Report: Kansas is more innovation-friendly than Missouri
February 24, 2016 | Bobby Burch
The Sunflower State is more hospitable to innovation than its eastward neighbor, a recent study found.
The Consumer Technology Association’s annual “Innovation Scorecard” ranked all 50 states in 10 different categories to determine which states best fostered innovation and economic growth. The study dished Kansas slightly higher innovation kudos than Missouri, comparing their friendliness to innovation, positions on right-to-work policies, investment attraction, welcomeness to new business models and more.
Kansas earned the CTA’s top distinction of “innovation champion” while Missouri was named an “innovation leader,” which is the organization’s second-highest ranking. The primary difference between the states’ ranking appears to be Kansas’ contentious “right to work” status. Missouri currently allows “security agreements” between unions and employers that require workers to participate in established labor unions, which the CTA claims hinders innovation.
The organization applauded both states for progress in different areas. Kansas nearly doubled its venture capital funding in the last year, from $14.51 in 2014 to $28.67 per capita in 2015. The state also boosted spending on research and development, increasing from $529 per capita in 2014 to $726 in 2015.
Missouri boosted its overall Internet speeds — from about 9,000 kbps on average to now about 11,800 kbps. Missouri also produces a high number of STEM graduates, hosting schools such as the Missouri University of Science and Technology, which graduates more than 90 percent of its students with STEM degrees.
The CTA is a nationwide trade organization representing more than 2,200 tech companies in the U.S. For more information on the rankings, click here.

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Photos: LaunchCode christens KC’s newest techies with graduation celebration
An Afghan immigrant. A mother of six. An English grad turned techie. A man now able to provide for his family. They’re all among the graduates and inspirational stories highlighted during LaunchCode’s graduation ceremony that recognized the newest members of Kansas City’s tech community. LaunchCode on Wednesday graduated 60 students from its rigorous LC101 coding…
Christian entrepreneur hopes to convert believers to veganism
Kris Taylor’s inspiration for a vegan, Christian lifestyle traces back to the first book of the Bible, she said. Modern people eat meat because of original sin and the fall of man, as described in Genesis, Taylor said. “But if you go back to the creation story in Genesis, every seed-bearing plant was given to…
Caffeine tours give ‘pub crawl’ experience for lovers of coffee, tea and chocolate
Escaping corporate life in New York, Jason Burton moved to Kansas City in 2004 and began pouring his work into a new passion. As a marketer for Kansas City’s Roasterie, Burton soon recognized coffee and tea lacked the social component of events and festivals that are more associated with specialty beverages like beer and wine.…
Pathfinder CEO switch pushes co-founder’s focus back to autism research
A leadership change at Pathfinder Health Innovations will allow its co-founder to focus on research that could change the lives of children and adults with autism, said Jeff Blackwood. Pathfinder announced Tuesday its board had appointed Tina Youngblood as chief executive officer, succeeding co-founder Blackwood to lead day-to-day operations and the strategic direction for the…
