Party for the payoff: Fountain City Fintech sets Oct. 15 demo day, KC celebration
September 18, 2019 | Tommy Felts
Kansas City’s ongoing fintech momentum deserves more than a nod from analysts and trend watchers, said Zach Pettet, announcing plans for an Oct. 15 demo day that’s already taking shape as a community celebration.
“We need an excuse to rally together and celebrate everything that’s happened over the past few months — especially in the fintech space,” said Pettet, managing director of Fountain City Fintech. “C2FO just had their big funding raise, PayIt is going wild, Fountain City Fintech is in Year 2, H&R Block picked up Wave. Kansas City just has so much freaking momentum.”
The event’s centerpiece remains the second cohort of Fountain City Fintech, which wraps its nbkc bank-based accelerator with the evening of presentations, as well as Kansas City barbecue and libations.
Click here for tickets to the Oct. 15 celebration, which is sponsored by LaunchKC, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and Cambr.
“The five companies in our Year 2 cohort will have killed themselves for the past 75 days,” said Pettet, eager to show off the hard work of the companies, which came to the accelerator from across the nation. “We’re trying to run the best program that we can, while simultaneously thinking about there being no Techstars this year in Kansas City. The Sprint Accelerator has become less focused on tech with its developing partnership with Dairy Farmers of America. So we’re looking at this event as an outlet to really cheers tech entrepreneurship in Kansas City and all the progress we’ve made.”
Click here to read about Techstars Kansas City’s planned return in 2020.
Diverse niche companies
Fountain City Fintech’s latest cohort builds on its inaugural predecessor’s success, said Megan Darnell, as well as an increasingly robust mentor network.
“As we’ve really solidified our connections to community members in Kansas City, they’ve gone above and beyond to be helpful and fill the gaps we had in resources from Year 1,” said Darnell, Fountain City Fintech program manager.
Members of the first cohort also worked to legitimize the program and garner vetted quality companies for Year 2, she added.
“They helped spread the gospel,” Darnell said.
The result?
“All of these companies are super impressive,” Pettet said. “The four that are from outside Kansas City are doing really important work that’s needed in the world, and don’t look anything like the other companies in their space. That’s a very important piece.”
Among the cohort members expected to present at demo day:
- Pluto Money — Tim Yu, Susie Kim and Dante Monaldo — Mobile banking for Gen Z
- Nav.it — Erin Papworth — Financial empowerment platform for women
- SteadiPay — Anthony Strike and Chad Kalebic – Optimizing cash and credit management for small businesses
- Chipper — Tony Aguilar and Keith Pattison – Student loan advisor
- Griffin — Donald Hawkins – Mobile marketing and data analytics
“The breadth and the depth of quality in these companies is amazing,” said Pettet, singling out Cupertino, California-based Pluto Money, which last week held the App of the Day spot in the Apple Store and since then has continued ticking up with total users across 1,500 college campuses now in the tens of thousands.
“We intentionally made sure we were taking on diverse viewpoints and interesting niche problems,” Darnell added. “And because of the work we’ve done to build the program, it was easier to select a quality cohort that just so happened to have diversity in gender, age, ethnic groups and backgrounds.”
Pettet called attention to Seattle-based cohort member Nav.It and the work its CEO is doing to change access to the fintech landscape.
“Nav.It is building specific to the female experience in the worlds of fintech and finance,” he said. “So much of the history of finance has been white men building for white men, right? And women have been left behind, as have a lot of socioeconomic, racial and gender groups.”
Donald Hawkins’ Kansas City-based startup Griffin came to the accelerator through nbkc’s entrepreneur in residence program, Pettet also noted.
Click here to read more about the new EIR incubator effort at nbkc.
“So it’s not just a matter of Fountain City Fintech picking up speed,” Pettet said. “We’re now starting net new fintech companies in Kansas City. That’s the goal of this whole thing at the end of the day. That’s why we’re trying to get the flywheel turning.”
A loud legacy
Henry Bloch won’t go quietly, Pettet said, detailing plans to honor the late H&R Block founder during the demo day event with a “Moment of Loudness.”
“The brand of Henry and that side of entrepreneurship — giving back, caring about your community, taking care of your customers — is something that we really want to carry forward,” said Pettet.
Both leaders of Fountain City Fintech — Pettet and Darnell — graduated from the Bloch School at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, and the accelerator’s “finterns” — Salem Habte and Ali Brandolino — will soon advance from the school the bears Bloch’s name, Pettet said, noting a rich heritage and tie-in with the legendary entrepreneur.
“Henry is a really important part of the narrative of Kansas City and this momentum in fintech,” he said. “None of it happens without him — or people like Ewing Kauffman. But Henry started that first domino, pushing us in the right direction.”
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
TokenTourney brings daily fantasy sports to the casual fan, fielding a video game feel with real-world experiences
In April, Davis Engle asked his lifelong friend to quit his job in Dallas and come take a gamble on his startup. For Sam Shortall, it was an easy decision. “It didn’t take long for me to weigh the pros and cons of leaving consulting and doing something revolutionary,” Shortall said. The two have known…
Access all in one room: KC Black Owned bringing Black business summit to KC Convention Center
It’s easy to get caught up in the daily hustle and forget to step back and reflect when building a business, said Chelsey M., announcing a fall summit meant to help minority entrepreneurs strategically gain insights, network, and plan for growth and success. The Infinity & Beyond Black Business Summit — set for Oct. 7 at…
Investment from former Chiefs linebacker expected to boost Kin Seltzer’s flow into KC
An investment from former Chiefs player Dezman Moses valued at $3 million is expected to help flood Kansas City with storytelling — and a new surprise flavor — from the first Black-owned seltzer in the market, said Joshua Lewis. Kin Seltzer announced the strategic investment from the Kansas City linebacker-turned-entrepreneur, noting plans to use the…
Venues Made Simple vows to marry transparency with streamlined wedding planning tech
Jeff and Jessie Pavalone didn’t intend to plan their wedding during a pandemic. The Kansas City couple is introducing technology to the wedding industry with their new Airbnb-style venue management system, meant to simplify wedding planning for both couples and event spaces. Click here to explore their Digital Sandbox KC-backed startup, Venues Made Simple. The…





