We Create KC report: Startup investment soared to $540M in 2017
April 6, 2018 | Tommy Felts
A startling statistic for those who think capital merely flies over the Midwest: Kansas City saw a 69 percent increase in startup investment from 2016 to 2017, according to KCSourceLink’s We Create KC report.
All told, early-stage businesses classified by KCSourceLink as startups — typically defined as those with 20 or fewer employees — nabbed about $540 million in 2017 (compared to $319 million in 2016), the study said.
Such totals include traditional investments, as well as funding via Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Launch KC and Digital Sandbox KC grants, KCSourceLink officials said.
“We are trending in the right direction. We see an increase in capital, and we are working to fill holes in funding resources all across the capital continuum,” said Maria Meyers, founder of KCSourceLink and executive director of the UMKC Innovation Center. “Our role at KCSourceLink is to continue to respond to the needs of our entrepreneurs, helping them connect with resources to get deal-ready and connect with the right type of funding at the right time.”
Almost half of the capital resources for early-stage entrepreneurs are new since 2013, according to KCSourceLink’s research.
The startup investment surge dovetails with other data points in the We Create report, including those noting a 290 percent increase in access to capital in the past five years, and an average of 16,376 jobs created annual by first-time (startup) employers in Kansas City.
KCSourceLink’s report not only details such trends, it seeks to illustrate the role the network plays in supporting entrepreneurs through access to capital, the idea pipeline, awareness and corporate engagements. Check out the full report here.
The organization made 9,425 connections via its hotline and email in 2017 (up by more than 2,000 from 2016), according the report, and 70 percent of companies that received funding in 2017 were assisted in some manner by the KCSourceLink network.
“We know that the right connections matter to entrepreneurs and that entrepreneurs matter to Kansas City’s economic growth,” Meyers said. “Having the right resource at your back is critical for the survival and growth of Kansas City startups and small businesses.”

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Leanlab launches edtech certification with focus on accountability to classrooms
A new product certification from Leanlab Education means increased transparency for edtech companies — as well as added credibility for their work within schools. “We want to give teachers and school administrators a quick way to understand if an edtech product reflects the insights of educators, students, and parents — the true end users in education — and…
Actor David Dastmalchian fought his own demons; now the KC native is sending ’80s-inspired monsters to you
Growing up in Kansas City, David Dastmalchian was enamored with his hometown’s most shadowy corners: its fabled haunted houses, the shelves of Clint’s Comics, “Crematia Mortem’s Friday” on local TV, and even his Overland Park neighborhood’s mystical-seeming creeks and forests. Each of these childhood haunts planted a seed for the Hollywood actor’s latest project —…
MoodSpark buys defunct startup’s IP, minds focused on disrupting elderly veterans’ depression
A slew of new patents and tools are now in the hands of a KCK-rooted startup that aims to protect aging military veterans that suffer from loneliness, anxiety and depression. MoodSpark has acquired assets previously held by California-based Dthera Sciences — an early leader of the digital therapeutics space, known for its innovative quality of life…
Built to last, bought with intention: How JE Dunn set supplier diversity as a cornerstone
Editor’s note: The following story was sponsored by KC Rising, a regional initiative to help Kansas City grow faster and more intentionally, as part of a campaign to promote its CEO-to-CEO Challenge on supplier diversity. Approaching supplier diversity for the long haul means defining the work — without limiting it, said Jason Banks, describing how Kansas City-based construction icon JE…

