1 Million Cups offers new mobile app
September 14, 2016 | Meghan LeVota
One Kansas City’s most popular entrepreneurial events is offering its thousands of fans an app to increase engagement.
The 1 Million Cups community in Kansas City and around the world has long asked for an app, and now it’s becoming a reality, said Jordan Marsillo, 1 Million Cups program coordinator.
The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation partnered with Kansas City-based Cremalab to develop the app. The interface mimics the 1 Million Cups website and allows users to see who’s presenting, the event’s location and to connect with community organizers.
1 Million Cups was established in Kansas City in 2012 and the format has since spread to dozens of cities around the world. Every Wednesday morning, two startup founders present to an audience with the intent to educate, engage and network — all over a cup of coffee. The audience then serves up critical questions to founders in an effort to challenge their business models and approaches.
On Wednesdays, attendees can use the app to check in to your local event. Users can see who else is in the room with them and are encouraged to connect with them on LinkedIn or other social media. Marsillo said that the app’s most important feature is the ability for attendees to provide additional feedback to presenters through a forum.
“Easy access to targetable and actionable feedback will only increase the peer-to-peer learning that already happens during 1 Million Cups’ question-and-answer sessions,” Marsillo said. “I also think that we’ll start to see a lot more connectivity between communities and across the country, as it will be so much easier for people to do so.”
“I think the app is just one tactic of the broader connectivity that 1MC is bringing to entrepreneurship.” – Larry Jacob
1 Million Cups released the app to Kansas Citians through a soft launch on Aug. 31, which Marsillo said generated a positive response. The app is now available on iOS and Android devices.
Larry Jacob, vice president of communications at the Kauffman Foundation, is eager to get the app in the hands of the 1 Million Cup attendees. He added that it was important to him for all of the 99 communities to gain access at once.
“I think the app is just one tactic of the broader connectivity that 1MC is bringing to entrepreneurship,” Jacob said. “It’s a visible way to see it and what we know about entrepreneurs is they can be really lonely, and this level of connectivity helps people learn and gather information about how they can be successful and that’s really the value.”
As organizers gear up for the upcoming 1 in a Million grant competition, app users may notice a perk.
1 Million Cup app users will be among the first in the community to learn the finalists as they’re revealed. As the semi-finalists and finalists are announced, users will receive push notifications with real time updates on the online-only startup competition.
Featured Business

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
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…
Go Topeka launches ‘Kansas Innovation Dealroom’ to track startup ecosystem growth
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. WICHITA…
Kauffman CEO retiring this fall: New leader must support ‘entrepreneur-focused economic development’
President and CEO of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Wendy Guillies announced that she will be retiring this fall after 22 years with the nonprofit. “Like many people over the past extraordinary few years, I’ve reflected on my professional and personal priorities. What won’t change is my drive to engage in work that makes our…
Its menu simmers with just five dishes; How Thaiger’s bowl’d flavors roll in complex family recipes
When someone orders the spicy pho or crispy pork belly bowl at Thaiger, they soon receive it just as Adison Sichampanakhone and his family make it at home, he shared. “If you were to come to one of our barbecues or cookouts, you would see it’s the same preparation, same sauce as we do here…
