Proactive hometown company-building will cross county, state lines with Fountain Innovation Fund, ECJC leader says
February 14, 2019 | Elyssa Bezner
It’s time for Kansas City stakeholders to stop waiting for coastal companies to “save the day,” said George Hansen.
“We spend a great deal of tax dollars trying to entice companies to move here with their workforce,” Hansen, president and CEO of the Enterprise Center in Johnson County, told a crowd of about 100 gathered Tuesday for a Fountain Innovation Fund dinner. “We are rarely successful [with this tactic] and when we are, they take form as branch offices or distribution centers. We love those, but they are far from a panacea. We need resident, fast-growing enterprises. We’ve got to grow.”
The presence of large corporations does not translate to high net job creation rates for Kansas City, he added, noting that placing confidence in corporations like Cerner and Garmin as indicators of economic growth is shaky ground.
“Companies are acquired and merged with unpredictable outcomes,” he said. “New and fast growing businesses must come along to take their place, share growth, and provide a place for our kids to stay.”
The ECJC announced its intention to capitalize the Fountain Innovation Fund — a bi-state initiative to support Midwest startups through a $5 million evergreen fund — in early 2018. The fund is currently supported by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and the federal government, said Hansen, noting the fund accepts tax-deductible donations.
Click here to read more about the Kauffman Foundation’s new effort: a $3 million Capital Access Lab.
The Fountain Innovation Fund is expected to cross county and state lines with its investments, he added, noting its intent to fuel indirect and direct jobs in the greater Kansas City community.
“Our high-potential kids are leaving and we’ve got to reverse that trend,” he said.
Click here to read more about the ECJC’s efforts with the Fountain Innovation Fund.
The evergreen fund — which employs a model that reinvests returns from portfolio companies — is expected to provide a “continuum of capital” to entrepreneurs disadvantaged by the gap that exists between the idea stage and the Series A stage, he said. The self-sustaining fund is expected to not have to return to stakeholders or investors for a top-up, he added.
“We’ve got to close the obvious holes we have in seed capital that thwart our attempts at being the ‘Most Entrepreneurial City in America’ — which we claim we want to be,” Hansen said. “It falls on us.”
“We have a responsibility to pass success on and reach back to give a hand to the next man or woman up,” he added.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
From the pitch to the Plaza: KC Current flipping the switch on new retail shop in iconic shopping district
Add team gear to the holiday shopping list this weekend. The Kansas City Current is kicking off a new permanent retail shop on the Country Club Plaza — just in time for the 2025 Plaza Lighting Ceremony. The Current Shop is set to open Wednesday, Nov. 26, in the former Starbucks building at 302 Nichols…
Kauffman wraps three fast-paced rounds of capacity building: Meet the year’s final grantees
A revised strategy to help nonprofit organizations strengthen their internal effectiveness and long-term stability — while still aligning with the Kauffman Foundation’s focus areas — next must showcase outcomes, said Allison Greenwood Bajracharya, announcing a final round of capacity building grant winners for 2025. Built with intentional versatility, capacity building grants are meant to meet…
Five stocking stuffer gift ideas that brew support for women-owned KC businesses
Editor’s note: The following holiday feature is presented by nbkc bank, where small businesses find big support [divide] Shopping with intention this season is just one way Kansas City gift-givers can squeeze local impact into each nook and cranny of those holiday stockings, said Melissa Eggleston, highlighting a sleigh-ful of women-owned businesses shoppers should bank…
Their brands survived legal bruises; here’s what still keeps these founders up at night
A brand worth building is worth safeguarding, said Bo Nelson, joining a chorus of battle-tested entrepreneurs at GEWKC who encouraged emerging business owners to trademark their own peace of mind early by locking down intellectual property — like designs, names and unique processes — from the start. “If you do have something that you genuinely,…

