$18M buyout of TomboyX shares shows investing in women pays off, says Women’s Capital Connection
May 16, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Women are winning in Kansas City, said Kelly Sievers as 24 members of Women’s Capital Connection receive their return from an $18-million buyout of their shares in a Seattle woman’s startup.

Kelly Sievers, Women’s Capital Connection
“They’re getting a great infusion of capital to grow even more and we also still have money in the company because we invested a couple months ago in a convertible note round and that will be converting to stock at this new valuation,” Sievers, managing director of Women’s Capital Connection, said of the funding network’s relationship with TomboyX — a gender-neutral underwear company responsible for creating the first boxer briefs for women, before expanding into a brand that challenges societal norms.
Click here to browse the startup’s current collections.
A U.K. venture capital firm is responsible for the buyout, Women’s Capital Connection noted in a press release that detailed the transaction.
“It’s great to have a company that had a nice buyout, that was led by women and invested in by women. … It shows support [for women-led companies],” Sievers said.
Supporting the startup since 2016, Women’s Capital Connection invested more than a half-million dollars in TomboyX — an initial $315,000 over three funding rounds and $242,000 in a convertible note which will convert into Series B shares as part of the buyout, Sievers explained.
“They were trying to solve a problem and focused on growing the business and doing what needed to be done,” she said. “They were excited, enthusiastic, they were motivated. I mean, their enthusiasm is contagious! Whenever they’d come up against any kind of hurdle they’d just figure it out.”
An out-of-state venture with Kansas City ties, Fran Dunaway, founder and CEO of TomboyX, is a graduate of the University of Missouri and former resident of Parkville and Platte City.
Such Kansas City ties aren’t the only thing that made the startup attractive to Women’s Capital Connection. It was a quality Sievers said every founder should value: transparency.
“We were so thrilled with the transparency of the founding team and how they came to Kansas City to get to know us and for us to get to know them,” she added. “These people were like this from the start and they kept coming back to Kansas City to present. They wanted us to get to know them personally. … I’ll tell you what, from Day 1, they were excellent at reporting out what was going on. “
Another key investment in TomboyX wasn’t financial, Sievers noted. It came in the form of women having each other’s backs.
“The way I got introduced to [Dunaway] is through Heidi Lehman, who is part of another one of our portfolio companies — Kenzen,” she explained. “Heidi spends a lot of time around Kansas City. She has a home here and in New York … [She] worked with Claude Aldridge at Trellie years ago, and she’s been a Techstars mentor here. Heidi is a rockstar!”
Click here to read about Trellie’s place in the history of the Kansas City startup ecosystem
Support like Lehman’s is invaluable in the startup world and can sow seeds that produce even more women-led wins, Sievers said.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC nonprofit leader will advise FCC committee on broadband
The leader of an area nonprofit focused on making Kansas City a digital leader will be offering his broadband expertise to a Federal Communications Commission committee. KC Digital Drive managing director Aaron Deacon was recently appointed to a group within the Federal Communications Commission’s Broadband Deployment Advisory Committee. Deacon’s group — Competitive Access to Broadband…
Bringing grub to KC food deserts, Rollin’ Grocer to expand impact after contest win
While he takes pride in his roots, Priest Hughes said it saddens him to see a staple of life — fresh food — become so difficult to attain in parts of Kansas City. Over the course of a decade, Hughes has noticed several grocery stores in his neighborhood close at an alarming rate. Purchasing fresh,…
Truck-sharing app Bungii hauling early success, eyeing expansion
Less than a year after its launch, Kansas City-based truck-sharing app Bungii is gaining significant traction. In addition to expanding its platform from only Kansas City to include Lawrence, Bungii has tapped hundreds of users that temporarily need a truck to haul their stuff. Led by two recent college graduates, Ben Jackson and Harrison Proffitt, Bungii’s on-demand…
Kauffman Foundation: National startup activity continues to improve
National startup activity grew slightly in 2016, a consecutive three-year improvement that reached pre-Great Recession levels, according to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. However, in the long-term view startup activity is still in decline when compared to the 1980s, the 2017 Kauffman Index of Startup Activity found. Victor Hwang, vice president of entrepreneurship at the…
