MECA students to Goodwill: Everyone has a mission now — what else are you selling?
September 25, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Editor’s note: MECA Challenge and Startland News are both programs of the Kansas City Startup Foundation, though the content below was produced independently by Startland. For more information on the relationship, click here.
Goodwill must innovate and change with the times if it’s going to survive after 125 years in business, said Ed Lada.
“The average age of our shoppers has gone up half a year for the last five years on an aggregate level. Being a relatively young CEO, this petrifies me,” said Lada, the CEO for Goodwill stores across Missouri and Kansas. “This tells us that we are not attracting millennials and Gen Z shoppers or donors or even the volunteers at the events.”
Goodwill partnered with the Kansas City Startup Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to fostering entrepreneurship in Kansas City, to pose a question to area high school students last week during one of the foundation’s MECA Challenge events.
“We just want [students] to see that they can take a real complex problem and come up with a viable, maybe even radical solution,” said Katie Kimbrell, director of education at KCSF. “[Students need to know] that their ideas are valid, their ideas are valuable, and they have things to contribute to this world.”
The MECA Challenge — part of KCSF’s response to the challenge to build KC as the Most Entrepreneurial Community in America — is a one-day innovation competition for high school students across the greater Kansas City area who compete to pitch a solution to a real-life problem, across issues in social justice or the marketing of a particular company, in just two hours, said Kimbrell.
The students are put in groups with real-life entrepreneurs serving as mentors to guide discussion and provide expertise, she added.
“How do we bring in people like yourselves and people that aren’t engaged with the mission of Goodwill?” Lada asked 85 students participating in the challenge at the Sprint Accelerator.
“Right now, the brand of Goodwill is thrift. It doesn’t matter whether you’re one of my competitors, every thrift store is a ‘Goodwill,’” Lada said. “So how do you differentiate that? What I heard in that room was: leverage the brands and leverage the quality and leverage the shopping experience, which are three things that Goodwill does not do very well, but it’s what I’m trying to rectify.”
Some of the critical feedback from the students was difficult to hear, admitted Lada, but ultimately a validation of projects the CEO has put in motion over the past four months on the job.
“One striking comment was that they want organizations to have that mission component — but everybody now has that component,” he said. “That was a real interesting paradigm shift for me. For Goodwill, we always say that our mission is our biggest selling point — that’s why people are usually shop there and donate. But Gen Z tends to think about it differently in that, ‘We know that you have the mission and that’s great, but what else can you do?’”
MECA Challenge events present the opportunity for organizations like Goodwill to hear directly from the age group with which they most need to connect, said Adam Arredondo, the chief executive officer at KCSF. The program also connects students to other youths they might not otherwise have met, he added.
“This opportunity for the kids … I thought it was incredible,” Lada said. “Now for me as a business, it’s basically a free market test. You’re getting insight directly to a consumer base that you want to learn from and they’re giving you ideas about how you can improve your business and they think differently, they see things differently. So the amount of value added in that is tremendous as an organization.”
The climate in the world right now is very “us versus them,” said Lauren Conaway, KCSF’s director of operations. The earlier students can be exposed to differing viewpoints, the better.
“We have representations from suburban schools, private schools, and urban schools, and all of these groups that are going to have to work together to find a solution to fix a real problem,” said Conaway. “I think it’s going to be really impactful.”
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
PrairieFood grows power of its micro-carbon ag solution with a pipeline of human connection
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. LAWRENCE — Entrepreneurship is all about networking, Robert Herrington said. “You never know where a pivot or direction is going to come from,” said Herrington, an early member of the Pipeline…
C2FO marks $300B in funding for businesses as entrepreneurs navigate ongoing credit crunch
Rapid marketplace expansion in the first half of 2023 helped push Leawood-based C2FO — the world’s on-demand working capital platform — past the $300-billion mark in total funding to its customers. This record funding amount reflects invoices paid an average of 31 days early via C2FO’s platform. C2FO gets vital, low-cost capital into customers’ hands…
Froyo with a ’tini twist: Entrepreneur collaboration serves alcoholic frozen yogurt in KC
Kansas City is excited by the new flavor combinations popping up as two entrepreneurs give customers a taste of collaboration, said Isaac Collins, teasing a line of alcoholic frozen yogurt that’s already hitting cups in the metro. Through a partnership with KC-based Brain Freeze Mobile Daiquiri, Collins’ Yogurtini locations have begun a series of happy…
How Meshuggah Bagels ‘built a bakery without a recipe’ — now expanding to Liberty, Lawrence
Pete Linde tested 72 bagel recipes before hitting perfection with number 73, said Janna Linde. She knows because she tried every single test bagel. “Pete worked on that recipe for about a year. He had a notebook and took notes on every little tweak and modification he made. I’d see the big hand mixer come…



