2010, he imagined creating a line with production and printing in-house and as much control over the supply chain as…


