Edcoda founder after pivot to new edtech app Boddle: ‘I wish I had failed faster’

May 4, 2018  |  Elyssa Bezner

Clarence Tan held onto his startup Edcoda longer than he should have, the founder admitted, but his pivot to a new edtech learning app, Boddle, should prove a more filling fit for users.

Clarence Tan, Edcoda, Boddle

Clarence Tan, Boddle

“Boddle has a much better underlying vision and mission, as well as being better in terms of how it would work in the market,” the startup founder and CEO said. “I wish I had failed faster and just said, alright let’s just drop Edcoda and restart.”

Boddle — set to launch in late June — broadens the scope of Edcoda, which delivered a high-quality educational game called Coda Quest. The app uses bottle cap imagery connecting to the idea of “filling up” with knowledge, and the transparency of bottles to convey the importance of what’s within.

“We really want to make sure that in the app we portray to kids that what really matters is what’s on the inside,” Tan said.

Boddle ties learning opportunities and online courses together to convey the importance of lifelong learning as compared to educational competition, he said.

“You can learn anything you want,” Tan added. “Our goal is that kids see learning as an engaging, interesting thing as compared to books and homework. So we’re trying to gamify that whole experience.”

Through the app, kids create their Boddle characters and complete courses to receive points and accessories for their digital homes, he said. The game also includes a management platform for teachers to pull reports and customize classrooms, as well as eventually upload their own material.

Boddle is partnering up with companies that deliver on-site learning activities and offer digital merit badges correlating to in-game rewards, Tan said, as well creating their own worksheets with randomized rewards scannable upon completion.

“That ties in our vision of really engaging kids and learning from every aspect,” he said.

Tan’s passion for education stems from his first experience creating an educational game and watching the reaction it received, he said. He also credits Kansas City’s supportive community for his successes throughout Edcoda and now Boddle.

“The area has helped for sure. I find that in Kansas City people are much more willing to help and collaborate whether or not they can help directly,” Tan said.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Flow Forward Medical raises additional $1.3M

        By Tommy Felts | May 18, 2015

        Flow Forward Medical boosted its latest funding round to further develop its device that helps improve outcomes for hemodialysis patients. The Olathe-based company closed a $1.3 million round of additional Series A financing led by the Kansas Bioscience Authority. Flow Forward previously raised $4.4 million, bringing its total funding raised to date to about $5.7 million.…

        Schukman: 5 reasons why KC is the capital of social entrepreneurship

        By Tommy Felts | May 18, 2015

        Take a walk in Kansas City’s startup scene and you’ll quickly hear something about KC’s devotion to becoming America’s most entrepreneurial city. This mantra is on everyone’s lips, from city leaders to corporate tycoons to scrappy startup founders. It’s amazing that in five years our city has created such clarity of purpose that millenials populating…

        KC Digital Drive creates lab to test drive gigabit apps

        By Tommy Felts | May 18, 2015

        Ever since Google Fiber announced Kansas City as its first fiber project, techies across the nation have wondered how gigabit Internet will shape a new wave of innovation and how the city would tap its new infrastructure. And thanks to a new KC Digital Drive initiative, Kansas Citians may have an up-close look at the…

        New UMKC center to engage entrepreneurs, community

        By Tommy Felts | May 15, 2015

        The University of Missouri-Kansas City recently solidified funds to build an innovation center to serve a broader set of students and the Kansas City community. The $14.8-million Robert W. Plaster Free Enterprise Center will feature a variety of resources for students and the larger business community, including a lab, rapid prototyping equipment, 3D printers and…