Rick Usher: How coffee shop culture fuels KC’s startup ecosystem
January 30, 2017 | Rick Usher
Editor’s note: Opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone.
Coffee shops play a significant role in the growing success of Kansas City’s startup community.

Rick Usher
Back in September, Startland News readers offered their top picks for best coffee shops for meetings and I’m taking off on that topic now to dig deeper into the key indicators of startup support at these coffee shops and others where I have had positive experiences.
In my work as assistant city manager for small business & entrepreneurship for the City of Kansas City, Mo., I value the meeting and work space offered by coffee shops. Meeting in a coffee shop gives me a hyperlocal perspective on the topics and issues that I’m discussing with business owners and entrepreneurs. Coffee shops are also capable of creating incidents of serendipitous collision density, which is so critical to innovation and creativity.
Coffee shops are great places for entrepreneurs hoping to venture outside their home-based businesses, coworking spaces, accelerators or incubators. In fact, there are many entrepreneurs using coffee shops as their primary work location. Coffee shops are also appreciated by a few larger employers who recognize that their employees may be more productive and creative when allowed to work outside of the office at a neighborhood coffee shop.
How to effectively use coffee shops to accelerate your work
Seating options are an indicator of a successful coffee shop. Each option has a specific purpose for entrepreneurs based on the reason for the visit.
For meetings, the two- or four-top table is best for discussions and introductions. If you are only meeting with one person, a two-top is best and makes larger tables available to more customers. If your meeting is more casual, however, you may decide to use a 4-top table to unlock the full potential of the coffee shop in supporting serendipitous collisions that are so highly necessary to entrepreneurship and innovation.
Measuring impact
I believe every coffee shop has a CDI (Collision Density Index) that can be developed through this article and with ongoing input from the startup community. I also believe that once the key indicators of a high CDI are identified, the success can be replicated elsewhere in the community.
When you are meeting in a coffee shop, inevitably someone will walk in that you or your guest know. It is not only polite, but critical to the community to make introductions, exchange business cards and give a 30-second update or introduction. If you know the person well, there will likely be some common thread with which you can share in the introduction. This networking connection may be the introduction that is needed to accelerate an idea to success. If you are finished with your intended meeting topic and time allows, this is when you can offer a seat at your table to continue new discussions started by the introduction.
Enable serendipity
Bo Nelson at Thou Mayest Coffee told me that he schedules time in his day for serendipitous collision density to occur. This seems like an oxymoron — scheduled serendipity — but it is a highly effective tactic of his day. Bo and I recently discussed the valuable role coffee shops play in the KC startup community in an interview with What’s Up Kansas City. In another What’s Up Kansas City interview, Crows Coffee owner Zach Moores, introduced me to the term “ear hustling,” which is promoted at their communal table.
Over time, I’ve developed these key indicators of successful coffee shops:
- Great coffee choices
- Assortment of seating options including 2- and 4-top tables, communal tables, bars and individual seating areas. Each of these have specific utility to customers and coffee shop owners
- Free high-speed wifi — preferably gigabit-powered
- Ubiquitous electrical outlets
- Bike Racks
- Street Trees
- Location in a vibrant, walkable urban neighborhood
Please share your feedback on this concept with me on twitter @RuKCMO #StartupKC #Coffice.
Rick Usher is the assistant city manager for small business & entrepreneurship for the City of Kansas City, Mo. Connect with him at @RuKCMO.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Quickly-growing HipHire to launch app for part-timers
A startup facilitating part-time job placement is finding traction. Launched in 2015, HipHire digitally matches people looking for and offering part-time gigs. HipHire founder Brian Kearns wanted there to be a solution that was “a step up from CraigsList” that the public could rely on to find quality jobs. Kearns said that over 1,000 job matches have…
Life Equals raises $780K, opens larger West Bottoms office
Health supplement startup Life Equals is the latest firm to outgrow the entrepreneurial hamlet known as the Kansas City Startup Village. Thanks to a growing team, the Lenexa-based company — which sells vitamins and supplement products — is ditching its quaint 900-square-foot office in the village to create a spacious 3,700-square-foot event space in the…
Greitens’ budget cuts ding Missouri, KC entrepreneurship efforts
A series of state budget cuts by Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens will directly impact Kansas City entrepreneurship. The sweeping $146.4 million rollback of the Show Me State’s budget will cut funds from both the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s Free Enterprise Center and Missouri Technology Corporation. Greitens’ plan will cut about $3.3 million from the enterprise…
LaunchKC grants contest to offer $100K grand prize in 2017
Kansas City’s popular grants competition LaunchKC has raised the stakes for applicants in 2017. Instead of allocating $500,000 via 10 equally-sized grants, LaunchKC will dish out eight awards of $50,000 and one $100,000 grand prize. In 2016, LaunchKC drew more than 400 tech startup applicants for the second year in a row. Applications open on…
