ECJC president to become Kansas commerce secretary
August 21, 2015 | Bobby Burch
George Hansen, president and CEO of the Enterprise Center of Johnson County (ECJC), is moving on to serve the Sunflower State in a broader capacity.
Hansen, who was appointed to lead the ECJC in June of 2013, will serve as Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback’s Secretary of Commerce. The ECJC is a non-profit venture development organization and early stage company incubator in the Kansas City Metro. It provides advisory services, access to funding resources, entrepreneurial education, office space and networking connections for area companies.
“I am honored to be appointed to this position and I look forward to serving the citizens of Kansas,” Hansen said in a release. “Kansas is a great state for businesses to grow and prosper.”
In addition to numerous business and educational board positions, Hansen’s career boasts more than 35 years of management and executive experience. He served as CEO of Zave Network — a digital commerce firm — in 2011 and led its sale to Google. Prior to Zave, Hansen was a director of TGP Investments, a Kansas City-based private equity firm.
Hansen currently is a member of the Dean’s Board of Advisors with the University of Kansas School of Business and is a board member of FreightQuote.Com. Hansen was previously a board member for the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s Council for Entrepreneurship at the Bloch School of Business.
“George Hansen’s entire career has prepared him to lead the Commerce Department,” Gov. Brownback said in a release. “He understands the needs of businesses and the environment that will attract them to expand and grow in our state.”
Hansen will join Commerce in mid-September and will replace Pat George who retired at the end of July. The appointment will require confirmation by the Kansas Senate with a vote.
“The Enterprise Center in Johnson County is proud to congratulate CEO George Hansen on his appointment to secretary of the Kansas Department of Commerce and urges the Kansas State Senate to undertake a speedy confirmation process,” said Melissa Roberts, marketing director of the ECJC. “High-growth businesses, established and homegrown through entrepreneurial efforts will be a key to Kansas’ economic success. George’s deep, first-hand understanding of the entrepreneurial experience will ensure that these hard-working business owners will have a familiar and friendly ear.”
Featured Business

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Missouri’s best breweries are in Kansas City (and they have the medals to prove it)
Two Kansas City brewers barreled through the competition earlier this week, earning the first-ever, statewide “Brewery of the Year” honors for local favorites Boulevard and BKS Artisan Ales. It’s a feat fermented through years of dedication by the teams behind the labels, both brewers said. “From the day we opened, we have kept balance with…
World Cup readiness event opens City Hall to entrepreneurs hoping to get on the roster
Kansas City wants to score as many points as possible when the FIFA World Cup arrives in 2026, said Janá Wagner, emphasizing that a special event planned Tuesday during GEWKC aims to get businesses into the game now — playbook in hand. “Our goal is to help as many entrepreneurs as possible get properly licensed,…
10 top event picks for GEWKC; build your own schedule from 60+ sessions
With dozens of events on the calendar for GEWKC, Union Station will be bustling with activity, said Callie England, noting organizers intentionally curated a week where attendees can’t go wrong — no matter how they fill out their itinerary. “While the schedule can feel full, it’s truly the best of the best,” said England, director of…
How AI changes the the founder code: ‘This is all moving faster than anyone expected’
New tech opportunities — like artificial intelligence — hold the potential to equalize the Kansas City region among more established startup hubs, investment leaders said Thursday, but to fully take advantage, entrepreneurs who want strong, lasting companies must have a fire inside them. Not to mention grit. “Several really incredible entrepreneurs said, ‘I think the one…

