ProjectUK introducing specialty accelerator’s latest cohort Oct. 10 at Travois
October 3, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Project United Knowledge is the only Kansas City accelerator that truly fosters collaboration between entrepreneurs and those in the industry establishment, said Quest Moffat.
“It’s the biggest and most dramatic reason that we’re different from other accelerators in the Midwest region,” said Moffat, ProjectUK founder. “Co-building is where the corporation and the people that run the program actually work together to make the idea come to life.”
The accelerator plans to introduce the eight founders participating in its latest cohort on Oct. 10 at Travois with a kickoff event for ProjectUK, said education and outreach manager Rebecca Dove. The names of the companies in the accelerator were not released in advance.

Quest Moffat and Rebecca Dove, Project United Knowledge
The cohort can expect a heavy emphasis on the Lean Canvas business validation model, she said.
“We want to make sure that if [a founder goes] to different programs in the city, that they have spoken to a wide variety of people and received feedback about different parts of their Lean Canvas — whether it was with the problem, financial model, the revenue,” she added.
The curriculum includes language targeting the urban core community, said Dove, though being an underserved entrepreneur is not a requirement to join the accelerator.
“We have a specific target because those individuals have a difficulty getting into the market as well as finding clients, so we want to be a way to help them reduce that gap,” she said.
The businesses in the new cohort solve problems in areas ranging from e-commerce, prison reform, and food trucks, she said. The Oct. 10 event is expected to begin with company pitches, she added.
“It won’t be a full demo; it’s really a way for the community to understand when they started and what their platform is,” Dove said. “Additionally, this is a way for people to understand [ProjectUK’s] story much better, so Quest will speak on that.”
Then the event will turn to networking, with food and drink provided, she said.
Hosted by Travois, a firm dedicated to creating affordable homes and economic developments for minorities, including Alaska natives, and native Hawaiian, Dove and Moffat said, reflects a partnership that has been a long time in the making.
“They’ve always wanted to help us out with a fundraiser or community event, and since the Travois center strategically focuses on native American communities, which is one of the largest underserved population of the United States, we felt that it would be a great opportunity to build relationships with like minded individuals that actually care about the community,” said Moffat.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Honey bunches of joy: How this Raytown bee farm landed its blooming business model
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. Erik and Rachael Messner’s home on an acre in south Kansas City gave…
Startup Weekend winners could have a billion-dollar solution for struggling taxpayers
Organizers of Missouri Startup Weekend predicted this year’s winner could be poised to be the competition’s next billion-dollar alumni. Solvtax presented the weekend’s winning pitch: a solution for avoiding financial implications through better business and personal property tax management. The idea struck a chord with entrepreneurs, founders, and CEOs in both the audience and judge’s…
KU spinout earns $180K+ in prizes at business plan competition; students going full-time with startup
LAWRENCE, Kansas — A sustainable engineering startup that emerged from the University of Kansas took fifth place in a recent business competition at Rice University in Houston, earning more than $180,000 in prizes and an opportunity to make history for the founders’ alma mater. Icorium Engineering, the first-ever team from Kansas to compete in the…
Coffee shop owner (and superhero super fan) pours himself into the pages of Darkmoon Comics
Mike Gladney might not be living in the Marvel or DC universes, but he is dwelling within the realm of his own dream world surrounded by comic books, he shared. Gladney — and his wife, Vania — own Comic Coffeehouse in Olathe, and now he’s also the editor-in-chief for Kansas City-based Darkmoon Comics. “I’m doing…
