(Video) ESHIP Summit attendees ask: Can entrepreneurial support efforts actually be sustainable?

July 13, 2018  |  Tommy Felts and Bobby Burch

ESHIP SUMMIT 2018 day 1 (14 of 32)

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.

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

    KC favorites eye World Cup: How to become ‘the spot’ for visitors without losing KC flavor

    By Tommy Felts | November 18, 2025

    Even a visitor can become a repeat customer, said Dulcinea Herrera, stressing the importance of Kansas City businesses making their establishments a destination — not just a one-time stopover or accidental find — for international fans and other out-of-town guests when the FIFA World Cup arrives next summer. The goal: Win them over with intentional…

    Meet LaunchKC’s winners: $60K prize today; world headquarters in KC tomorrow

    By Tommy Felts | November 18, 2025

    Every iconic company headquartered in Kansas City — from Helzberg Diamonds to Hallmark — started with an entrepreneur hoping to scale a small idea into big impact, said Jim Erickson, teasing a next wave of emerging startups and the latest winners of the LaunchKC grants competition. Eight early-stage companies were announced Monday as recipients of…

    Tesseract pairs one-button robotic badge with real-time, multi-industry workforce tracking 

    By Tommy Felts | November 18, 2025

    A new site management platform — complete with wearable robots designed to automatically document work as it happens — is expected to help construction, infrastructure, and military teams gain real-time clarity across their projects and workforce, said John Boucard. “Instead of relying on spreadsheets, manual reporting, or guesswork, leaders now have continuous visual and sensor…

    LISTEN: KoraLabs connects AI to the field, helping agtech grow a more sustainable future

    By Tommy Felts | November 15, 2025

    On this episode of our 12-part Plug and Play Topeka podcast series, we speak with Luca Corinzia of KoraLabs — an agtech pioneer based in Switzerland that’s bridging the gap between scattered farm data and actionable insights. KoraLabs’ AI-driven “digital twin” platform integrates field data, satellite imagery, soil and weather models to help agronomists and…