Pure Pitch Rally returning in October with spot-cash funding; applications open now
July 9, 2019 | Startland News Staff
The land sharks are already hungry for Kansas City’s top tech talent, said Karen Fenaroli, announcing the planned return of the Pure Pitch Rally this fall.
“Not only does Pure Pitch Rally provide startups with the opportunity to earn much-needed cash funding, it gives local entrepreneurs direct access to the resources and people in our community who can take their businesses to the next level,” said Fenaroli, founder of Pure Pitch Rally and CEO and founder of Fenaroli & Associates, a premier talent consultancy.
The fourth annual event — set for Oct. 15 — will showcase a curated group of startups pitching to a pre-selected panel of executives called “land sharks” who judge then each directly fund and donate $1,000 to the start-up pitcher of his or her choice. Attendees also vote to award an additional funding prize to a People’s Choice winner.
Click here to apply to compete in the competition. Applications will be accepted through Aug. 16.
“Success is snowballing; we had a Pure Pitch Rally alumnus sell his business to a Fortune 100 company,” Fenaroli said, referencing TicketRX’s spring exit with its acquisition by Overland Park-based MSTS. “It’s milestones like those we continue to support our pitchers in achieving.”
Click here to read about Stenovate, another one of Pure Pitch Rally’s success stories.
The pitch competition brings together an invitation-only crowd of more than 200 CEOs, VIPs, angel funders and investors to network and collaborate, Fenaroli added, underscoring Kansas City’s commitment to expanding its role as a national tech leader.
“Due to the KC’s growing support for this event, the number of land sharks and sponsors continues to grow each year,” she said. “In 2018, we were able to give away more than $1 million in cash funding and resource packages, and we’re expecting that to grow this fall.”
Click here for a glimpse at the startup’s featured in the 2018 Pure Pitch Rally.
A new component of the event this year: Shark Bites dinners. Participating land sharks and sponsors plan to gather in small groups the week before to the Oct. 15 event to discuss the entrepreneurial and business landscape in Kansas City, and to ideate additional ways the community can generate support for up-and-coming tech innovators, Fenaroli said.

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Hammerspace grows maker mission on Emanuel Cleaver Boulevard
Dave Dalton is a maker — a blacksmith, a bladesmith, a woodworker, an artist and a jack of all trades. More than just a sum of his skills, being a maker is all about perspective, said Dalton, founder of Hammerspace Community Workshop. And when a friend dared him to give his tip jar an upgrade, Dalton…
Innovation Stockyard selects first St. Joe startup for Digital Sandbox
A curbside recycling service is expected to be the first startup to receive Digital Sandbox KC proof-of-concept funding through the Innovation Stockyard incubator. Toss it Curbside, a service with which customers place unwanted items on their curbs to be recycled or donated, plans to use the funds and the St. Joseph-based incubator program to optimize…
Applications open: Sprint Accelerator dialing into ag tech, IoT with 2018 cohort
Investing in startups isn’t just about providing needed capital, Doug Dresslaer said. As the Sprint Accelerator gears up for its fifth year, Dresslaer, managing director of the program, said the accelerator’s 2017 cohort — the first since its move toward establishing corporate partnerships and pivot away from Techstars — proved industry relationships themselves create tremendous value.…
Entrepreneurial inspiration: How a wheelchair freed Wesley Hamilton
Editor’s note: Kansas City fitness and community advocate Wesley Hamilton offered four inspirational tips for entrepreneurs, illustrated by his own remarkable experiences overcoming adversity. Two bullets pierced Wesley Hamilton’s back, confining him to a wheelchair, but freeing his mind, the Kansas City adaptive athlete said. “I found that being shot by someone I never knew…

