The Nerdery launches hiring spree at KC office
June 16, 2016 | Bobby Burch
Nerds abound in Kansas City.
Or at least the Nerdery’s local expansion seems to indicate as much. The software design and development firm has added 14 staffers in the last 18 months and is now launching another hiring spree.
The Minneapolis-based firm — which opened a Kansas City office in late 2014 — plans to add another dozen tech jobs in Kansas City to accommodate its growth, local branch director Monica McAtee said.
“We’ve had really good growth both client-wise and with hiring employees,” McAtee said. “It’s been faster than what we expected, which has been really exciting.”
The Nerdery opened a downtown office in late 2014, but McAtee said that the firm has had a Kansas City presence since 2011 when it began working with Hallmark. From startups to Fortune 500 firms, the company’s clients include the State of Vermont, Tastefully Simple, Purina One and more. The Nerdery’s services include mobile and web apps, website development, system integration and digital consultation.
The Nerdery now has 47 Kansas City employees but hopes to finish 2016 with nearly 60 staffers. In total, 500 “nerds” work for the company, which is led by CEO Tom O’Neill.
The Nerdery’s local job openings are for .NET, PHP and Java developers, as well as UX designers, project managers and data scientists. The firm’s user experience and data science divisions have been particularly successful, McAtee said.
“We’re really excited about expanding and growing those disciplines,” McAtee said. “They’re definitely hot across the U.S., and as an organization, we’re investing to grow those disciplines so we can respond to clients’ demands. Big data — especially in Kansas City with the Smart City project and Internet of Things — is a really relevant space right now and we want to be there as thought leaders.”
Asked how the Nerdery has been successful in attracting talent in a city where techies are in high demand, McAtee said it boils down to its values. The firm’s “deep nerd culture” has emerged as a key differentiating factor when it comes to talent attraction and retention, she added.
“Our definition of being a nerd is just being passionate about something,” she said. “We don’t believe that a nerd is a negative term or someone who just codes. You can be a nerd about photography or travel or cooking. All our guys and gals have passions outside of what they do every day at the office, and they bring that to the workplace. … Everyone’s a nerd.”
2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Mental reps and truth bombs: How this AI ‘coach-in-your-pocket’ strength trains minds before life’s hardest workouts
Building mental resilience should feel as natural as going to the gym, said Craig Mason, noting his new venture flexes a “performance psychologist, coach in your pocket, 24/7.” The emphasis: training the mind before crises hit. “Myndset is really designed to be a mental strength training platform,” said Mason, founder of the Kansas City-based startup.…
MTC leader resigning, calls for a new voice to lead fight for Missouri entrepreneurship funding
A leadership change at the Missouri Technology Corporation comes as the state faces a crossroads with its approach to entrepreneurship support, officials said Tuesday, reacting to news of a high-profile resignation just three months after the public-private partnership lost key financial support from lawmakers and a new governor. “It’s time for MTC to be led…
Amazon’s drones won’t be alone over KC: Federal rule change opens skies to greater tech buzz
As the nation prepares for large-scale commercial drone deployments — thanks in part to newly rolled-back federal regulations — pilots, businesses, and agencies using the tech must skillfully balance opportunity with public trust and privacy concerns, industry experts said. “I’ve had people say to me, it kind of creeps me out … but in 30…
Garmin survived the smartphone revolution; now it wears digital health innovation on its wrist
Garmin might not have survived cellular carriers putting free navigation and mapping apps on every smartphone if the Olathe-based GPS tech leader wasn’t constantly innovating, said Scott Burgett, touring a group of digital health entrepreneurs and investors through the Johnson County headquarters. “It’s what keeps a company vibrant,” said Burgett, senior director of Garmin Health…