Hunting unicorns: C2FO spotlighted as startup likely to reach $1B valuation
February 12, 2019 | Startland News Staff
Leawood-based C2FO is among the nation’s highest-momentum startups, according to CB Insights and The New York Times, which teamed up to name 50 “future unicorns.”
The U.S. companies on the list — which analysts involved predict will eventually be valued at $1 billion or more — largely are based on the coasts. Twenty-two are in California, five in New York, and two in Massachusetts.
C2FO, a Kansas financial tech firm led by serial entrepreneur Sandy Kemper, is a notable exception.
The startup landed in the No. 1 slot on Startland’s list of Top Venture Capital-Backed Companies in 2018, as well as being named one of the publication’s Startups to Watch lists in 2016 and 2017.
C2FO has a total disclosed funding of about $200 million, having raised a $100 million round for global expansion in early 2018.
The median company on the CB Insights-New York Times list has $111.4M in total funding and has raised a Series C.
To identify companies, CB Insights and the New York Times analyzed companies’ financial health, traction, and strength of market.
The same approach was used for the 2015 version of the list, with 48 percent of the predictions resulting in unicorns, according to CB Insights.
Sandy and Christine Kemper — who together founded C2FO — were honored in 2017 as Regional Entrepreneurs of the Year by the University of Missouri Kansas City’s Henry W. Bloch School of Management.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Advocate envisions Plexpod ‘art village’ rebuilding KC culture at the intersection of art, business
An arts advocate in Kansas City hopes to partner with one of the metro’s leading community coworking spaces to create a haven for nearly 1,300 art entrepreneurs. GUILDit announced Thursday plans to develop an art village within Plexpod Westport Commons — featuring coworking, studios, a theater, and gallery — with a goal to rebuild art…
Legacy-filled eclair shop launches with crowds, pastry case lined with custom, unexpected treats
Chef Erin Luttrell recalls tales of lines out the door and around the block at her great-grandparents’ bakery in the 1920s — the inspiration behind her newly opened sweets shop on the historic Independence Square. “During the grain strike, people couldn’t get flour or bread or products to bake at home for their families, so they…
BLK + BRWN debuts KC’s first smart bookstore with a twist: ‘I wanted to be as Black as possible’
Kansas City’s newest Black woman-owned, brick-and-mortar bookstore in Midtown has opened its doors, but customers shouldn’t judge the operation by its cover, owner Cori Smith said, revealing an additional first for the metro that has heads and pages turning. “There’s a technological aspect paired with each book,” explained Smith, owner of BLK + BRWN — Kansas…


