Two Kansas City startups relocating to St. Louis to cash $50K Arch Grants awards
November 8, 2019 | Startland News Staff
Two Kansas City tech startups are on the move — winning spots in the Arch Grants competition, an “aggressive effort” to build St. Louis’ startup ecosystem.
Healthy Hip Hop and FastDemocracy were among 20 companies each earning $50,000 in equity-free cash grants through the selection, which also requires the startups run their businesses from St. Louis for at least a year.
Click here to learn more about the Arch Grants Global Startup Competition.
Led by Roy Scott, Healthy Hip Hop utilizes technology and the hip hop culture to help improve student learning environments and academic outcomes. It’s dual sided technology, with SaaS platform and mobile application empowers users to live stream, publish and share interactive content.
Scott and Healthy Hip Hop are the previous winners of $50,000 through LaunchKC in 2017, $25,000 from LEANLAB Education’s Lauch[ED] Day pitch contest in 2017, and $20,000 through the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge in 2018, among other funding and services awards secured in the metro. He also previously participated in Digital Sandbox KC, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s FastTrac program, and Pitch Perfect at the Enterprise Center in Johnson County.
Click here to read about Healthy Hip Hop’s 2018 reboot.
FastDemocracy is a federal, state, and local legislative analytics platform that provides users with a way to follow politics and take action. Using data-driven analytics and collaborative communications tools, the platform replaces political punditry with machine learning and data science; offers distinctive collaborative, communications and workflow tools; and creates an intuitive, user-friendly platform with comprehensive bill tracking capabilities.
“With our new, advanced analytics, we’re not only giving subscribers the ability to follow what’s happening in the legislature, but we’re also giving them the ability to predict outcomes and showing them the pathway to success,” co-founder Jill Kline told Startland News after FastDemocracy’s successful showing at the 2018 Pure Pitch Rally in Kansas City.
Click here to learn more about FastDemocracy.
Other members of the 2019 Arch Grants cohort ranged in focus from New York-based womenswear and Columbia, Missouri-born storage tech to international perspectives on e-commerce and rubber production from sunflower plants.
Techstars Kansas City alum Planetarians — a Palo Alto, California, ingredient tech company, upcycling by-products and solid food waste into high-protein high fiber ingredients — also was among the Arch Grants selections.
Click here for a full list of Arch Grants winners.
Past Arch Grant Recipients are eligible to participate in the Chaifetz STLaunch competition for up to $1,000,000 in equity investment from Chaifetz Group, the private investment and venture capital firm of entrepreneur and investor Dr. Richard A. Chaifetz.
[divide]
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
Ready to bet big? Kansas wants to help entrepreneurs win more federal innovation grants
Kansas innovators now have access to a new tool designed to help them compete for major federal funding. The Kansas Department of Commerce has opened applications for the state’s SBIR and STTR Matching Program, which provides financial support and hands-on guidance for entrepreneurs pursuing federal innovation grants. The matching initiative is part of ACCEL-KS, a…
New Maker of the Year: Why this mom’s side hustle for the girly girls couldn’t stay at home
A hobbyist venture that began with making shirts for her kids has earned Julie Swopes a spot on Made in KC’s shelves for her Chiefs- and Royals-inspired tees — along with one of the local-first retailer’s top honors: KC New Maker of the Year for 2025. “I’m just a stay-at-home mom that has turned her…
Don’t be a stranger: When this Crossroads refuge closes, another chapter begins for Afterword (and the space it leaves behind)
With two more Open Mic Nights and more than a month left on its lease at Afterword Tavern & Shelves — a cozy corner hotspot where patrons leisurely bond over drinks and good reads — the popular Crossroads third-space isn’t finished telling its story despite losing the space to its new landlord, said Kate Hall.…
Exporting KC to the world: Esports leader revs come-from-behind global takeover amid World Cup’s big draw
As the metro bundled up and showed out Friday, getting its latest taste of what the 2026 World Cup has in store, the Kansas City Pioneers dropped new heat — raising the thermostat on their commitment to seize the moment brought forth by the global gathering as a net for esports. “Now is the time for…



