CB Insights calls KCRise most active VC in Kansas; Fund credits work of small team, innovative portfolio startups
February 7, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Kansans don’t fear hard work, said Darcy Howe.
An investment in such a mindset has come with big returns for the KCRise Fund, newly proclaimed the most active venture capital fund in the Sunflower State, according to CB Insights.

Darcy Howe, KCRise Fund
“Perhaps overused but Margaret Mead’s quote, ‘Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world,’” Howe said in response to the distinction.
Deposited into Kansas City’s startup scene in 2016, the KCRise Fund was born when civic leaders came together in attempt to solve economic malaise in the metro, calling for more support behind the KC Rising initiative — a 20 year vision plan for Kansas City prosperity and economic growth, launched in 2014 — Howe explained.
“They asked business and civic folks to come problem solve together,” she said of what sets the KCRise Fund and Kansas City apart from other VC matching firms.
Notable KCRise portfolio companies in Kansas include: ShotTracker, SquareOffs, and Life Equals –– all companies that earned spots on Startland’s list of 12 Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2019, based largely on their likelihood of big news this year.
Click here to read more about Startups to Watch in 2019, which also included the fund’s portfolio firm Pepper IoT on the Missouri side of the state line.
“Promising entrepreneurs are coming to us every day with disruptive ideas in sectors like transportation, logistics, agriculture tech and IoT – verticals where KC already has a national reputation. We know KCRise can continue to be a conduit to capital nationwide and open doors for the next generation of KC startups,” added Ed Frindt, KCRise fund principal.
KCRise Fund additionally boasts such KCMO success stories as Backlot Cars — which posted an $8 million Series A funding round in late 2018 — and PayIt, named a GovTech 100 company three years running, the fund said.
“This is not only a testament to KCRise Fund, but to the many innovative companies being built by inspiring entrepreneurs in the KC region,” said Chad Feather, KCRise Fund analyst. “I am excited not only about the future of KCRise Fund, but the future of the entire KC entrepreneurial ecosystem.”
St. Louis-based Cultivation Capital was named the most active fund in Missouri, the report said.

2019 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…

