Fund Me, KC: SlickRinse helps preserve your contact lenses
January 19, 2018 | Startland Staff
Editor’s note: Startland News is continuing its segment to highlight area entrepreneurs’ efforts to accelerate their businesses. If you or your startup is running a crowdfunding campaign, let us know by contacting news@startlandnews.com.
Who are you?
Brandon Presley, founder of SlickRinse

What’s your product?
SlickRinse is a new contact lens case that helps you take better care of your contact lenses. SlickRinse provides a consistent way of cleaning and rinsing your lenses.
How much money do you hope to raise with your campaign?
$38,440
What do you plan to use the funds for?
Final Revisions for manufacturing design, custom tooling, our first round of production and packaging.
How are you differentiating your campaign?
The past five months, I’ve been building an email list of interested people via our website and Facebook advertising. Users see an ad for SlickRinse, go to our website, and then add their email if they were interested. Currently, I am working with local Kansas City influencers, reaching out to blogs, media outlets and news agencies.
I wanted SlickRinse’s design to be both functional, and beautiful. I hired an award-winning industrial designer based in Santa Monica, California, that was able to bring that vision to life. I also did not want to skimp on the manufacturing side, and I sourced an extremely reputable manufacturing company that produces parts for major corporations like Ikea and Tesla. This ensures no matter the demand, SlickRinse will be able to meet that quantity without issue.
To show the product and myself in a unique environment, the Kickstarter campaign video and some of the photography was completed in a gorgeous modern Airbnb in West Hollywood that a friend was gracious enough to provide free of charge. Since SlickRinse deals with eye care and contact lenses, I partnered with a local eye doctor, Dr. Lauren Seutter, O.D., to help with advising SlickRinse throughout the design and launch process.
What’s some advice you have to other crowdfunding campaigns?
You must have a huge list of interested backers that you are able to contact on Day 1. I had an email list of 1,300 people that signed up directly from my website, and even that hasn’t seemed to make quite the dent or effect in our funding goal that I imagined.Also, make sure you submit your campaign for approval well before your scheduled launch date, to account for any revisions and final approval that are required.
2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Pour decisions: Craft beverage enthusiasts add Sunday tasting event to KC’s pregame cart
Kansas City’s roster of craft beverages — from rookies to veteran players on the scene — come to the field in a wide range of uniforms, said Jason Burton, noting there’s no better time to checkout the lineup with thirsty friends than as the Chiefs return to Arrowhead Stadium this weekend. The play: showcase Kansas…
Back to the people: Social venture firm connects WyCo entrepreneurs with a human-centered toolkit
Editor’s note: The following story is presented through a paid partnership with Network Kansas. [divide] An initiative built on collaboration with business boosters already embedded in urban communities is deepening Network Kansas’ impact, said Erik Pedersen, sharing how the strategy helps more readily connect entrepreneurs to available resources like loans and technical assistance. In Wyandotte…
Great Jobs KC aims to impact 50,000 Kansas City scholars within a decade — one life at a time
Editor’s note: The following story was written and first published by the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri (EDCKC). Click here to read the original story. [divide] Natalie Lewis is no stranger to complex work. As chief operating officer of Great Jobs KC, she oversees programs that connect thousands of Kansas Citians with scholarships, tuition-free job…
Black Feast Week returns to feed restaurants new diners, combat hunger in Kansas City
Opening Black Feast Week — designed to promote Black-owned restaurants, chefs, and culinary creativity — by feeding 150 single Black mothers for free was an intentional act of community care, said Joshua “JT” Taylor. “We’ve always tried to prioritize helping people who are most marginalized,” said Taylor, senior content producer and chief administrative officer at…

Tell us about your campaign strategy …