KC founders share their stories of building a great Midwest company
October 24, 2016 | Meghan LeVota
It’s not the flashiest locale, but the Midwest is a ripe area in which to grow a global business, a group Kansas City entrepreneurs argued Monday.
During the Kauffman Fellows summit, four Kansas City business leaders made the case that you don’t have to be on the coasts to build a thriving company.
The entrepreneurs — including EyeVerify CEO Toby Rush, Blooom CEO Chris Costello, Pipeline CEO Joni Cobb and BATS Global Markets founder Joe Ratterman — shared with a crowd of about 300 people how they’ve built their ventures over the years. The conversation was preceded by a large scholarship announcement by Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation CEO Wendy Guillies.
Here are a few of the panelists’ thoughts on how to build a company in the Midwest.
Look international for growth.
Before selling his company to a subsidiary of Alibaba, EyeVerify CEO Toby Rush said several venture capitalists told him that they would only fund his company if he moved to the east or west coast.
While raising funds was a challenge in the Midwest, Rush said that his international vision and success helped topple those obstacles. Rush said it was important for his company to “think globally.” Half of EyeVerify customers are from outside the United States and the company has been funded by investors in China, Korea and Japan.
“I would like to say that it was really easy to say no (to moving to the East or West coast), but in reality it wasn’t,” Rush said. “We realized that when you get international. They care a lot less about whether you’re in Kansas City or New York or Silicon Valley.”
Pipeline CEO Joni Cobb echoes the importance of a global vision and encouraged entrepreneurs to build trusted connections abroad.
“Since we are in an area that is not typically known as the sexy place for scaling companies, how do we make it that way?” Cobb said. “The answer is we do that by opening up the portfolio of national and international networks.”
Grow a network of trusted peers.
A community builder herself, Cobb said that while business leaders were already building Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem, national attention from Google Fiber helped further their efforts.
Accelerator programs, entrepreneur fellowship groups and early-stage venture capital funds have been critical to further the momentum, Cobb said. Her organization, Pipeline, helps foster the regional entrepreneurial community via a fellowship program, which she hopes will bring a spotlight to the opportunities that exist in the region.
Rush affirmed Cobb’s sentiments in the value of building a network and often looks to his fellow alums in Pipeline.
“When I’m having a really hard day, these are the guys I wanna hang out with,” Rush said. “When I have a mountaintop experience and I want to go celebrate, these are the guys I want to go celebrate with because I know that they are on that journey with me.”
Pipeline seeks to create and enhance connections in the community, which is one of the things that attracted Rush to the program. Although he expected mentorship, he never could have predicted the impact those connections have made on his life.
He said that efforts like Pipeline highlight the importance of developing a vibrant community of entrepreneurs.
“Ecosystems don’t just pop up, they’re created,” Rush said. “We’re not going to be the next San Francisco. We’re going to be our own version of a healthy ecosystem, and it takes a lot of effort for that to happen.”
Develop mission-based approach to attract talent.
Blooom CEO Chris Costello said that despite the perceptions that tech talent is limited in Midwest, his firm hasn’t experienced many challenges.
Costello said that his tech firm’s mission-based approach has helped attract a deep pool of talented people wanting to make a difference.
For example, Costello said he’s had to educate many on his team about stock options. This indicates that his team has come to his company for genuine reasons and are not just hoping to make a quick exit, he said.
“At Blooom, we really believe we have a shot at impacting someone’s life,” Costello said. “We could give people a couple extra years of retirement they wouldn’t have had if they’d not been helped by Blooom, and I think my team knows they have a genuine opportunity to change people’s lives.”
Featured Business

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Wichita startup with growing KC team secures $10M from Koch Disruptive Technologies
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 Entrepreneurial Growth Ventures (EGV), a business unit of NetWork Kansas supporting innovative, high-growth entrepreneurs in the State of Kansas. WICHITA — weavix is transforming…
Global flavors layer together as 200+ chefs serve up their best dishes for KC Restaurant Week
Kansas City Restaurant Week serves as a sampler for curious diners to satisfy their taste buds with an array of delightful dishes — and chefs from more than 200 local eateries showing off their culinary creativity and most visual see-food specialties, said Andrew Fontes. “It’s a great opportunity to go outside your comfort zone and…
‘Superstars’ opens the door to KC Chamber, making room for small biz, startups: Apply through Feb. 1
Editor’s note: The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce is a non-financial partner of Startland News, which serves as the media partner for the Small Business Superstars program. Recognized as a Small Business Superstar twice in the program’s first two years, More Than a Meal earned a sense of validation from the Chamber’s initiative for…
Four KC-area startups tapped for custom accelerator targeting diverse range of Kansas entrepreneurs
Only a handful of Kansas City startups — three of which hail from Johnson County — are among 21 companies selected for a Wichita-based accelerator designed for growth-minded startups in the thick of their product-market fit and customer-acquisition journeys. The NXTSTAGE Customer Traction Cohort is designed to help early-stage companies break through barriers to generate revenue…
