MECA Challenge engages KC students in entrepreneurship
September 3, 2015 | Ashley Jost
For two years, MECA Challenge has been working with Kansas City’s students to instill an entrepreneurial mindset.
This fall, organizers are all-in with the first of five MECA Challenges of the season set for tomorrow, Friday, at Blue Valley CAPS.
The program is a one-day event for student groups in which they work on teams with entrepreneurs and startup companies to learn how to tackle real-world business problems. MECA is operated by the Center of Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Development, or CEED.
Abby Tillman, director of marketing at Affinity Enterprise Group and former director of student engagement for CEED said doing day-long events the last few years gave CEED a better idea of “what KC has an appetite for,” which is a catch-all event for students to become immersed in the startup life.
“The reason we’ve gotten so much more traction is change in format, and the schools are starting to realize the traditional way they were doing education isn’t working the way they wanted it to,” Tillman said. “This keeps students engaged in creative problem solving. Schools are wanting to find a way to make it work, and at a minimal cost to them.”
The cost for the one-day program begins at $2,000, and CEED handles planning and communication with startups and speakers.
Corey Mohn, Blue Valley CAPS executive director, said the program helps align students’ personal passions with the opportunity to find solutions to meaningful problems.
“In the professional world, you are not given linear assignments,” he said. “Those who succeed are able to be nimble and proactive. The ability to work on a team, communicate effectively and manage time often trumps content knowledge and skill sets. The MECA Challenge is an event that places students in a situation to further develop and refine these ‘soft skills,’ which are absolutely critical in today’s post-secondary and professional environments.”
Tillman said organizing the challenges during the beginning of the school year works well to help trigger students thinking critically and creatively, with the hope from administrators that those skills will then resonate in the classroom.
For more information on MECA Challenge, click here.
Featured Business

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Pepper teams with Switzerland cyber security expert to combat ‘terrifying’ IoT threats
A new, long-term collaboration between KC-based Pepper IoT and an international leader in digital security has an opportunity to aggressively boost consumer confidence in the rapidly expanding — and potentially hostile — Internet of Things, said Scott Ford. “It is terrifying to see millions of vulnerable connected devices being distributed to U.S. consumers who have…
Artist incubator paints scene of blissful collaboration in far-from-lonely West Bottoms space
Vanessa Lacy’s artist incubator eliminates “the lonely artist,” she said, noting her gallery model replaces solitude with creative relationships and a collaborative community. “Artists tend to get very isolated in their studio spaces working on their own; then they have a relationship with a gallery that’s really more of a business relationship,” said Lacy, owner…
Take the Kauffman survey: Is KC’s startup culture welcoming and inclusive to all?
Perception shapes reality, said organizers of a survey that seeks greater understanding of Kansas City’s startup culture. The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s 2018 Entrepreneurship in Kansas City survey checks the pulse of the local entrepreneurial ecosystem by raising specific questions about culture and practice in workplaces across the metro, said John Quinterno and Julie Marks,…
