Meet Kansas City’s new chief innovation officer
November 10, 2015 | Bobby Burch
After a six-month search, the City of Kansas City, Mo., has found a candidate to lead its various tech and innovation initiatives.
Kansas City hired Bob Bennett, a 24-year veteran of the U.S. Army, as the city’s second-ever chief innovation officer and will begin leading the City of Fountains’ various tech operations in January. Bennett succeeds Ashley Hand who left the post in June.
City officials said that Bennett — now an instructor at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth — will be tasked with finding innovative ways to solve city problems and improve citizen satisfaction. Among the programs that Bennett will lead for the city are: the KCStat initiative; the implementation of the KC Digital Roadmap; the Cisco Smart City initiative; work with the Mayor’s Challenge Cabinet to enhance civic engagement; and “create a culture of innovation within City Hall.”
Kansas City Mayor Sly James said that he was impressed with Bennett’s leadership.
“Bob’s experience leading process improvement strategies and efficiencies at the highest military levels will renew efforts throughout city government to make Kansas City more effective for all citizens,” James said in a release. “His talent and enthusiasm will focus the City’s efficiency and digital momentum to even greater success.”
A graduate of West Point, Bennett’s more than two decades of service includes some impressive accolades and experience.
Bennett, 47, has planned a variety of combat, humanitarian and training operations for hundreds of troops in Iraq, the city said. He commanded a support battalion for a 6,000-soldier brigade deployed to Iraq with trained replacements, medical support for wounded soldiers and care of families whose soldiers were deployed. Also while in Iraq, he wrote and implemented threat strategies affecting the Department of State, Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Agency of International Development.
“I am thrilled to have the opportunity to transition the planning and innovation skills that I developed in support of Army operations around the world to my hometown,” Bennett said in a release. “To be able to join the Mayor and City Manager’s team in Kansas City and work to accelerate and maximize Kansas City’s technological and innovation prowess is a dream come true.”
In addition, the Kansas City-native previously served as chief of operations for U.S. Army Africa, planning more than 500 annual military and humanitarian assistance operations, including development of digital tracking systems for Army personnel travelling on the continent.
Bennett is also active as a volunteer with the Heart of America Council, Boy Scouts of America and VFW Post 7356.
Featured Business

2015 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Just funded: Meet the five latest startups scaling their tech, Digital Sandbox KC’s impact
Five emerging startups are the latest to benefit from Digital Sandbox KC’s support — investment and resources that have led to more than $200 million in follow-on funding in less than 10 years for Sandbox companies. “Without this funding, it would have taken us much longer, as the whole project is currently being bootstrapped,” said…
Developers’ plan for massive West Bottoms investment stirs fear in some neighbors
Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by CityScene KC, an online news source focused on Greater Downtown Kansas City. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for the weekly CityScene KC email review. SomeraRoad’s ambitious proposal to transform a sleepy section of the West Bottoms into a “dynamic” mixed-use district has strong…
How a historic Roman Catholic private school became ‘the queerest hotel in Kansas’
With its claim to fame as the first incorporated city in Kansas, Leavenworth is a hidden treasure of historical sites, said Ilan Salzberg, but its significance does not end within its past, as the vibrant town has still so much to offer. “Leavenworth is a really cool town that I think commonly gets overlooked. People…
Give yourself permission to pause the hustle; injury prompts serial entrepreneur to get grounded
Trauma from a brain injury after an auto accident last fall left Joy Broils downshifting her Type A personality and ambitious drive to a few hours of work each day, the entrepreneur said. The incident, however, prompted her to slow down and focus on a new startup idea: Hustle & Ground, a monthly subscription box…

