WATCH: No reason for ‘lone wolfing’ the startup grind, LaunchKC past winners say as application window narrows
June 28, 2018 | Startland News Staff
Editor’s note: This article is sponsored by LaunchKC but was independently produced by Startland News.
With a July 11 application deadline nearing, LaunchKC past winners emphasized the popular, high-profile grants contest is about much more than chasing a payday.
“There’s the community piece. There’s the exposure piece. But once you win — or even once you apply — you’re getting that support system behind you, the connections that you might need,” said Erika Klotz, whose firm PopBookings was among the first LaunchKC success stories in 2015. “It’s a startup essential. We wouldn’t be where we are if we didn’t have some sort of support system, if we were just lone wolfing it. That’s not a good path to take.”
LaunchKC applicants now are vying for eight awards of $50,000 and one $100,000 grand prize that will be doled out after a live pitch competition Oct. 12 at Techweek Kansas City. The program has already awarded $1.5 million to 29 startups over the past three years. Apply here.
Klotz, along with Jeff Rohr, CEO at SquareOffs, and Dominique Davison, CEO at PlanIT Impact, joined Startland’s Bobby Burch this week for a Facebook Live conversation about LaunchKC’s long-term impact on winning startups like theirs.
Most people in the entrepreneur community know about LaunchKC’s prize money and free office space for winners, said Rohr, but many don’t consider the quality of its programming.
“LaunchKC has done a great job of getting experts on various topics. These people really know what they’re talking about,” he said. “It’s good to just break out of the day-to-day and go to a two-hour lunch to pick up a tip or two on something you’re going to encounter.”
And it’s at such gatherings that startups come together, bonded by their early stage challenges and achievements, added Davison.
“Kansas City is really unique in how galvanized our community is around the technology and startup space, and LaunchKC is a critical part of that,” she said.
The program grew out of a recognition to support entrepreneurs, said Drew Solomon, senior vice president of business development at the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City. The City of Kansas City, Missouri, the area corporate community and the Missouri Technology Corporation all worked together to launch the initiative — not only to give startups a boost but also to flex Kansas City’s growing reputation as an innovative community.
Watch the Facebook Live conversation in its entirety below.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘Heartbreaking but empowering’: Nipsey Hussle’s life, death inspire entrepreneurs to action
The Marathon will continue, Wesley Hamilton said, echoing tens of thousands of mourners now pledging to keep alive the transcendent entrepreneurial spirit of rapper-turned-community leader Nipsey Hussle. Hamilton, founder and executive director of the KC-based nonprofit The Disabled But Not Really Foundation, was among a dozen or more Kansas City entrepreneurs in Los Angeles Thursday…
Inmate to business founder: Determination, Incorporated adds partner with lived experience
Determination, Incorporated’s new partner in compassion places a new lens on the impact the prison-to-founder non-profit could have, said Kyle Smith. “I’ve gotten this non-profit this far, but I can’t do it alone,” said Smith, founder of Determination, Incorporated, which uses entrepreneurship to curate new opportunities for formerly incarcerated people, on the addition of his…
How entrepreneurs are using podcasts to become thought leaders, empower founders
Audiences are moving from eyeballs to eardrums, said Addison Price, and entrepreneurs need to evolve their messaging to compete in a new arena of online engagement. “What’s going to happen when Instagram just isn’t Instagram anymore? What’s going to happen when your Facebook audience just migrates someplace else? Because it will happen,” said Price, podcast…
Open Belly podcast puts voices of immigrant chefs on the menu
Immigrant entrepreneurs have been quietly advancing Kansas City’s food scene for decades, said Danielle Lehman. “When I started hearing the stories of the chefs, I just felt like they were so compelling, and that food is really what connects us,” said Lehman, host of the “Open Belly” podcast and founder of marketing consultancy firm Boxer…

