UMKC celebrates Maria Meyers for driving social entrepreneurship, ecosystem building in KC
November 16, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Kansas City’s most tenacious advocate, Maria Meyers has built far more than a legacy for herself, proclaimed Mary Bloch.
“I first met Maria Meyers in the mid-90s when we were both involved in the renovation of Union Station,” Bloch, civic leader and daughter-in-law of H&R Bloch founder Henry W. Bloch, said as she recognized Meyers, founder of SourceLink and executive director of the UMKC Innovation Center. Meyers was among the honorees Friday night at the 34th annual Entrepreneur of the Year Awards — hosted by the UMKC Bloch School of Management and the Regnier Institute of Entrepreneurship and Innovation.
Click here to read about Kansas City Entrepreneur of the Year Michael Rea, CEO and founder of Rx Savings Solutions.
Drenched in spotlighting, Bloch told a full room of university students, partners, supporters, family and friends why Meyers was the perfect fit for the 2019 Marion and John Kreamer Award for Social Entrepreneurship.
“Maria is fulfilling her passion and creating jobs,” Bloch explained. “She’s partnering with local economic development organizations to turn fragmented small business resources into cohesive and vibrant entrepreneurial ecosystems.”
With collaboration as a driver, Meyers is fueled by her community, Bloch noted. As a result, SourceLink — an entrepreneurial ecosystem for startups in need of resources and connections — is online in more than 50 communities across the country.
Click here to explore Global Entrepreneurship Week Kansas City (GEWKC) organized by KCSourceLink.
“Maria is the person that develops the vision way before anybody else is talking about it and then her ability to execute on it is just unbelievable,” said Zach Anderson Pettet, managing director of Fountain City Fintech and Bloch school graduate.
Meyers might have been the center of attention Friday night, but as she received her award she was quick to note she couldn’t have achieved her success alone: Entrepreneurial ecosystem building is a task best accomplished when community organizations stand together.
And the results locally are being noticed on a national scale, she said.
“I get to go out and talk to lots of people and work with lots of people in these other communities and they all talk about Kansas City, so I think we’re making it,” Meyers said to cheers and applause.
“We’ve been saying, ‘Let’s make Kansas City America’s most entrepreneurial city’ and we’ve all worked together to do that,” she said. ‘There are probably three reasons that I’m standing here. One is because I have a very supportive family; One is because I have the most incredible team that’s ever been developed in this country; And the last thing is because we have a community that really cares about what we’re doing.”

Ali Brandolino and Jeff Hornsby, University of Missouri-Kansas City
While Meyers was recognized for her community-focused achievements, Ali Brandolino, a budding social entrepreneur and soon-to-be graduate, earned the Bloch school’s 2019 Student Entrepreneur of the Year award and a $2,500 scholarship.
“The Student Entrepreneur of the Year highlights one student out of many who exemplifies the entrepreneurial spirit and action to impact the Kansas City community in the future,” said Dr. Jeff Hornsby, executive director of the Regnier Institute.
A commitment to student leadership and project management through such programs as UMKC Enactus earned Brandolino the award, Hornsby explained.
“Her passion for bringing change to the community is evident in everything she does.”
Click here to read more about Brandolino’s work and the 2019 Enactus team.
Such a passion nearly kept Brandolino from attending UMKC, she told the room.
“… I tried to quit. I wasn’t passionate about higher education. I was passionate about impacting people’s lives and I didn’t think college with the correct platform for that,” she said.
“Thankfully they make canceling your housing pretty difficult here and for that reason I decided to give college my best shot,” Brandolino joked.
Past Student Entrepreneur of the Year winners include Andrea Savage, who recently pitched UMKC’s FeedKC Initiative to sharks at the 2019 Pure Pitch Rally, in 2018 and Chad Feather, associate at KCRise Fund, in 2017.
Together, the Bloch School and Regnier Institute have supported more than 350 entrepreneurs through the E-Scholars program and aided in the launch of more than 100 student ventures, Hornsby noted.
“We take our role as Kansas City’s university seriously. We’re building a pipeline of entrepreneurial talent in this region,” he added.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Davids’ effort to level the playing field for Native entrepreneurs passes US House, moving to Senate
Legislation meant to address entrepreneurship challenges specific to Native and tribal business owners advanced in the U.S. Congress this week, with a Kansas City lawmaker championing the effort to bring equity to an overlooked corner of the small business community. “In Indian Country, Native-owned businesses employ over 300,000 Americans and are vital drivers of our…
Charlie Hustle popup coming to Power & Light in time for Big 12 (and 300,000 visitors)
A highly visible storefront along the KC Streetcar line is expected to give homegrown apparel brand Charlie Hustle a prime spot to showcase KC Heart for hundreds of thousands of potential shoppers during the coming Big 12 basketball tournament. The game day merch shop and experiential retail concept is expected to open Thursday, March 7…
DivvyHQ exits: They built this KC startup brick-by-brick, now it fits within a bigger story
A Kansas City marketing tech startup’s acquisition by Lytho, a leading creative project management platform, is built upon the two brands’ complementary company ideologies and tech, said Brock Stechman. “We’re seeing a lot of consolidation in our market, and this was an opportunity where we could collaborate and come together seamlessly with a single, specialized,…


