Three tips to landing in the Techstars KC accelerator
January 27, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
Techstars new local accelerator is on the lookout for ten tech companies to join the Kansas City accelerator’s inaugural class.
In an effort to cull suitable applicants, Techstars KC managing director Lesa Mitchell recently shared some of the top traits the program is looking for in companies.
“The Techstars team in Kansas City is looking for founders who are solving big, complex problems,” Mitchell wrote in the Techstars blog. “To do this, we want the most promising minds to join this program.”
A Kansas City native, Mitchell has worked with entrepreneurs all across the world for many years. She believes that although the digital age has made it easier for entrepreneurs, the risk of failure is still far too high for many companies. Mitchell hopes to dismantle barriers to entry and pay it forward through the Techstars program.
The accelerator — which was previously affiliated with The Sprint Accelerator — is not looking for a specific vertical and all startups are encouraged to apply.
Here’s more on what she’s looking for.
Disintermediating markets
Mitchell is prioritizing companies that eliminate the middleman in various sectors, such as what Neighborly did to the municipal bond market and Classpass did to gym memberships. She believes that these types of firms have a positive impact in the marketplace.
Infrastructure
Expecting extreme growth in this particular market, Mitchell is particularly interested in companies that are developing sustainable building materials, sensors collecting new data, business models that reduce the cost and innovations that will improve the planet. She added that developed economies will rebuild old infrastructure to the point where in 20 years we may have replaced most current infrastructure.
Addressing talent
Mitchell is interested in closing the skills gap and ensuring that everyone is prepared for a 21st-century economy. Companies that bring solutions to this problem will be favored, Mitchell said.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Lawrence-based Sweet Jane magazine offers safe space for women to get candid about cannabis
Satisfying her own curiosity, Katy Ibsen penned an article on cannabis opportunities for publishers. “There were niche magazines being published, there were B2B magazines being published, there was ‘High Times’ and ‘Dope,’” Ibsen, now founder, editor and publisher of Sweet Jane magazine, said of her research for the piece. A 10-year publishing vet with a…
Cannabis founder’s advice: Weed out the bad seeds; run green startups like real businesses
Cannabis might seem like it presents a Wild West frontier for entrepreneurs looking to strike green, said Michael Wilson, but would-be founders must cultivate a plan grounded in common sense — and the law. “In the industrial hemp or marijuana space, if you want to build a successful business, run it like a real damn…
Show Me Hyperloop: Missouri panel confident it can win route with $300M+ test track
If Missouri wants to win the race for a Virgin Hyperloop One route connecting Kansas City and St. Louis, the Show Me State must foot the bill for a 12- to 15-mile test track that could cost taxpayers, the state and private partners more than $300 million, according to a new report. “This initial segment…
Cyber threats and opportunities: Why did 50+ KC schoolgirls get a peek at Fishtech’s high-security campus?
You never know when an opportunity will find you, Alex Vendetti told a group of Kansas City high school girls touring the Fishtech Group cybersecurity campus. “I was a hairstylist before this,” Vendetti, a project manager at Fishtech, told groups of students making their ways through the cybersecurity startup’s sprawling Martin City facilities Friday. The…
