Entrepreneurial card game Idea Jab spurs creativity in students, startups
December 12, 2016 | Startland News Staff
Editor’s note: Startland News is continuing its Fund Me, KC segment to highlight area entrepreneurs’ efforts to accelerate their businesses. This is an opportunity for entrepreneurs — like Idea Jab co-founders Matt Callegari and Alex Laughlin — to share their stories to gain a little help from their supporters. Back Idea Jab here.
Who are you and what is your product?
We are Matt Callegari and Alex Laughlin, co-founders of Idea Jab. Our product is a tabletop card game that helps players generate their own original business ideas.
We invented the game to help aspiring entrepreneurs generate an unlimited supply of new business ideas. Once we began user testing, we realized that the game was most valuable as a classroom activity or workplace team-building exercise. …
During our classroom demos, we watched students go from disengaged to idea generating masterminds. … No matter how we set up the game play, students always left class excited about their capability to generate valuable new ideas.
What is the overarching goal of Idea Jab?
We’ve discovered a huge opportunity in gamifying ideation activities and we’re extremely excited about the possibilities that lie ahead.
Due to the overwhelming support we’ve received from educators, we’ve been thinking about developing classroom specific products based upon our original game. We’ve also done demos at local startups and mid-sized businesses who have requested that we make versions tailored to their needs. We would like to start developing an extensive line of products for both markets — and a lot more.
What do you hope to raise?
Our project goal is to raise $16,000.
What do you plan to use the funds for?
With the $16,000, we’d be able to make use of bulk prices and manufacture our game at a competitive price. This Kickstarter is about more than offering a scalable product at an affordable price. It’s about getting our product into the classrooms and into the hands of people who could benefit from it.
How are you differentiating your campaign?
We plan to use Kickstarter’s new ‘Kickstarter Live’ live stream feature. We will be playing the game live as part of a “try it before you buy it” strategy. We also plan to network with local startups, schools and entrepreneurs.
In addition to live streaming, we plan to continue to broadcast our behind-the-scenes journey post- Kickstarter. … That is everything from packaging each game, getting our first office and hiring our first employee. … We wanted to be as fun, transparent and true to ourselves as possible. For us that meant creating and sharing goofy videos of ourselves all throughout our journey.
Any advice on crowdfunding campaigns?
Crowdfunding is all about the human connection. No matter how ridiculously awesome the product is, at the end of the day backers are supporting and backing real human people.
Sometimes awesome ideas get millions of dollars’ worth of backers because the product is awesome, but more often projects that really blow up, do so because the people behind the project are awesome.
Kickstarter is all about the effort you put into it — it’s not free money. … Remember that Kickstarter is only a tool. … If need be, consider hiring a consultant and a freelance graphic designer. … And most importantly, be yourself. Be fun. Let your personality shine through.
2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
LISTEN: How this startup helps brands ditch plastic without disrupting manufacturing
On this episode of Startland News’ new Plug and Play Topeka founder podcast series, we sit down with Anthony Musumeci — CEO of Earthodic — to explore the future of sustainable packaging. Discover how Earthodic’s flagship product, Biobarc, delivers water-resistant, recyclable paper coatings made entirely from bio-based ingredients — closing the loop on waste without sacrificing…
KCSourceLink expands bilingual entrepreneur-focused support, adding two more Community Navigators
A network of “Community Navigators” is extending resources deeper into Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, KCSourceLink announced Friday, detailing the hiring of Citlali Valdez and Racquel Rodriguez to its months-old connectivity program. “We are thrilled to welcome these experienced team members,” said Becca Castro, senior director of regional ecosystem development at the UMKC Innovation Center, which…
Meet the Lumi Award winners: Digital Health KC salutes pioneers leading innovation trends
A lot of smart investors are betting on artificial intelligence, said Dick Flanigan, telling a crowd gathered Thursday at Digital Health Day that even if AI doesn’t turn every startup that uses it into a multi-million-dollar company, the technology still will fundamentally reshape health care. “It’s transformational,” said Flanigan, CEO of Digital Health KC and…
