KC Tech Specs report: Net gain of 11,000 workers for KC, but 3,000 jobs remain unfilled

May 16, 2018  |  Tommy Felts

Cerner

Kansas City’s brain gain grew at three times the rate of Chicago in 2017, according to a new report from the KC Tech Council.

Isolated to tech jobs, the city’s pool of workers swelled by 11,000, the KC Tech Specs 2018 report said, though a shortage of skilled professionals remains.

“The Kansas City tech industry is growing faster than all other industries in KC,” according to the report. “Its momentum is greater than most competing cities’ tech industries. We’re outpacing the national average for tech industry growth, and we are beating out cities like ours by attracting in-demand, skilled talent.”

“But, with more than 3,000 unfilled jobs, we need to find ways to fuel even more growth,” it continued. “The Kansas City regional economy depends on the tech industry more than the state economies of either Kansas or Missouri, with the tech sector contributing almost twice as much to our bi-state, regional economy than it does to the overall economy of the state of Kansas, for example.

KC Tech Specs

KC Tech Specs 2018 report

Focusing on the current state of the metro’s tech community, the report shows a path forward for Kansas City by balancing successes with the opportunity to overcome challenges in such areas as wage and skilled labor gaps, as well as cultivating under-represented segments of the workforce, said Ryan Weber, KC Tech Council president.

“Kansas City’s momentum is driving the growth of our tech industry,” Weber said. “What this all comes down to is how do we as a city and a region position ourselves to attract, retain and grow a robust tech workforce. ”

Paying less than the national average — anywhere between 4 percent and 13 percent below it, in fact — doesn’t help, the report said.

KC Tech Council Ryan Weber

Weber

“It’s imperative that we recognize we’re competing for this talent on a national level — and compensate them appropriately,” the report said. “Paying in-demand, skilled workers at rates closer to the national average will enable us to pull from bigger markets and retain our local talent.”

Kansas City continues to be ranked No. 2 as a best city for women in tech — in part because the wage gap between the sexes in the metro flips the script on the nation conversation about pay. (Female tech workers, on average, are paid more than their male counterparts in KC, according to numerous reports.)

But what could move KC to No. 1 in such rankings?

Improving growth of female representation in seniority positions within the tech scene across the city, the report answers.

“Women in leadership is particularly helpful, with revenues rising along with female leaders to the tune of almost 4 percent,” the report said. “Troublingly, the tech industry has the lowest rate of female board membership of the industries surveyed. Kansas City suffers from the same problem. In fact, if you divide tech jobs in Kansas City by seniority, as the level rises, the number of women in those jobs declines. In contrast, the number of job openings rises with seniority. In short, we need more women at the top, but our pool actually decreases.”

The KC Tech Council partnered with leading Kansas City marketing firm VML to produce the KC Tech Specs 2018, which was released Tuesday.

“To flourish in the future, we can’t rest now. Kansas City is a town built on twin values: vision and function,” the report said. “As a city, we’ve traditionally leveraged the most advanced tech of the day, whether it was the steamer or the railroad, and our position at the crossroads of the country to prosper as a community. That industrious spirit is alive in Kansas City today. By embracing our tech industry in the following three key ways, we can position our city as a hub of innovation for years to come.”

KC Tech Specs 2018 report

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

    WIRED women Kansas City

    WIRED together: How mentorship led 22 women to a million-dollar investment

    By Tommy Felts | March 6, 2019

    Collaboration among like-minded women forms a dangerous advantage, said Sheryl Vickers and Audrey Navarro. The duo helped found WIRED — Women in Real Estate Development — to foster mentorship and investment among women in the male-dominated and individualistic commercial real estate world. “We believe we have a leg up in the industry because that siloed,…

    Carlanda McKinney, Raaxo

    Founder facing gender bias: Don’t call me a victim; call me investors

    By Tommy Felts | March 6, 2019

    It’s like pulling teeth to get key investors and resource organizations to help push female entrepreneurs forward, said Carlanda McKinney, citing implicit bias and a lack of effective support mechanisms. “I don’t think it’s intentional at all. I think it’s a byproduct,” said McKinney, co-founder of Raaxo, an online tech platform used to design and…

    Darcy Howe, KCRise Fund; Lesa Mitchell, Techstars KC; Melissa Roberts, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, female entrepreneurs Kansas City

    Even gatekeepers struggle to bring KC’s women-led companies in from the cold

    By Tommy Felts | March 6, 2019

    Female entrepreneurs are falling behind as a new generation of highly-scalable startups rises in the Kansas City, said Darcy Howe, reporting too few women-led firms even approaching KCRise Fund for investment. “My experience with those ‘Hey, I hear you have money’ calls that I do get [from female entrepreneurs] — many of them are not…

    ScaleUP! Kansas City ninth cohort

    ScaleUP! KC reveals new 15-member cohort of growing businesses; touts alumni successes

    By Tommy Felts | March 5, 2019

    Entrepreneurs joining the latest ScaleUP! Kansas City cohort represent ventures from such varied business sectors as photography, construction, design, counseling, film and engineering, said Jill Meyer. An ability to scale knows no single industry, emphasized Meyer, program director of ScaleUP! KC. “This program has shown us, time and time again, that not only can you…