K4Connect has launched COVID-911, a company-wide initiative to accelerate product development and customer communications to support them through the crisis.
By: Suzanne Blake
March 31, 2020
The technology market serving seniors and senior living facilities has been growing for years, but Covid-19 puts an increased emphasis on the need for the elderly to have access to quality technology. Triangle-based startups Roobrik, Viibrant and K4Connect are all meeting those needs in these difficult times.
Raleigh-based K4Connect’s CEO Scott Moody said K4Connect saw the pandemic coming. As the leader of K4Connect, a startup that creates smart solutions for older adults and people with disabilities, Moody said he’s been working hundred-hour weeks for the past month to address the needs of senior living communities during this time.
Moody said that in late February, K4Connect launched COVID-911, a company-wide initiative to accelerate product development and customer communications to support them through this crisis.
Residents in senior living homes, meanwhile, are facing new challenges every day from Covid-19. In addition to Covid-19’s potential increased severity on this group, seniors are being isolated from the physical engagement of their surrounding communities and loved ones. That makes K4Connect’s tech enabling communication more important that ever.
Employees in senior living facilities also face new challenges, as they must make difficult decisions such as whether they should go to work with even mild symptoms that could be related to allergies or a simple cold—or could be Covid-19. With a shortage of testing, it’s hard to know the difference.
K4Connect has continued its mission to keep senior residents engaged and informed along with smart home technology, which also allows monitoring to make sure a senior resident is doing all right based on their light or thermostat usage, Moody said. K4Connect offers 24/7 support and currently has a number of no-cost capabilities, including a virtual morning check-in for residents.
“You find a lot of people saying, ‘Oh, I have something you can use’, but inside the community, it’s like, ‘Who’s going to put this all together? Who’s going to download all these apps? Who’s going to train everybody? How do we know what people are doing?’” Moody said. “And that’s what we do. We bring all these great technologies together.”
Smith said that Viibrant, being a technology company, had a fairly easy transition to remote work. But there’s been an increase in customer need for services related to dining, like providing virtual menus for facilities as they’ve closed dining facilities and turned to to-go ordering and food delivery.
Still, Smith said the world and national economy will take a blistering impact from Covid-19, but some startups can offer hope.
“When when you have a crisis like this,” Smith said, “you’re going to find other tech startups that bring hope, that bring value, that bring a product, that bring solutions.”
Moody, who previously founded and led the company AuthenTec—responsible for the technology now used in Apple’s Touch ID—through the dotcom crisis and the Great Recession, said startups have two ways to look at navigating these times: managing during the crisis and leading through the crisis. Leading could ultimately be what defines the success of your startup.
“I believe—and our company believes—that if you serve others, if you do good, then good things will happen,” Moody said. “I think for any startup, they have to look at ‘how do I manage through the crisis,’ but probably more importantly is ‘how do I lead through the crisis’ and come out a stronger, better company, and often a changed company than we were at the beginning of the crisis. And so many people forget about that kind of leadership activity. It’s the difference between a manager and a leader.”