KCSF rebrands to ‘STARTLAND’ and bolsters board, reflecting maturation of organization, ecosystem, leaders say
November 13, 2019 | Startland News Staff
A rebranding and name change for the Kansas City Startup Foundation will see the entrepreneurial community-building organization build on the legacy of Startland News while continuing to grow its education and talent programming.
Now operating as STARTLAND, the organization still boasts its most-widely recognized programs — Startland News, MECA Challenge and Back2KC — which also have been visually refreshed as part of the rebranding, said Adam Arredondo, CEO of STARTLAND.
“STARTLAND will allow us to showcase what we do best: inspiring innovation through stories, experiences, and talent with a particular focus on real-world learning,” he said in a press release.
The new STARTLAND name allows the organization to move beyond its origins in the Kansas City Startup Village, capitalize on the brand recognition of Startland News — the nearly 5-year-old nonprofit newsroom powered by the former KCSF — and reduce miscommunication stemming from use of the word “foundation” in the previous branding, Arredondo said.
“The name ‘KCSF’ has always confused people who rightfully assumed KCSF was either funding startup programs or directly working with founders to grow their businesses. We do neither,” he said. “STARTLAND exists to activate a culture of innovation in which creators and entrepreneurs can be more successful.”
The organization has a new online home at STARTLAND.org, and can be found across major social media channels at @STARTLANDKC.
(Editor’s note; Startland News and startlandnews.com — led by Tommy Felts and Austin Barnes — will continue in its independent storytelling capacity, focused on elevating Kansas City’s entrepreneurs, startups, makers, creatives and risk-takers.)
Keep reading after watching STARTLAND’s new hype video below.
STARTLAND — and the team behind it — have grown alongside Kansas City’s maturing innovation ecosystem, added Darcy Howe, co-chair of STARTLAND’s board and founder of KCRise Fund.
“Kansas City, itself, has graduated from a startup to being the home of many companies which have found talent, capital and resource partners to build and stay here,” said Howe. “So it is fitting that our beloved ‘Kansas City Startup Foundation’ graduate to its growth phase and be the flagbearer for KC as ‘STARTLAND.’”
“We aspired,” she continued, “and now can confidently say this region is America’s startland and STARTLAND will continue to provide a guiding light here and to many across the U.S. who are watching and cheering for us.”
Howe serves as co-chair alongside Anita Newton, chief innovation officer at CommunityAmerica. The two lead a bolstered board with members ranging from active entrepreneurs to veterans of the Kansas City corporate scene, including:
- Anurag Patel, co-founder and CEO, Helix Health;
- Christine Kemper, founder, KC Girls Prep Academy;
- Davin Gordon, business development officer, AltCap;
- Marshall Lockton, senior vice president, Mylo/Lockton Companies;
- Martha McCabe, executive director, KC STEM Alliance;
- Roger Nelson, retired deputy chairman, Ernst & Young;
- Thalia Cherry, founder and CEO, Cherry Sports;
- Tina Peterson, founder and manager, Sprint Accelerator; and
- Vinoo Vijay, chief marketing officer, H&R Block.
STARTLAND has also enlisted a group of prominent civic and business leaders as advisors.
Click here to check out the full STARTLAND board and list of advisors.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Latest Pipeline fellows include familiar KC founders, startups focused on eSports, saving pets, ‘hearables’
Eight Kansas City startup founders have the opportunity to build a lifetime of high-level entrepreneurial support as 2019 Pipeline fellows, said Joni Cobb. The Pipeline network of top-tier Midwest founders announced 13 new fellows last week at the organization’s annual Innovators event, staged this year in Omaha, said Cobb, president and CEO of Pipeline. More…
Crema apprenticeship effort aims to decode a more inclusive talent pool
Crema’s recent growth means more than an additional Crossroads office space for the startup, said Gabby Brotherton. It provides bandwidth for the firm to supplement Kansas City’s tech talent with a new apprenticeship program. “[Crema is] very much a company that values collaboration and innovation learning,” said Brotherton, marketing specialist at the software development firm.…
Biopesticide AgTech building toward RNAissance with TechAccel cultivation
KC-based TechAccel endeavors to guide startups through “the valley of death” stage that emerges after ideation, but before traction, said Brad Fabbri, noting the firm’s new venture, RNAissance Ag, is expected to disrupt the ag tech industry with environmentally-safe biopesticides. “We try to find products and help develop them to make [farmers’] lives easier and…
Digital Sandbox charges three new startups with its proof-of-concept challenge
An effort to elevate Kansas City’s creative minds, Digital Sandbox KC is digging deeper in its sixth year of acceleration — adding three new startups to its portfolio, the proof-of-concept program announced this week. “Our initial goal was to find 10 early-stage concepts that had high-growth potential and help them secure follow-on funding,” said Jeff Shackelford,…

