New ScaleUp! cohort vies for $1M in revenue

May 26, 2016  |  Kat Hungerford

ScaleUp! KC

There’s a new batch of entrepreneurs in town ready to take their companies to the $1 million level.

ScaleUp! Kansas City on Tuesday announced its fourth cohort of business owners. The 17 entrepreneurs will spend an intensive four months learning how to scale their businesses through specialized curriculum, coaching and networking.

The program offers business owners the time away from day-to-day operations to focus on planning for the future, said Jill Meyer, program director of ScaleUP! KC.

“This is truly what it means to ‘grow your own’ when we talk about building sustainable entrepreneurship.”

– Maria Meyers 

“ScaleUP! Kansas City continues to fill a key and vital gap in our entrepreneurial ecosystem,” she said in a release. “Building a business is hard and lonely work and business owners spend a lot of time working in their businesses, but rarely have the time or resources to work on their businesses. ScaleUP! KC gives them that perspective and gives us a chance to provide mentoring and training to these businesses that are so key to our economic growth.”

To date, 48 Kansas City businesses have entered the program. Alumni include entrepreneurs in such industries as architecture, software, transportation, fitness, food and more. Companies entering ScaleUp! meet three qualifications: they have been in business for at least two years, generate annual sales of between $150,000 and $750,000 and operate in a market that can generate more than $1 million in sales.

This most recent class promises to be one of the best yet, said Maria Meyers, director of the UMKC Innovation Center. UMKC operates ScaleUp! KC in partnership with KCSourceLink.

“We know this fourth cohort will continue to raise the bar, for their companies and for the Kansas City economy,” Meyers said in a release. “With their talent and the education, support, and connections they’ll get through the ScaleUP! program, there are no limits to what they’ll be able to accomplish. This is truly what it means to ‘grow your own’ when we talk about building sustainable entrepreneurship and increasing economic opportunities.”

And now, to unveil the fourth cohort:

  • Erin Bardon, BNB Design, Bonner Springs, Kansas: BNB Design is an architecture and interior design firm that has designed more than two million square feet of space for commercial, multifamily housing, healthcare and government projects.
  • Germaine Chappell, Chappell Electric, Kansas City, Missouri: Chappell Electric provides electrical wiring, lighting system installation for new construction and renovation projects.
  • Ryan Deveney, Studio Build, Kansas City, Missouri: Studio Build combines architectural, builder and designer processes to provide master builder services for both commercial and residential projects.
  • Luke Einsel, Thirsty Coconut, Olathe, Kansas: Thirsty Coconut is a healthy food service distributor for schools, universities, hospitals and corporations.
  • Georgina Herrera, Mackech Jewelry, Overland Park, Kansas: Mackech Jewelry designs and distributes Mayan-inspired fine jewelry throughout Mexico and the United States.
  • Philip Lopez, Arboles Tree Trimming, Kansas City, Kansas: Arboles Tree Trimming provides tree-trimming services to both residential and commercial clients throughout the Kansas City area.
  • Philip Mabion, Bethlehem Home Healthcare, Kansas City, Missouri: Bethlehem Home Healthcare is a home health care company that provides nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, aide and attendant care at patients’ homes.
  • Habte Mesfin, Revocup Coffee Corp, Overland Park, Kansas: Revocup is a coffee roasting company and coffee shop that pledges 10 cents of every dollar received to assist coffee farmers around the world.
  • Ronald Mirick, Cass County Choppers, Pleasant Hill, Missouri: Cass County Choppers/Trikes created a bolt-on trike kit for motorcycle riders, as well as manufacturing parts for turret press machines.
  • Brandon O’Dell, Friend That Cooks, Shawnee, Kansas: Friend That Cooks personal chefs offer weekly in-home meal prep for families with busy schedules, food allergies or special diets.
  • Ryan Sciara, Underdog Wine Co., Kansas City, Missouri: Underdog Wine Co. is a retail wine and spirits store that organizes its beverages by weight and flavor profile rather than by country and varietal.
  • Christina Scott, Shamerrific Shine, Overland Park, Kansas: Shamerrific Shine is an eco-friendly auto detailing and hand car wash service.
  • Kunjan Shah, Quark Studios, Overland Park, Kansas: Quark Studios provides web and mobile solutions for government organizations and enterprise-level businesses.
  • Dana Ward, Great Day Moving, Kansas City, Kansas: Great Day Moving is a moving company providing both residential and commercial services both locally or long-distance.
  • Cecilio Webb, Webb Technology Group, Kansas City, Missouri: Webb Technology Group’s designs technology solutions to make the everyday connection better.
  • Kenneth Yancy, mobile.earth, Kansas City, Missouri: Mobile.earth is a software development and telecommunications company specializing in responsive websites, mobile apps, target mobile outreach/marketing and custom software.
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

    KCMO Mayor Quinton Lucas and Gov. Mike Parson, R-Missouri, talk before the announcement of Meta's new $800 million data center in Kansas City

    Meta promises local jobs, impact; How its $800M plan could post growth (and disruption) to KC’s story

    By Tommy Felts | March 24, 2022

    There’s more to Meta’s $800 million upload into Kansas City’s Northland than face value, company officials said Thursday, outlining plans for community impact that extends well beyond anticipated tech jobs.  “We have programs that help to equip people, schools, and organizations with the resources to build skills and increase the use of technology,” Darcy Nothnagle,…

    Rendering of the Meta Kansas City data center at Golden Plains Technology Park

    Facebook coming to Kansas City; Meta selects KCMO for massive, $800M data center

    By Tommy Felts | March 24, 2022

    A new hyperscale data center is expected to be operational in Kansas City by 2024 — bringing global social media and tech giant Meta to the metro and making good on promises that a Northland development could be the next great national technology hub. The Kansas City Area Development Council and its partners announced the…

    Dr. Richard H. Linton, president of Kansas State University, board of directors for TechAccel

    New K-State president joins KC startup’s board, bringing expertise on food science, academic collaboration

    By Tommy Felts | March 23, 2022

    The president of Kansas State University has joined the board of directors of TechAccel, an Overland Park startup focused on scientific breakthroughs to produce healthier plants, animals and foods. Dr. Richard H. Linton, who assumed the leadership of K-State following the Feb. 11 retirement of former Richard Myers, comes with an array of experience expected…

    Penny Dale-McCant and Myron McCant, KD Academy

    $4M dream childcare center opened on Prospect as planned; why the 24/7 KD Academy is struggling to fill its beds

    By Tommy Felts | March 23, 2022

    Penny Dale-McCant built a childcare model — and a $4 million expansion of her KD Academy brand with her husband, Myron McCant — unlike anything else in the region, she said. Today, however, the center serves only a third of its intended capacity: a product of pandemic trends that have limited staffing. “I’m just proud…