LevelEleven Spins Out of ePrize With $1 Million in Seed Funding

A new enterprise gamification company called LevelEleven officially launched in Detroit today, backed by $1 million in seed funding from investors like Detroit Venture Partners and ePrize, and fueled by the hope that the company’s software will transform the way managers keep salespeople motivated.

The relationship between LevelEleven’s CEO Bob Marsh and DVP’s CEO Josh Linkner is a cozy one—they worked together even before Linkner founded ePrize, where Marsh spent 13 years in various sales and management positions. In fact, LevelEleven was originally conceived as a sort of division within ePrize until Marsh and current ePrize CEO Matt Wise began to see that it had potential as a stand-alone company. “I feel so blessed that it wasn’t just me starting out on my own,” Marsh says. “I was able to develop my idea within the insulation of a great company.”

ePrize is the Pleasant Ridge, MI-based digital marketing and engagement company that grew to become the largest interactive promotions agency in the world before it was acquired in August by Catterton Partners for an undisclosed sum. It was while implementing Salesforce’s enterprise software at ePrize that Marsh got the idea to develop LevelEleven’s flagship product: A sales gamification app called Contest Builder. He had chosen to bypass consultants and instead learn the ins and outs of Salesforce together with his sales team.

“When a company buys software like Salesforce, it’s about changing habits,” Marsh explains. “They’re buying into the ability to measure sales activity and motivate sales people.”

Marsh realized that what was missing was a Salesforce-integrated way to rally his team. Since ePrize is “all about motivation”—it was an early pioneer in the gamification of digital marketing—Marsh saw an intersection between the abilities and talent already within ePrize and his idea to turn the classic speadsheet-heavy sales contest into an automated, software-driven affair.

“The question was, how do I keep salespeople focused on the right things?” Marsh says. “Our mission is to help sales managers through that.”

Marsh went to Wise with his idea and Wise agreed to allocate company resources toward exploring the idea further. “I grabbed a couple of ePrize engineers and spent the summer building it out,” Marsh says.

The Contest Builder Salesforce app was officially launched in September 2011 at

Author: Sarah Schmid Stevenson

Sarah is a former Xconomy editor. Prior to joining Xconomy in 2011, she did communications work for the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and the Michigan House of Representatives. She has also worked as a reporter and copy editor at the Missoula Independent and the Lansing State Journal. She holds a bachelor's degree in Journalism and Native American Studies from the University of Montana and proudly calls Detroit "the most fascinating city I've ever lived in."