Inclusion Open funding helps Determination Incorporated reunite KCSourceLink alums
July 31, 2019 | Startland News Staff
Within days of securing funding from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s Inclusion Open, Determination Incorporated is expanding its team, the nonprofit announced Wednesday.
“We are so thankful to the Kauffman Foundation and excited to announce that Leslie Walton, an experienced entrepreneurial ecosystem builder in KC, is joining the team in support of our mission,” Johnny Waller, Jr., co-founder, said of the growth of the success-after-prison organization.
Click here to learn more about the Inclusion Open and the six Kansas City organizations chosen to receive Kauffman support.
Formerly a project/program coordinator for KCSourceLink for nearly three years, Walton is reuniting with Determination Incorporated co-founder Kyle Smith, former communications coordinator at KCSourceLink.
Committed to Determination Incorporated’s mission, Walton — most recently the founder and CEO of A Cents of Change — will serve as the entrepreneur success manager for the organization.
“I grew up on the east side of Kansas City, in what others would call the ‘hood,’” she recalled. “I’ve seen my entire life the natural-born entrepreneurs in my community who went to prison. Some were legal, others not. Some formal, others less so.”
Through access to resources and pathways to opportunity, anyone can succeed, Walton added.
“Once people make up their mind to succeed and do business the right way: they can do it. We can all assist in that transformation by setting aside labels like ‘felon,’ and giving others the chance to make the most of themselves,” she said in reference to personal experience, watching members of her family struggle with societal reentry.
Walton will work directly with participants in the Rise Up, Get Started grant competition — set to return during Global Entrepreneurship Week in November, which recently launched its application period.
Click here to read about the inaugural showing of Rise Up, Get Started.
Moving the startup ecosystem forward, organizations like Determination Incorporated are why the Inclusion Open was created, explained Melissa Roberts, senior program officer in entrepreneurship at the Kauffman Foundation.
“Entrepreneurship support should be diverse, inclusive and equitable — these grantees are developing programs that will drive systems-level change and move us closer to that goal,” Roberts said.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Jasmine Diane: ‘My Girl Story’ empowerment is bigger than T-shirts, Instagram
Jasmine Diane Cooper dreams of inspiring women across the world with the My Girl Story movement, she said. “[As women] we will tear ourselves down or we look for things that kind of separate us, but we all have the same struggle,” said the social media influencer and rising star on the Kansas City marketing…
Pipeline rotates The Innovators gala to Omaha for celebration of fellows, incoming cohort
Pipeline hopes moving its The Innovators gala to Omaha for 2019 will help keep the premier startup event fresh after more than a decade in Kansas City, said Joni Cobb. “Change and experimentation are what Pipeline is all about,” said Cobb, president and CEO of Pipeline. “We are an entrepreneurial organization, and as such we…
KCultivator Q&A: Lesa Mitchell talks eating eyeballs, remembering names, growing startups
Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. The KCultivator Series is sponsored by WeWork Corrigan Station, a modern twist on Kansas City office space. Growth is a daily driver, Lesa Mitchell said, but it can be limited by the environment around entrepreneurs. “If…
STEM education bill backed by KC Tech Council passes MO Senate, heads back to governor
Despite initial pushback, a bill that would broaden access to computer education in Missouri high schools, could be gaining momentum, said Ryan Weber. If passed, the legislation would increase STEM awareness in public schools and require districts to count computer science courses as math and science credits, the KC Tech Council president and an advocate…

