Newly launched Dare to Venture competition set to award $30K in micro-grants

January 15, 2020  |  Startland News Staff

Rhonda Dolan, Udo, Urban Business Growth Initiative alum and 2019 Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce Entrepreneur of the Year

Participants in a series of select entrepreneurship courses this winter will be eligible to win a total of $30,000 in micro-grant awards thanks to the Urban Business Growth Initiative.

Funded by the City of Kansas City, Missouri, and administered by the UMKC Innovation Center, the new Dare to Venture Micro-Grant Competition is expected to feature numerous prizes with a top winner earning at least $5,000.

“A $5,000 prize can make a world a difference to a business owner who has already done the groundwork to build their dream,” said Carmen DeHart, senior director of entrepreneurial education at the UMKC Innovation Center. “We want this competition to support, spotlight and even spark the work and courage that goes into being an entrepreneur.”

The prizes are grants with no equity component, DeHart emphasized, and judging falls to peers — fellow entrepreneurs who’ve shared the journey of entrepreneurship and continued education.

Dare to Venture also rewards entrepreneurs who have already invested in their entrepreneurial education by taking a multi-session, 30-hour+ entrepreneurship class, getting a coach (a part of the class) and building their peer network, she said. And finally, judging falls to peers — fellow entrepreneurs who’ve shared this journey of entrepreneurship and continued education.

Mishawnda and James Mintz, Urban Business Growth Initiative alumni

The competition is open to all UBGI scholarship-funded graduates — past or current — of the center’s 30-hour+ entrepreneurship courses who currently live in or whose businesses are located in Kansas City, Missouri. Graduates of extended entrepreneurship courses that start in late January and February 2020 also are eligible to enter the competition.

Click here for a list of qualifying entrepreneurship courses.

Contest applications open March 15, 2020.

Click here for a full competition description, timeline and rules.

Click here to apply for a UBGI scholarship, which can bring the cost of classes down to $75.

Winners will be announced at a city-sponsored event May 7 during the U.S. Small Business Administration’s National Small Business Week.

“The micro-grant competition is an idea generated through startup community participation in the City Budget Speakeasy public input sessions,” said Rick Usher, assistant city manager of the City of Kansas City, Missouri. “It’s exciting to see this come to fruition through our partnership with the UMKC Innovation Center.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Photo courtesy of United American Hemp

    Two novice gardeners in an Olathe lab could harvest Kansas’ first legal hemp harvest

    By Tommy Felts | July 23, 2019

    Potential for a high-yield payoff grows with each day as Michael Wilson and James DeWitt inch closer to their first hemp harvest — likely the first in the state in modern times, they said. “It’s the jumping off point to create a repeatable process,” said DeWitt, co-founder and CEO at United American Hemp. “We’ve learned…

    Lisa Bledsoe, Tea-Biotics Kombucha

    Tea-Biotics bottles $1.2M in quick funding round; taps into thirsty new markets for kombucha

    By Tommy Felts | July 22, 2019

    From jar-lined countertops in her kitchen to a 13,000-square-foot facility brimming with brew tanks, Lisa Bledsoe’s mission to pour Kansas City a more refreshing bottle of “booch” is scaling fast, she explained over a freshly tapped glass of her “Beachlife”-flavored kombucha.  “I think it can be an inspiration for younger women or even other women…

    Henry Kim, LG Electronics, Innovation Exchange

    LG Electronics tech expert: Kansas City a smart home for corporate-startup collaboration (IXKC photos)

    By Tommy Felts | July 20, 2019

    Tech industry giants see significant potential in the ideas being created in startup hubs like Kansas City, an LG Electronics leader told a crowd gathered this week at Homebase.  “A lot of startup companies can bring innovation to the front. Big companies like ours, sometimes we’re so busy that we lose track of that activity,”…

    Photo by Jakob Owens Sharkoff shark bite survivor

    5-year-old shark bite survivor returns to the ocean with help of SharkOFF wearable, founder says

    By Tommy Felts | July 19, 2019

    A sweet taste of its do-good mission has Kansas City-based SharkOff eyeing new ideas, explained Shea Geist, recounting the tale of 5-year-old Violet Jalil’s journey back into the ocean.  “Several months ago we got a big order from [Violet’s mom,] Jessica [Veatch], and she commented when she put in her order, talking about her daughter…