$300K Kauffman grant will keep no-cost LaunchCode coding classes in KC another two years

February 22, 2019  |  Austin Barnes

Jeffrey Mazur, LaunchCode

Sourced in community building through enhanced access to resources, a grant from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation will allow LaunchCode Kansas City to continue its training program for at least two additional years, the program announced Thursday.

“It’s very exciting. We know that it’s, in part, through the vision of the Kauffman Foundation that LaunchCode could start up in Kansas City [in 2015] and that vision continues now — to help us build and grow,” Jeffrey Mazur, LaunchCode executive director, told a crowd during the graduation ceremony for the program’s most recent class.

Jeffrey Mazur and Kevin Kickham, LaunchCode

Jeffrey Mazur and Kevin Kickham, LaunchCode

In total, the Kauffman grant will provide LaunchCode with $300,000 to help sustain the program, explained Kevin Kickham, director of institutional giving at LaunchCode.

“There are bootcamps out there that charge people — we don’t charge a dime,” Kickham said. “We are tremendously grateful that the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation believed in that mission and made it possible to get started.”

Click here to learn more about and to apply for coming LaunchCode classes.

A “cornerstone” of the program, LaunchCode might not exist if it weren’t for the open minds at Kauffman, Mazur said.

“We’re forever grateful for their deep and generous support,” he told the crowd in acknowledgement of the impact the grant could have on emerging tech talent in Kansas City.

Additionally, Mazur announced VMLY&R as the largest hiring partner of LaunchCode Kansas City.

Click here for more about how the ongoing partnership has impacted graduates.

“Without the folks who hire people from our program, the whole thing collapses,” Mazur said.

Such an acknowledgment is a reflection of the full-service marketing firm’s commitment to serving as a compiler for coding talent in the metro, he said.

Five of LaunchCode’s fall 2018 graduates began work at VMLY&R this week, the company said.

Thursday’s ceremony graduated more than 80 coders from the no-cost program — the first group since LaunchCode began a new on-campus partnership with Rockhurst University in 2018, LaunchCode said.

Rockhurst will continue to host LaunchCode classes, the university announced during the ceremony.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Brad Starnes, Splitsy

    Splitting time between student, entrepreneur lives earns Splitsy co-founder top UMKC honor

    By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2022

    Recognition as UMKC’s Student Entrepreneur of the Year is a reminder that innovators often begin early, said Brad Starnes, one of Kansas City’s most-talked-about emerging young startup founders. “When I was about 8 years old, I submitted a drawing to an engineering firm,” said the co-founder of Splitsy, a bill splitting app that launched its…

    Sam Kulikov, Jeremy Terman, LJ Browne, Mark Josey and Alex Laughlin, Kansas City Pioneers

    Why this KC esports startup is betting on a gambling app to scale into new NFT, cryptocurrency levels

    By Tommy Felts | February 9, 2022

    The Kansas City Pioneers became the first professional esports organization to step into the head-to-head gaming and gambling sphere thanks to its pairing with PLLAY Labs — an AI-based wagering platform. “We see this partnership as a tremendous opportunity to tap into a community of folks who love competition — and then inject the KC…

    Nick Carter, Market Wagon

    Can tech save the family farm? E-commerce farmers market plants seeds in Kansas City

    By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2022

    An Indianapolis-based startup is planting seeds of change it hopes can enhance the ways growers and producers get their products into the hands of customers. Kansas Citians are harvesting from it in bushels.  “This is definitely a business of passion for me,” Nick Carter said, recalling his upbringing and days spent on his family’s farm…

    TripleBlind team 2021

    ‘Everybody at TripleBlind is better than me,’ founder says as top startup’s global team firewalls groupthink

    By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2022

    Startup companies are on a continual mission to create, define and own the category in which they operate within, Riddhiman Das noted, and to do so — startup founders must build a proficient team.  “If you’re not the category-defining company, then it’s not as big a win. Categories are typically defined at the global level,…