Holt: Early-stage capital isn’t Kansas City’s biggest problem

March 8, 2016  |  Travis Holt

NightShoot (15 of 15)

Rack your brain and create a list of local tech businesses that have successfully raised early-stage capital in Kansas City.

The list is actually quite extensive.

Now try to list the tech firms that have raised later stage capital in Kansas City — defined as closing a round of $5 million or more. It’s going to take you a while.

Late-stage capital is the biggest gap in the Kansas City funding landscape. Of the few local investors even willing to look at late-stage deals, even less will fund a company that hasn’t yet reached profitability. And the reality of the startup tech industry is that most companies looking to raise $5 million or more will still be operating in the red.

While I believe the energy being allocated toward creating more early-stage capital in Kansas City is great, I think we’re ignoring a larger problem: Kansas City needs local investors to fund later-stage deals. Solving the late-stage capital issue will, in turn, create a surplus of early-stage capital.

Early-stage capital is (finally) taking off in Kansas City

There are already many different places an entrepreneur can go locally to raise early stage capital. Organized funds like Flyover Capital are actively making investments and there are numerous angels who will invest in early stage technology businesses.

“The bottom line is that entrepreneurs looking to locally raise later-stage capital have extremely limited options. And having to go elsewhere for funding increases the chances that the company will have to move.” – Travis Holt

Jeff Dunn, CEO of Sora Medical Solutions, recently raised early stage funding from local angels and has a positive outlook for the area’s investment climate.

“We found that the investment community was very receptive to our call for capital needs in our early funding stage,” Dunn said. “Sora was able to secure nearly $1 million of seed investment last October.”

Many businesses have had similar positive experiences, although there are also examples of businesses that have struggled to locally raise early-stage capital. From my perspective, this isn’t a problem.

Regardless of the amount of early-stage capital we have locally, there will always be entrepreneurs who find this process easy and efficient and others who will find it difficult to navigate. I’ve successfully raised early-stage capital in Kansas City twice and unsuccessfully raised early stage funds in Austin and Silicon Valley. Every market has entrepreneurs who will experience both sides of the coin.

Late stage capital almost always comes from outside KC

In the past two weeks, I’ve had three conversations with local entrepreneurs who have successfully raised early stage funding but are concerned about being able to stay in Kansas City when they have to raise their next round.

That’s because the record is clear: over the past few years, area companies that have raised late-stage funding have all found it outside Kansas City. Netchemia, now People Admin, raised $6.5 million in 2013 from Mainsail Partners in San Francisco. Farmobile raised $5.5 million in December from Amsterdam-based Anterra Capital. C2FO brought in $9.1 million in 2012 from Union Square Ventures in New York.

Although there are likely strategic reasons each company partnered with each capital source, Kansas City isn’t without its own strategic advantages — except for the availability of late-stage funding. The bottom line is that entrepreneurs looking to locally raise later-stage capital have extremely limited options. And having to go elsewhere for funding increases the chances that the company will have to move.

But local late-stage funding has a snowball effect

You may be wondering why this is an issue if the good, local companies are able to secure later stage funding in other places. Investors who participate in later rounds and write bigger checks will, over time, do much better than an investor who writes a smaller seed-capital check in an earlier round.

While the percentage return to the early stage investor may be greater on an individual deal, the amount of money made on an exit will almost always be greater for the larger investor in the later round. If Kansas City can do a better job giving entrepreneurs options for later stage capital, more proceeds from a successful exit will stay here. And, as a result, there will be more investors with capital looking to fund early- and later-stage deals.

The focus and momentum behind solving the capital problem for entrepreneurs is great for the community, it just needs to be shifted to include the real money-maker deals. 


Travis Holt is a co-founder of Brush Creek Partners, a risk management, due diligence and insurance firm. Follow him on Twitter at @TravisSHolt

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Kaylee Chappelow and Rebecca Burney, RiskGenius

        Chit chat on the elevator? RiskGenius targets missing ‘adulting’ soft skills with event series

        By Tommy Felts | February 20, 2020

        College curriculum often falls short of the crucial soft skills to get young entrepreneurs from coffee chats to the head of the table, said Kaylee Chappelow.  “I don’t want to say college sucks … but I think we all agree that it doesn’t touch on the soft skills,” laughed Chappelow, customer success manager at insurtech…

        Happy Food Co., Get Happy Catering

        High demand, low profits: Happy Food Co pulls meal kits from stores, pivots to catering

        By Tommy Felts | February 19, 2020

        Love wasn’t enough to sustain the original model of Happy Food Co., but the meal kit company’s ability to pivot opens new doors, said Kiersten Firquain. “For a startup in Kansas City … it is difficult,” Firquain, head chef and co-founder of Happy Food Co., said of geographical challenges that contributed to its restructuring, a…

        Ryan Martin, KC Jacks

        Outcrafting Carhartt: KC denim guru opened the door to a hidden maker speakeasy, affordable US-made workwear 

        By Tommy Felts | February 19, 2020

        The high-stakes world of makers — especially those hoping to develop a national brand built on quality craftsmanship — can require connections beyond what someone finds in a simple Google search, said Ryan Martin. “You kind of have to know somebody,” the Kansas City denim guru behind the KC Jacks workwear line and the couture…

        Wise Power Shield Club at Children's Mercy Park

        WISE Power shifts energy from Hy-Vee Arena to Sporting KC, debuting cutting-edge tech lounge March 7

        By Tommy Felts | February 19, 2020

        A new partnership with Sporting KC gives a Kansas City-founded startup naming rights to the new WISE Power Shield Club at Children’s Mercy Park, as well as a new lease on its emerging entertainment concept previously set to debut at the Hy-Vee Arena. “WISE Power has designed technology products and services that are incredibly innovative…