Photos: KC Coworking Day sings virtues of big ideas in startup spaces

August 11, 2018  |  Tommy Felts

Eems, KC Coworking Day 2018

KC Coworking Day is a celebration of people whose vision exceeds their circumstances, said Bob Martin.

Bob Martin, iWerx

“If you’re an entrepreneur, and you have a vision, I hope your vision is so big that you’re uncomfortable sharing it with everybody — that there’s only a handful of people to whom you’re going to say, ‘This is what I’m going to do,’” Martin told a crowd gathered Thursday evening at Brookside Gardens for the third annual KC Coworking Day.

The event invited startup founders and leaders to take the stage and get vulnerable — detailing those scary big ideas that unite entrepreneurs — through quick-paced storytelling. For many presenters, it was an apt opportunity to laud the impact of the Kansas City coworking spaces that welcomed them along the way.

A partner at iWerx, an entrepreneur development center in North Kansas City, Martin’s frequent collaborators Mary Kay O’Connor, founder and CEO of PatientsVoices, and Pam Newton, Uncommon Relics Design Studio, were among those to discuss their journeys and the roles coworking played.

“I would suggest that it’s a celebration of survival, as much as it is a celebration of thriving,” Martin told the crowd in his introductory remarks.

Organized by the KC Coworking Alliance, the event provided a party-like atmosphere for members of the group’s 15-strong coworking businesses, which include iWerx, Cowork Waldo, Plexpod, WeWork, GridBridge Space, Office Evolution, 31w31 The Nonprofit Village, Corbin Mill Place, Eastside Collaborative, eCafe, Ennovation Center, the Enterprise Center in Johnson County, Firebrand Collective, and Spark KC.

Joining in the on-stage sharing were the event’s caterers, Mattie’s Foods and KC Cajun, who served up praise for their homebase, the Ennovation Center in Independence.

Check out photos of KC Coworking Day 2018 — including a glimpse of the closing performer, Eems — in the gallery 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

    Black farmers are losing ground in the fight to feed their communities, advocates say

    By Tommy Felts | March 27, 2025

    More than a century of systemic land dispossession and discriminatory practices has left Black farmers with less than 0.6 percent of U.S. farmland — less than a third of the 16 million acres they operated in 1910, according to local urban farming advocates.  They gathered Tuesday at Independence Boulevard Christian Church to confront this history…

    Cracking egg-flation: How farmers, substitute ingredients help restaurants mitigate price spike

    By Tommy Felts | March 27, 2025

    Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Kansas City PBS/Flatland, a member of the Kansas City Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, The Kansas City Beacon, and Missouri Business Alert. Click here to read the original story. Whether ordering an omelet, French toast, chicken n’ biscuits, chilaquiles, corned beef hash…

    Soccer tennis comes to KC ahead of World Cup; here’s how a weekend street festival is kicking it across the map

    By Tommy Felts | March 25, 2025

    Ryogoku Soccer Academy — with the help of local businesses like MADE MOBB, Café Ollama, and Café Cà Phê — is taking soccer from the pitch to the streets of Kansas City’s historic Northeast, Brad Leonard shared. As the metro gears up for hosting World Cup games in 2026, the neighborhood-based international school and soccer…

    KC celebs, sports icons and tech stars stick around; a hall of famer’s interviews reveal why

    By Tommy Felts | March 25, 2025

    Sportscaster Frank Boal could’ve just retired; his wife (and Kansas City’s pull) made other plans Former sports broadcaster and Pittsburgh native Frank Boal knows a thing or two about the pull of Kansas City, he shared. The longtime media personality moved here in 1981 for work and never left. Now, Boal and his wife, Sarah…