KC Rising update: Kansas City falling short in economic race with peer markets
March 3, 2019 | Tommy Felts
Bill Gautreaux sounded the alarm with a mixed refrain meant as a KC Rising call to action: “We’re good, but we’re not good enough.”
Throughout a recent KC Rising update on the region’s economic growth, Gautreaux and other KC Rising leaders championed Kansas City’s efforts to move the needle, while also lamenting the slow speed at which the region is positioning itself among competitors.
“We are progressing — and we’ve seen growth in every measure we track — but we’re simply not moving fast enough relative to our peers and our own horizon for KC,” said Gautreaux, KC Rising co-chair and managing partner at MLP Holdings.
Click here for a full report on the KC Rising findings.
Local economists present a positive forecast for the region, said Sandy Price, KC Rising co-chair and a retired Sprint executive, but Kansas City’s growth isn’t yet meeting the expectations set by the organization.
Click here for more about KC Rising and its mission.
“The vision for KC Rising is that our region will be among the top 10 of our peer cities in three important measures: gross regional product, median household income, and the number of quality jobs,” Price said. “This is how we measure our success, as well as our inclusivity.”
Yet Kansas City has fallen short in all three metrics, she and Gautreaux agreed. KC Rising’s findings found the region 20th on GDP; 16th on income; and 13th on jobs.
Keep reading below the KC Rising data.
“Often in business today, we work in quarterly or annual time spans,” said Gautreaux. “That focus on shorter-term results does not translate well when were solving for regional GDP, jobs, income and inclusion.”
Price, however, noted several encouraging trends:
- Kansas City’s economy grew in 2017 and 2018;
- Retail in in the KC Fed District was up strongly, year over year in Q4 2018; and
- Manufacturing, wholesale trade, professional and high tech sectors are in strong expansion phases.

Neal Sharma, KC Rising
“There is much work left do for our city, and it will take all of us together to get it done,” added Neal Sharma, incoming co-chair of KC Rising and CEO and co-founder of DEG. “I’ve been a Kansas City resident for most of my life. I built my business here. I’m raising my family here. And there have been times in our past, in my lifetime, where we didn’t lack the skills or the talent or the work ethic required to build a brighter future — we had that in spades. What it felt like we lacked was the confidence — even though we knew in our hearts we had what it takes.”
Kansas City still has time to make an impact toward achieving KC Rising’s ambitious goals, but the community must act quickly, he emphasized.
“Right now is the fastest rate of change any of us have ever experienced in our lives,” Sharma said. “And at the same time, it is the slowest it will ever be for the rest of our lives.”
Click here for KC Rising’s full report.

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Tech workforce program championed by former Chiefs star graduates its first KC class
An education initiative recently launched in Kansas City not only focuses on lifting up young people from low-income backgrounds and helping them succeed in the high-tech sector, said pro football hall of famer Will Shields: it upends a cycle of decline and replaces it with building blocks. i.c.stars, headquartered in Chicago, launched in Kansas City…
Build-A-Bear founder joins VFA’s board, lauding group as an ‘onramp’ to entrepreneurship for overlooked young professionals
ST. LOUIS — A hometown founder and entrepreneurial icon is joining the board of one of the region’s premiere work placement opportunities for early-career professionals. Maxine Clark, founder of Build-A-Bear Workshop — the teddy-bear-themed retailer she launched in 1997 in St. Lous — is the latest appointment to the national board of directors for Venture…
Leveraging KC’s resources: How the right people at the right time can unlock a startup’s potential
The level of collaboration seen in Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem is unmatched by peer communities, said Jill Meyer, noting it’s not a phenomenon that developed by accident. And it takes transparency and trust, she added. “There is a lot of work that resource partners do to make sure that our companies and our founders have…
Looking for investors? A startup’s first ask shouldn’t be for money, leading VCs say
Most startup founders think of funding as transactional, Darcy Howe shared, but it’s actually relational. “You’ve got to have relationships with people long before they’ll fund and that includes angels and all the others,” the KCRise Fund founding managing director told a crowd gathered at UMKC’s Bloch Executive Hall for Startland News’ Kansas City Startups…





