Google Fiber, KC entrepreneurship takes stage at White House

January 22, 2016  |  Bobby Burch

Kansas City Mayor Sly James at the White House

In a special event at the White House, Kansas City Mayor Sly James exalted area entrepreneurship and a startup community that grew as a result of the metro’s access to Google Fiber.

Joining mayors from Boston and Fresno, Calif., for the U.S. Conference of Mayors, James stood at a White House podium touting the gigabit service and the Kansas City Startup Village as examples of innovation in the heartland. The Kansas City Startup Village is located on the Kansas-Missouri border in the first neighborhood to receive Google Fiber in 2012. It hosts more than 20 startups in a three-block-radius and has served as a hub for entrepreneurial growth.  

James poked fun at Boston Mayor Marty Walsh for the startup village’s success in luring away a few Bostonians.

“As a matter of fact, mayor, there were three kids that showed up at a reception for Code for America,” he said. “They came in off the street, I asked them where they came from. They said they had just driven in from Boston to go live at the Startup Village where they started their business that deals with software for home 3D printers and they moved to Kansas City. They’re still there.”

“They must have left their Red Sox hats in the car,” Walsh replied.

“They did because now they’re all wearing Royals jerseys,” James joked. “We have a tremendously active entrepreneurial population with a lot of startups.”

James also shared with press at the meeting that Kansas City drew an impressive turnout to its inaugural Techweek conference in the City of Fountains. Techweek came to Kansas City in September, hosting dozens of tech related events, including networking meetups, lectures, parties and more. After a strong showing in Kansas City, it committed to coming back to the area for five more years.

The mayor also noted the success of LaunchKC, a grant competition in which the city and other organizations awarded 10 firms $50,000 each.

“We surprised Techweek,” James said. “They brought Techweek in on kind of an experimental basis expecting 1,500 people. 4,000 showed up. And during the time of Techweek, we had LaunchKC that we use and we gave away $500,000 in $50,000 blocks to 10 selected entrepreneurial enterprises which have now grown and are getting secondary and third level funding.”

To watch the mayor’s speech, click here.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2016 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    PBS docuseries puts KC creator at the intersection food and ‘transformational travel’

    By Tommy Felts | December 28, 2023

    Food travel is about more than getting the most exotic or expensive social media-worthy photo of a meal to share for superficial clout, said Jim Kane, emphasizing the transformation power of connection when someone truly allows themselves to use food as a lens for understanding culture. “Before the pandemic, there were a lot of checklists…

    A misstep ended their ‘Squid Game’ run together; the business of their friendship keeps moving

    By Tommy Felts | December 28, 2023

    While not everything on reality TV is 100 percent … well, real, the bond between “Squid Game: The Challenge” competitors Stephen Lomas and Chase Higgins is anything but scripted, the Kansas City duo said. Longtime friends and business partners — the two previously co-founded Let’s Get Moving, a social media savvy moving company that gained…

    How Kauffman Scholars’ 20-year run reflected the value of representation for Black, Brown students

    By Tommy Felts | December 27, 2023

    Editor’s note: The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is a financial supporter of Startland News. The legacy of Kauffman Scholars — an initiative of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation that sunset earlier in 2023 after 20 years — can be seen in the decades of students impacted and the passion fueling the effort from within, according to a…

    This hands-on video production workshop at DeLaSalle will put careers in focus

    By Tommy Felts | December 27, 2023

    A new partnership between a Kansas City video production company and a charter school serving teens along the Troost corridor is expected to give DeLaSalle High School students a stronger entry point into an emerging industry, said Jasmine Nastasi. “It’s a way to help with recruiting, to streamline the process, and to have an official…