Manufacturers notice growing KC inventor contest
September 10, 2015 | Ashley Jost
You have 48 hours to make a product.
And if you beat the competition for creativity, function and originality, you leave with $6,000.
No pressure.
Make48 is back in October with the group’s second inventor competition, incentivizing creativity and grit. Tom Gray, co-founder of Make48, said the group’s competition this Oct. 2 – 4 brings 21 teams of inventors from 10 different states.
And this year’s finalists receive an added bonus in addition to cash: face time with manufacturers.
“Another big benefit to the event finalists is four to five large manufacturers in the (competition’s theme industry) are going to be looking at the top three winners with intention of possibly licensing their inventions,” Gray said. “They’re well-known, but we’re keeping them a secret. And they’re not just American-based companies.”
This round’s 21 teams are up from 13 teams during the inaugural April competition. The theme for the competition was ‘kitchen,’ and the winning company created a product that prevents utensils from falling off of a plate during dinner conversation. The theme for October competition is being kept a secret until just before it begins, Gray said.
Make48 will be held Oct. 2 – 4, at Union Station, and tickets cost $129. For more information, click here.

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Black farmers are losing ground in the fight to feed their communities, advocates say
More than a century of systemic land dispossession and discriminatory practices has left Black farmers with less than 0.6 percent of U.S. farmland — less than a third of the 16 million acres they operated in 1910, according to local urban farming advocates. They gathered Tuesday at Independence Boulevard Christian Church to confront this history…
Soccer tennis comes to KC ahead of World Cup; here’s how a weekend street festival is kicking it across the map
Ryogoku Soccer Academy — with the help of local businesses like MADE MOBB, Café Ollama, and Café Cà Phê — is taking soccer from the pitch to the streets of Kansas City’s historic Northeast, Brad Leonard shared. As the metro gears up for hosting World Cup games in 2026, the neighborhood-based international school and soccer…
KC celebs, sports icons and tech stars stick around; a hall of famer’s interviews reveal why
Sportscaster Frank Boal could’ve just retired; his wife (and Kansas City’s pull) made other plans Former sports broadcaster and Pittsburgh native Frank Boal knows a thing or two about the pull of Kansas City, he shared. The longtime media personality moved here in 1981 for work and never left. Now, Boal and his wife, Sarah…
