(Video) ESHIP Summit attendees ask: Can entrepreneurial support efforts actually be sustainable?
July 13, 2018 | Tommy Felts and Bobby Burch
When more than 600 attendees gathered this week in Kansas City for the second ESHIP Summit, they each came with their own ecosystems, businesses, local governments and support networks in mind.
They also brought questions.
“What are they doing in their cities? What’s worked and what hasn’t worked? What can we adopt back at home to learn about new resources?” asked Deloris Wilson, an inclusive innovation fellow at BEACON: The DC Women Founders Initiative.
The three-day conference organized by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation sought answers to how entrepreneurs and their supporters can rethink an economic model that currently fails to provide equity in access to business success.
Planned as an unconventional gathering of innovators, mayors, community builders, economic development leaders, 1 Million Cups leaders, researchers and educators, ESHIP provided an opportunity for people like Wilson flesh out common challenges — like sustainability among initiatives aimed at entrepreneur support.
“A lot of the work — and a lot of the organizations that are in a similar space that I’ve met — are relatively new, probably within the past five years. I have not yet met someone that is like ‘We’ve been doing this for 20 years,’” Wilson said.
Locally, KCSourceLink has come close. The entrepreneur resource network celebrated 15 years in Kansas City in June.
The Kauffman Foundation was founded in 1966.
Hear more takeaways from Wilson and other attendees in the video below.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
PresentR taps the Kinect to boost public-speaking skills
A Kansas City startup is plugging into popular gaming technology to improve users’ public speaking skills. Founded by Tim Wikstrom, PresentR taps Microsoft’s Kinect to analyze a presentation, scrutinizing everything from poor posture to counting how many times you say “um.” Founded in 2013, PresentR’s tech evaluates a user’s eye contact, gestures, voice and posture to…
Niall goes ‘all in’ on new retail location, high-tech pen
Well-known in Kansas City for gifting Royals manager Ned Yost a snazzy timepiece, Niall will soon be offering a host of new luxury products — including a high-tech pen — and a new store to feature them. Led by CEO Mike Wilson, Niall on Wednesday announced an expansion of its product line to include a…
Cue the palpitations: Bobby’s taking a (free) coding class
Only a few weeks in Kansas City, and LaunchCode is already making good on its promise to improve the area’s coding competency with a free, 16-week computer science course. And this mathematically-challenged, technically-inept journalist is going to do his best not to embarrass himself while attempting to learn the science of computing. Open to all…
