According to one estimate, Americans place 240 million 911 calls each year. Sending emergency services to the right location sounds straightforward, but each call is routed through one of thousands of call centers known as public safety answering points (PSAPs). "Every 911 center is very different and they are as diverse and unique as the communities that they serve," said Karin Marquez, senior director of public safety at RapidSOS. One PSAP that serves New York City is a 450,000-square-foot, blast-resistant cube set on nine acres, but "you have agencies in rural America that have one person working 24/7 and they're there to answer three calls a day," Marquez noted. Founded eight years ago, RapidSOS processes more than 150 million emergencies each year across approximately 5,000 PSAPs. The company’s technology helps call centers integrate requests from cell phones, landlines and IoT devices. “Its technology is almost certainly integrated into the smartphone you're carrying and many of the devices you have lying around,” Managing Editor Danny Crichton writes in a four-part series that studies the company’s origins: - Part 1: The early years and why a consumer app company turned to govtech and integrated services for technology and device companies.
- Part 2: How RapidSOS made its pivot and why its current business model has performed so well.
- Part 3: To transform 911 services, RapidSOS established dozens of corporate and individual partnerships.
- Part 4: Examines the future of 911 and RapidSOS in light of limited infrastructure funding.
“I’ve honestly never met a company like RapidSOS with so many signed partnerships,” says Danny, who initially wrote about the firm six years ago. “It’s closed dozens of partnerships and business development deals, and with some of the biggest names in tech. How does it do it? This story is about how it built a successful BD engine.” (Extra Crunch is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.) Read More |