Opening KC to black entrepreneurs begins with teaching startup lingo, tearing down walls
November 19, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Most entrepreneurs operate within silos, said Adrienne Haynes, noting that black-run startups face particular — though not insurmountable — challenges becoming embedded in the Kansas City startup scene.
Seemingly approachable community events and coworking spaces aren’t always as open as organizers think, added Quest Moffat, founder of Project United Knowledge, joining Haynes and Donald Hawkins, CitySmart founder, Friday for a BlackTech Weekend KC panel at the Mohart Multipurpose Center.

Adrienne Haynes, SEED Law; Donald Hawkins, CitySmart; Quest Moffat, Project United Knowledge; BlackTech Weekend KC
The trio of black startup leaders cited Plexpod Westport Commons, WeWork and 1 Million Cups among places where entrepreneurs congregate, but can often feel like exclusive clubs where outsiders are unwelcome.
“When I was [working in law school], I couldn’t go to 1 Million Cups,” said Haynes, founder of SEED Law. “Someone actually told me — this was a black entrepreneur — ‘Yeah, I’ll go to coffee with you after I see you at 1MC a couple more times.’ That could’ve been my opportunity to be like, ‘Oh, I guess I can’t participate.’ No way, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m gonna show that guy.’ That’s the kind of attitude that we have to have.”
The conversation should always be about how to break down walls, she added.
“All of the spaces in Kansas City are our spaces, and they can be spaces for [people of color] to have entrepreneurial relations too,” said Haynes. “It doesn’t have to be a black-only space, but that’s also important. I don’t want to negate that. It is important for us to get into a regular habit of having conversations about, ‘Man, it’s difficult to find resources. What are the best ways?’”
“[Entrepreneurship in black communities] ends with our silence,” she said.
Keep reading after the photo gallery:
The first step in infiltrating silos in startup culture is getting educated and learning the language, said Hawkins, founder of CitySmart, noting that wide gaps exist across the metro where resources and education relating to entrepreneurship is unavailable.
“[Entrepreneurs need to] talk with sophistication when in front of a venture capitalist,” he said. “I’m guilty of that as well — like when I first got started with entrepreneurship many years ago in Atlanta, I was constantly pitching, but the second someone would ask, ‘What kind of capital are you raising?’ I was like, ‘I’m going to get some coffee, I’ll be right back.’”
Many locally owned companies are challenged by their leaders’ inability to translate “venture-speak” or the startup lingo, added Moffat, noting that these specific firms only seek out connections to innovation when applying for grant funding.
“I think that these organizations could create an innovation liaison to reach out to other communities and work on translating the venture capital [language,]” he said.
Founders and small business owners should get the same approval and accolades as professional athletes, said Hawkins, with the navigating of territories that’s required of entrepreneurs.
“I put a lot of work into my business,” he added. “I think in 15 to 30 years, I would love to see people from Kansas City going to places like New York and bringing funding back, and to see exits every couple of months.”
That future doesn’t exist without the resource gaps getting filled, said Moffat.
“I would like to see a paradigm shift in Kansas City, where [entrepreneurs] are knocking down doors like Adrienne said, and finding everyone that has a checkbook,” he said. “We aren’t going to have a 20 or 30 year vision if we don’t build a foundation and start getting the capital and resources and start taking advantage of them.”
“If you have an idea and a strategic way of building it, there is someone in Kansas City that is willing to [help you get] to that multimillion dollar point,” he added.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Fresh off $200M funding haul, C2FO acquires India’s largest payment platform in bid to expand market position
Kansas City-built C2FO will continue to expand its global prowess with the acquisition of India-based Priority Vendor, the startup announced Thursday. “This is an important milestone in C2FO India’s journey,” said Pradeep Gode, C2FO’s country head for India, in a release about the acquisition of Priority Vendor — India’s largest early payment platform. The move…
Playing for tips and contacts: Artist-entrepreneurs travel across Midwest to fill PorchFestKC with music
Kansas City is a world-class destination for entrepreneurial musicians and artists hoping to hit high notes in business, said Dominic Roy. “I’m a singer-songwriter who’s trying to make it. I don’t want fame or glory or anything like that. I just want people to relate and I want people to feel what I’m trying to…
One-woman act with 68 stages: Kathryn Golden rallies 152 bands for PorchFestKC
A front porch concert isn’t the typical way to meet your neighbors, Kathryn Golden admitted, but it’s unconventional experiences like those that truly unite communities, the PorchFestKC founder said from atop a stoop in the Midtown Roanoke neighborhood. PorchFestKC — the city’s original porch-packed community music celebration, which returns Saturday for its fifth year —…
Is KC getting lapped? Kansas City scores No. 13 among Top 25 Midwestern cities in M25 ranking
Kansas City is maintaining a spot firmly in the middle of the pack among the top 25 Midwestern startup cities — in large part thanks to a $100-plus million growth equity investment in PayIt earlier this year, according to a new ranking by M25. The mega-round for Kansas City’s leading GovTech startup kept the City…







