Human capital: KC Mythbusters challenges Kansas City to rethink how it supports startups
October 18, 2018 | Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts
A thriving startup ecosystem requires more stakeholders with skin in the game, said Eric Jorgenson.
That means increasing direct participation — those actively and directly building or investing in startups that can potentially exit and see a talent and capital explosion that results in even newer startups — and de-emphasizing the need for and dependence on support networks, he added.
“[Startup ecosystems increase in size] not because of the supporters, but because of the participants that create that feedback loop,” said Jorgenson, director of growth for Kansas City-based Zaarly, an innovative home services marketplace.
Six years into a professional life he’d previously built in Silicon Valley, Jorgenson said, he realized institutional support for startups that had chosen to develop on the West Coast was nothing short of non-existent — and yet the ecosystem continued to flourish.
It’s a system that relies on less talk and more action — a model from which Kansas City can learn, he bluntly told the crowd at “KC Mythbusters — Entrepreneurial Ecosystem: Fact or Fiction,” a light-hearted NBKC-hosted program during Techweek Kansas City.
The Silicon Valley approach he described requires “putting your human or financial capital into the creation of a company with exponential growth possibility,” Jorgenson said.
Rounded out by a panel of Kansas City entrepreneurs and startup champions — including Zach Pettet, managing director of Fountain City Fintech; Erika Klotz, CEO of PopBookings; and Shelley Armato, CEO of MySmartPlans, in addition to Jorgenson — KC Mythbusters challenged the foursome to argue whether common misconceptions about Kansas City’s startup ecosystem were myths.
Friend-turned-temporary rival Pettet disputed Jorgenson’s downplaying of the role support networks and resources play in Kansas City’s entrepreneur community.
“There are daily things that we need to do to jumpstart our engine as an entrepreneurial ecosystem in Kansas City,” Pettet said. Chief among them, growing more startups to the point of exit.
Such Kansas City resources as accelerators, incubators, and non-profit organizations also help correct structural imbalances in the startup ecosystem, Pettet said, in turn, allowing the metro to thrive in ways Silicon Valley doesn’t: communally.
“Having things like Digital Sandbox, these kinds of public-private tracks to get you at least a little bit of traction to prove out your concept and actually have that conversation with the person investing in the company — I think that’s really, really important,” Pettet said.
Members of the panel agreed on at least one point during the mini-debate: Creating a feedback cycle wherein successful startups beget new businesses and opportunities is critical to establishing a stable, long-term ecosystem in the metro.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Survivor, innovator Kim Gandy rewards patients for sticking to treatments
In her 20 years working as a transplantation clinician, Kim Gandy found it baffling that a seemingly simple problem had such a difficult time finding a solution. Transplant patients consistently struggled to adhere to their health regimens, resulting not only in significant costs for care providers but also death. “We were literally losing patients,” Gandy…
Kansas City to host national student entrepreneur competition
Kansas City will soon host a national competition for student entrepreneurs. Set for March 6 and 7 at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards will bring its top 25 national finalists to Kansas City. To qualify, student entrepreneurs must be the primary operator of a business less than six years old…
Area experts dive into uncertainty and hope for immigrant entrepreneurship
Now more than ever, it’s important for the community to come together to gain new perspectives. That notion was a driving force behind the February Innovation Exchange in which Startland News dove into the subject of immigration and entrepreneurship. Hosted in partnership with Think Big, the event welcomed a researcher and a policy expert from…
Analysis from binge watching six-months of 1 Million Cups KC
Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Every Wednesday morning in over 100 communities nationwide, two entrepreneurs present a six-minute profile of their companies to a diverse audience, followed by 20 minutes of open Q&A. Last July, I binge-watched 1 Million Cups Kansas City’s 51 presentations from January 1 to…


