TechMap Kansas reveals open tech jobs, potential for startups to reshape employment trends

January 15, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

Brian McClendon, Beth Ellyn McClendon, Free State Forge

Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation.

LAWRENCE — Tech talent relocating to the Kansas City area shouldn’t worry about their future — opportunities for growth are everywhere, said Brian McClendon. TechMap Kansas exists to prove it, the mapping veteran behind Google’s and Uber’s popular tech added. 

Brian McClendon, Free State Forge

“One of the challenges is recruiting and keeping new graduates and also bringing outside employees into the region,” said McClendon, serial entrepreneur and half of the husband-wife duo behind Free State Forge — an angel investment arm that’s backed a wide range of Kansas City startups from working capital titan, C2FO to such early-stage ventures as Griffin Technologies. 

Click here to learn more about Brian McClendon, Beth Ellyn McClendon and the portfolio at Free State Forge.

Officially launched Wednesday by Free State Forge, TechMap Kansas is an ever-evolving resource that pinpoints tech jobs across Kansas and Missouri, bringing visibility to area tech opportunities for prospective workers, investors and the communities at large — a weakness of the region’s tech ecosystem, McClendon noted.

“If there isn’t enough opportunity outside of the company in question, it looks risky,” he noted, highlighting ways TechMap Kansas shows potential employees ways they can survive in the region should the job they relocate for fails them. 

Click here to explore TechMap Kansas.

TechMap Kansas

“If you come to the region or stay in the region, you’ll have many choices over your career — while still being able to live a great quality of life in an area with good schools, housing that’s affordable and commutes that don’t give you huge headaches,” he said.

Rich with statistics, the first version of TechMap Kansas shows that startups account for little hiring activity in the region, holding less than 32 percent of open positions. A fact that surprised but didn’t shock McClendon, he noted. 

“We only have a few [startups] that are seeing big investment and big growth. And there’s many that are sort of in process, but I would like to see a bigger community of bigger startups,” McClendon explained. 

“What’s going to be the growth of employment in Kansas and the region are these startups and they need to grow for that to happen,” he added.

And nothing fuels growth like capital, he added, detailing ways TechMap Kansas could further serve as a tool for companies looking to land cash injections. 

“Our goal is that all the investors in the region and even investors outside the region can use this as a discovery mechanism and a [sense of] comfort that they’re not investing in an island. We’re actually a pretty dense archipelago out here,” McClendon said. 

Such a realization took McClendon and his wife, Beth Ellyn McClendon, by surprise when they returned to the Kansas City area in 2017, he noted, adding that more tech employers exist in the region than most people recognize. 

TechMap Kansas reveals there are 610 employers supporting a collective 34,000 tech jobs in the metro. Thirty-eight percent of those positions are based on the Kansas side and 29 percent are held in Missouri. 

“In Kansas City, the well-known names are Cerner, Garmin, Burns & McDonnell, and Black & Veatch,” McClendon noted of high profile employers who might not necessarily drive tech employment. “Less well-known, Honeywell FMT employs over 3,000 engineers keeping our country safe and the Kansas City Federal Reserve has over 600 software developers.” 

Though startups hold less of a presence, their power shouldn’t be dismissed, McClendon added. The 193 companies on the map as of its release employee up to 125 engineers, developers, and/or data scientists. 

“These young companies are doing cool things like sequencing the genome better, faster and cheaper than ever before or attacking the inefficiencies in a $200 trillion marketplace,” he said, noting the impact startups have on the region — despite lower volume. 

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

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

    Ahead of Valentine’s, e-commerce floral shop Zinnia prunes itself to grow

    By Tommy Felts | February 9, 2016

    Zinnia is not your mom-and-pop local florist — although the company did have a brief iteration as one lasting about a blink last year. It’s also not your big-box, online flower retailer — although their ecommerce site is a beautiful example of what a website focused on the customer experience can look like. The company…

    LaunchKC delivering another $500K in 2016

    By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2016

    Kansas City’s popular grant competition, LaunchKC, will be doling out another $500,000 in 2016 to startups around the world. LaunchKC in April will open the application period for its international competition, which will issue ten $50,000 grants to winners during the second-annual Techweek Kansas City conference. Drew Solomon, vice president of business and job development…

    Key legislator optimistic in the future of Kansas’ angel tax credits

    By Tommy Felts | February 5, 2016

    A Kansas lawmaker overseeing discussion on the future of the state’s angel investor tax credits is confident the program will be made a budgetary priority by his peers in legislature. Rep. Marvin Kleeb, R-Overland Park, said that he and fellow members of the Kansas Committee on Taxation listened to thorough testimony Wednesday during a hearing…

    5 reasons your startup isn’t attracting investors

    By Tommy Felts | February 4, 2016

    Last week, Techstars managing director John Fein told us that one of the main complaints he hears from Kansas City investors is that there aren’t enough fundable startups. Investors may be right, but it’s not necessarily a lack of good ideas. Today, Kansas City investors are looking for more than the next big idea: they’re…