‘Be the Boss’ invites probation, parole clients into entrepreneurial ecosystem

January 20, 2018  |  Tommy Felts

Kyle Smith, Be the Boss

Would-be entrepreneurs who are returning from incarceration shouldn’t feel excluded from Kansas City’s startup ecosystem, Kyle J. Smith said.

Be the Boss, a support group launching next month under Smith’s leadership, aims to provide a welcoming environment free from the stigma associated with a criminal history, he said.

“When we’re being honest about the elephant in the room, people can breathe a little easier. And we can also figure out how to deal with their specific needs,” said Smith, senior communications coordinator at KCSourceLink and a community organizer for Kansas City’s One Million Cups.

While all local programs and resources for early stage entrepreneurs technically are already open to probation and parole clients, more can be done to attract talent from the pool of 350 citizens who return from incarceration to the Kansas City area each month, he said.

The idea is not only to strengthen the entrepreneur community, but to build businesses that ultimately will employ even more people returning from prison, Smith said. It’s an outcome that would reduce recidivism all around, he said.

“Like a lot of people, I look out at the criminal justice system and think about all of the folks who are incarcerated in the United States, and just say, ‘Wow. What a huge mess.’ It feels like there’s not much we can do as regular people,” Smith said. “Then it struck me that there was something small that I could do to help people here in Kansas City by leveraging the ecosystem and the connections that already exist.”

Be the Boss is expected to convene the second and fourth Thursdays of each month at the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s Innovation Center. A session for first-timers is set for 6:30 p.m., followed by the full group at 7 p.m., Smith said. The curriculum is based on self-preparation, business feasibility and goal setting.

“For those folks who might not be ready to take that next step down their entrepreneurial endeavor, if they still want to hang out and think through their business ideas, they can loop it in, and have a nice, supportive system where they can gain understanding of the entrepreneur mindset and the rigors of owning a business,” he said.

Smith’s approach requires cooperation between members of the entrepreneur and re-entry communities to address the unique challenges of returning citizens, he said.

“Yeah, the idea of starting a business is cool, but some of these folks are still trying to figure out housing, transportation and jobs,” he said. “The re-entry community is really big on getting folks into good, stable, living-wage jobs, if at all possible, so they have the support they need.”

Inspired by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s Zero Barriers initiative and developed through UMKC’s E-Scholars, the program will serve as a test to see what kinds of entrepreneur support that probation and parole clients find most useful, he said. Smith’s long-term goal is to create a program to hire returning citizens to help fight blight in Kansas City, while teaching them entrepreneurial skills so they can become job creators, he said.

“I know when I actually start working with people through Be the Boss that I’m going to learn all sorts of things about what this looks like in real life,” Smith said. “I anticipate having to figure a lot of it out as each of these obstacles make themselves apparent. But so far in my research, I’ve been really impressed by the generosity of the entrepreneur community.”

Through his podcast, Prison or ESHIP, Smith further explores the power of entrepreneurship to reduce recidivism, he said.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Report: Missouri startups continue hiring surge, creating 40K+ jobs in every corner of the state

    By Tommy Felts | March 6, 2024

    Editor’s note: KCSourceLink and MOSourceLink are non-financial, community partners of Startland News. Missouri startups across the state created 40,169 jobs in 2022, according to the latest data, nearly matching the surge in the number of jobs they generated in 2021. Taking into consideration the number of employees these same firms hired in 2018 and in…

    Vytelle expands hoofprint for its cattle IVF tech ‘closer to home,’ opening lab in Kearney, Nebraska

    By Tommy Felts | March 5, 2024

    A new lab space for Kansas City-based Vytelle is expected to help the precision livestock startup increase regional accessibility to modern reproduction technology and enable the possibility of fresh embryo transfers for producers across the Midwest, said Kerryann Kocher. Vytelle — the fastest-growing in vitro fertilization (IVF) company — on Monday announced the opening of…

    Now serving foodpreneurs: KC conference dishes out 30+ sessions for new, growing food businesses

    By Tommy Felts | March 5, 2024

    Launching a food business comes with unique challenges, Xander Winkel shared, and the Mid-Continent Public Library has partnered with several local organizations to help those specialized entrepreneurs find their recipe to success. The Food Business Conference — free workshops, panel discussions, and networking opportunities for “foodpreneurs” that are offered in partnership with the library, Kansas…

    New home on Ward Parkway: $4M minority chamber project brings Black, Brown entrepreneurs under one banner

    By Tommy Felts | March 5, 2024

    A history-making project on Ward Parkway — said to be the first minority-owned property on the storied Kansas City thoroughfare — already is demonstrating the power of unity amid divisive times, said Kim Randolph. Unveiled to the public Saturday, the new Minority Chamber of Commerce Development Center at 9100 Ward Parkway is now home to both…