Program commercializing classroom tech spurs 29 startups, dozens of jobs
November 29, 2016 | Meghan LeVota
A Kansas City program is making strides in its efforts to commercialize local, university-cultivated ideas.
In the past four years, KCSourceLink’s Whiteboard2Boardroom program helped create almost 100 jobs and facilitated the creation of 29 new startups, according to a recent progress report. Those companies also generated nearly $16 million in follow-on funding, helping to fuel job growth and the regional economy.
With several area success stories to boast, the program aims to accelerate the commercialization process for student-made innovation — which may have otherwise lived in academia forever. The program works with 13 higher education institutions in Kansas and Missouri, such as the University of Kansas and University of Missouri-Kansas City.
The most prominent example of a company that benefited from the program was biometrics firm EyeVerify, which in September sold to an affiliate of Alibaba for more than $100 million. Other companies that have participated in the program are Mobility Designed, PatientsVoices, Play-It Health and more than a dozen others.
In addition to education institutions, W2B also partners with several area corporations. When looking for innovations, Black & Veatch reached out to the program to assist with the launch of its new accelerator.
Conner Hazelrigg was a student at William Jewell College when she first invented the “Sunshine Box,” the innovation that led to the creation of her company 17° 73° Innovation Co., which tapped W2B. Similar to the connections it made for Hazelrigg, W2B connects entrepreneurs with technologies developed in local universities that are available for licensing.
For a yearly subscription, W2B’s Tech Alert System is available to entrepreneurs and corporations who are looking to bring new technology to market. Subscribers can select from a list of industry categories and find innovations that match their needs.
W2B director James Baxendale said he was particularly excited about how the Tech Alert System has advanced the program. W2B’s annual report showed that it has assisted 525 entrepreneurs between 2012 and 2016, offering them access more than 400 innovations.
Though a plethora of opportunities has been made available through the program, Baxendale said that he’d like to see more community members capitalize on the promising tech coming from universities.
“This program has provided me with the opportunity to meet a number of passionate and successful entrepreneurs, as well as experienced corporate executives,” Baxendale said. “But, I would like to see more entrepreneurs and corporations taking advantage of the opportunity we have presented.”
Featured Business

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
With traction in tow, Super Dispatch is a model ‘lean startup’
Super Dispatch began like every tech startup: with a good idea. But as founder Bek Abdullayev will tell you, it takes more than that to be successful. In 2013, Abdullayev founded Super Dispatch, a software-as-a-service platform for the trucking industry intended to eliminate paperwork. Super Dispatch streamlines the communication of documents between truckers and their…
‘Makerspace in the ‘Hood’ wants to smother poverty and crime with creativity
Every successful entrepreneur is born with a seed of opportunity. It is impossible for one person to be successful on their own; whether you extend gratitude to your family for their support, your university for its resources, or the angel investor who believed in you when nobody else did. Now imagine you grew up in…
Pipeline Entrepreneurs accepting applicants for 2017 fellowship
Ahead of its first adventure abroad, Pipeline Entrepreneurs is accepting applications for its fellowship program that not only affords entrepreneurial education but also a network of powerful business leaders. The 2017 class will mark the organization’s 11th-annual program in which Pipeline accepts at least 10 entrepreneurs from the around the region to participate in a…
KC-made card game Mixtape makes a ‘soundtrack for your life’
If your life was a movie, what song would you play in the background? A fast paced techno montage? A jazzy love story? Perhaps a dreary ballad? Regardless of the tune, music is intimately connected with the special moments in life, according to Joel Johnson, who’s set out to prove that with Mixtape, a board…
