Illness forecaster Sickweather lands local investor, opening KC office

December 13, 2016  |  Bobby Burch

As part of a recent investment round, Sickweather will be returning to familiar stomping grounds to open a Kansas City office.

A graduate of the 2014 Techstars-led Sprint Accelerator, Sickweather raised a seed round of an undisclosed value to accelerate sales of its tech that forecasts and maps illnesses for consumers and enterprises.

“We’re thrilled about it,” Sickweather CEO Graham Dodge said of the round and new office plans. “Our CTO was joking about how important it is for us to be near Grinders (pizza).”

Based in Baltimore, Sickweather’s algorithm scans thousands of social media postings and direct reports from its users to generate illness maps and forecasts. For example, when a Facebook user posts “The doctor says I’ve got the flu,” Sickweather will recognize and report the post. When several reports appear nearby one another at roughly the same time, they are grouped as “potential storm activity” represented by heat mapping. The results are displayed via a web-based and mobile app.

The company says its results arrive up to six weeks prior to the Center for Disease Control’s illness reports, and are just as accurate. Sickweather was featured on the Today Show for recognizing a flu outbreak about to 6 weeks before the CDC.

While initially a consumer-facing app that garnered revenue from advertisers selling cold meds, Dodge said that Sickweather now is finding traction with enterprise clients. A variety of industries now tap the company’s deep swaths of data , including pharmaceuticals, insurance and health care.Sickweather

The company now works with companies such as Clorox, Pfizer, the Weather Channel, AccuWeather and CVS.

Dodge said that the firm has yet to decide where it will office, but added that the Crossroads Arts District is an alluring option. Dodge’s firm and 9 others set up shop in the Crossroads for more than three months as part of the Sprint Mobile Health Accelerator.

Founded in 2011, Sickweather now employs eight people. The recent funding round will go toward the firm’s sales efforts, Dodge said.

“It’s the first money we’ve raised that’s meant to go wholly toward growing our enterprise and B2B outbound sales,” Dodge said. “It will stretch our runway with the help of our current revenue. We’re already at break even as a company so that’s helpful. This will be the first time we can aggressively put money toward growth.”

Among the investors in Sickweather is Kansas City-based Firebrand Ventures, a $7 million fund that launched in July. Led by former Techstars managing director John Fein, the fund plans to invest its $7 million in about 30 Midwest startups over the next three years. The fund tends to write checks around $150,000.

Fein said he developed a relationship with the Sickweather team through the accelerator, adding that he’s excited for the company’s future for a variety of reasons. While he’s thrilled about Sickweather’s growing appeal to enterprise clients, Fein added that the firm’s team is a top reason why he invested.

“I’ve known them for three years and I have the utmost confidence in their core team,” Fein said. “Another thing I’m excited about is the power of their data. No one else has the combination of historic data, real-time illness data and predictive analytics. That’s proven to be really powerful.”

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

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        This AI keyboard can write your next email with the push of just one button; its creator says it could revolutionize workplaces

        By Tommy Felts | October 28, 2025

        Hardware — not just software — should be at the forefront of the AI’s future, Jerry Hsu shared. After the successful release of its GPT-powered AI mouse, Jethro V1, in late 2024, Overland Park-based Virtusx — which is revolutionizing workplaces through integrating hardware and software to make AI-driving products more accessible and user-friendly — has…

        Alexa, show me the winners: Storytailor leads Pure Pitch Rally prize tally ahead of tech launch

        By Tommy Felts | October 28, 2025

        Storytailor’s marquee Pure Pitch Rally win comes at the perfect time for the Kansas City startup, its founders said. They’re preparing to roll out a new immersive storytelling platform through a partnership with Amazon’s Alexa+ next year — a move expected to bring their tech to more than 200 million Prime users. “It’s the most…

        LISTEN: How the Midwest opened this German agtech company’s eyes to opportunity in the US

        By Tommy Felts | October 27, 2025

        On this episode of our 12-part Plug and Play Topeka podcast series, we connect with Débora Moretti, co-CEO of NutriSen — a Berlin-based agtech startup building real-time molecular sensors to measure nutrient concentrations in plants directly on the field. Moretti shares how her team, alongside co-founder Tobias Vöpel, is merging biosensor technology, data-driven insights and…

        Crossing lanes: KC Streetcar collaborators back aboard for expansion, dropping new merch, anthem

        By Tommy Felts | October 24, 2025

        Opening the extended KC Streetcar line Friday completes a loop for creatives whose collaborations with the popular public transit system first emerged nearly a decade ago along Main Street — a time when Kansas City’s surging vibrancy helped curb streetcar doubters. “For us, it’s always been about representing Kansas City — the people, the culture,…