‘NEXT Missouri’ coalition launches policy push to renew MTC funding; EDCKC backing effort
January 29, 2020 | Startland News Staff
A new effort by a coalition of Missouri policy-focused organizations aims to give Show Me State entrepreneurs a voice among legislators, as well as renew funding for an agency known for providing meaningful cash injections to Kansas City startups.
Among the key priorities for NEXT Missouri — a 17-member-strong group, backed by the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City and buoyed by MOSourcelink’s Show Me Jobs report — is restoring the potency of the Missouri Technology Corporation, a public-private partnership to promote entrepreneurship and foster the growth of new and emerging high-tech companies.
Many in the Kansas City startup community are most familiar with MTC through its financial support of the popular LaunchKC grants competition — a partnership between the EDC and the Downtown Council of Kansas City — which in previous years awarded as much as $550,000 across 10 winning companies.
Startups having previously earned MTC funding run the gamut from now-GovTech powerhouse PayIt to backstitch and StoryUp/Healium — both among Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020.
Click here to read more about 10 Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020.
MTC is a critical mechanism to support entrepreneurs through their difficult first years of business, said Quinten Messbarger, vice president of the Missouri Innovation Center, a member organization within the NEXT Missouri coalition. In recent years, the MTC agency has seen its budget reduced and future questioned.
“We need to work with the public sector in order to make sure Missouri is investing in the right companies and creating an economic return on investment,” he said. “Allocating a sufficient amount of resources for the right ideas can be a catalyst for economic growth and retaining the country’s most innovative minds here in Missouri.”
NEXT Missouri can make an impact by proactively engaging policymakers to revamp state economic development policies to better recognize the role of entrepreneurs in driving job creation, said Ben Johnson, vice president of programs at BioSTL, who serves as president of NEXT Missouri.
Click here to learn more about NEXT Missouri, as well as to see its list of members.
Johnson and the coalition cite state job data, compiled by MOSourcelink, that shows nearly 80 percent of new jobs in Missouri — 40,000-plus jobs per year — are created by startups with fewer than 20 employees. Wages paid by these new firms exceed the state average after two years, they added.
“New startups and their businesses are transforming Missouri’s economy, but the momentum is often uneven across Missouri, whether by geography or demographics or industry sector,” Johnson said. “Our coalition will work to bridge the economic divide between urban and rural areas by ensuring the opportunities and the impact of innovation and entrepreneurship are accessible to all Missouri communities.”
NEXT Missouri seeks to grow to a network of 5,000 individual entrepreneurs and 50 organizations by 2022.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Black & Veatch constructs ideation platform with new accelerator
A new program at area construction giant Black & Veatch hopes to hatch and accelerate innovative ideas by adopting a concept common among startups. The Overland Park-based corporation recently created the B&V Growth Accelerator, which hopes to challenge the global firm’s traditional methods of generating and launching ideas. The internal program is led by nine…
Women in entrepreneurship: How KC stacks up to other cities
Late in 2015 and without much fanfare, the U.S. Census Bureau released its 2012 Survey of Business Owners. The survey is taken every five years and polls more than 1.75 million enterprises, gathering, compiling and releasing the results in a process spanning several years. The survey is the only regularly-collected source of economic and demographic…
KCMO transit plan sets route for automated shuttles to KCI airport
Area residents will ride to the airport on automated shuttles by 2020 if Kansas City officials have their way. In a note to the American Planning Association, Kansas City chief innovation officer Bob Bennett shared the city’s “three pillars” of its bid for a $50 million transportation award. The note details Kansas City’s pitch for…
Civically-minded techies aim to ‘Hack Kansas City’
Tech startups often get a bad wrap for churning out impractical gizmos. It’s not hard to see why when a search of the app store turns up hundreds of applications that all turn on your phone’s flashlight, and even more knockoffs of a popular angry, bird-bombing game. To put techie minds to a more magnanimous…
