UMKC awards students $75K in prizes at Regnier Venture Creation Challenge
May 8, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Student startups are growing rapidly on the University of Missouri-Kansas City campus, said Bryan Boots.
Such acceleration has been further propelled thanks to the recent distribution of $75,000 in prize money, awarded to a series of winners of the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge Competition May 2-3, split across events at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and UMKC.
“[The challenge is a chance to] support the students and see what the next generation of entrepreneurs in Kansas City are doing,” Boots said of the school’s mission to elevate young entrepreneurs and promote their ventures through real-world exposure, feedback, and financial support.
Divided into two categories — the primary Regnier Venture Creation Challenge track and the BlueKC Healthcare Innovation track, which celebrates innovation and community impact in healthcare — the competition’s main event produced six winners who run seed-stage or early growth startups.

Air Traffic Awareness
Among the event’s top prizes, $20,000 winners included: Air Traffic Awareness, a product for reducing danger of in-air collisions for novice pilots; and BlueKC winner DeepLens, a computer vision product that helps blind people navigate the world around them.
“Winning the RVCC 2019 was a great thrill, but it’s not the end point; it’s the beginning. It was the result of many long nights of hard work toward creating a new technology to assist people who are visually impaired,” said Gharib Gharibi, DeepLens founder.
Other prize winners include: Blockchain Water, $10,000; DeltaTech, $5,000; Spatial Insights, $2,500; and Bionic Bowel, the second place BlueKC winner of $10,000.
“The RVCC truly expands the depth and breadth of students’ entrepreneurship experience and prepares them to become leading innovators,” Gharibi added.
Additionally, DeepLens took home one of two $500 prizes during the competition’s student expo, chosen by attendees.
Six-thousand dollars in speciality awards were handed out to startups delivering significant social impact and sound business plans, UMKC explained.
Beyond leadership skills, incorporating the BlueKC track into the competition helps students understand the community need for innovative products that create change, he noted.
Student entrepreneurs went through several competitions to land a spot in the challenge, Boots explained.
Click here to read about the Entrepreneur Quest accelerator and EQ Pitch Competition
Past winners of the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge include: Mobility Designed, RFP360, and Healthy Hip Hop.
Check out photos from UMKC’s May 2 student venture expo below.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Black & Veatch constructs ideation platform with new accelerator
A new program at area construction giant Black & Veatch hopes to hatch and accelerate innovative ideas by adopting a concept common among startups. The Overland Park-based corporation recently created the B&V Growth Accelerator, which hopes to challenge the global firm’s traditional methods of generating and launching ideas. The internal program is led by nine…
Women in entrepreneurship: How KC stacks up to other cities
Late in 2015 and without much fanfare, the U.S. Census Bureau released its 2012 Survey of Business Owners. The survey is taken every five years and polls more than 1.75 million enterprises, gathering, compiling and releasing the results in a process spanning several years. The survey is the only regularly-collected source of economic and demographic…
KCMO transit plan sets route for automated shuttles to KCI airport
Area residents will ride to the airport on automated shuttles by 2020 if Kansas City officials have their way. In a note to the American Planning Association, Kansas City chief innovation officer Bob Bennett shared the city’s “three pillars” of its bid for a $50 million transportation award. The note details Kansas City’s pitch for…
Civically-minded techies aim to ‘Hack Kansas City’
Tech startups often get a bad wrap for churning out impractical gizmos. It’s not hard to see why when a search of the app store turns up hundreds of applications that all turn on your phone’s flashlight, and even more knockoffs of a popular angry, bird-bombing game. To put techie minds to a more magnanimous…








