Pitch & Pint: KC Collective unveils founders competing in real-time April 30 pitch event
April 22, 2020 | Tommy Felts
While COVID-19 wreaks havoc across the globe, Kansas City entrepreneurs already are proving their resiliency, said Donald J. Hawkins.
“They’re still grinding, iterating, and finding ways to make things happen,” said Hawkins, co-organizer of the KC Collective founder network, as well as co-founder of Griffin. “In addition to working on their own businesses, they’re diving in to do their part to help others.”
A new pitch event is expected to help expose the ongoing tenacity of such startups. Initially planned as an in-person live event at Strang Hall in Overland Park, the Pitch & Pint competition now is set to debut April 30 as a real-time, virtual event with eight entrepreneurs pitching for prize money.
Click here to register for the April 30 Pitch & Pint event.
“We [need] to show entrepreneurs that we’ve got their back and won’t allow distance to stop what we’re building,” Hawkins said. “Though we’re all dealing with a lot, providing an opportunity for the community to see and hear some amazing founders was too good to pass up. Though we’re all separated, being able to connect with our tribe, even for just a few hours, is therapeutic and they’re going to crush it.”

Frank Keck, CoreBuild; Parker Graham, Joe Krywicki, and Jerry Workman, Destiny; Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020
Entrepreneurs set to be showcased at the virtual Pitch & Pint include:
- Jannae Gammage, The Market Base — A software platform that connects clients with on-demand marketing services like strategy, copy writing, social media, and graphic design.
- Aaron Foster, Saavy House Hunting — A tool to help real estate agents show homes virtually, allowing them to more easily scale their sales efforts.
- Elango Thevar, Neer — A real-time water management platform (drinking water, wastewater, stormwater) using artificial intelligence, specifically machine learning, to model and assess the risk condition of drinking water distribution mains, sewer and stormwater collection systems.
- Jillian Carlile, TravelHive — A social travel bookmarking and planning tool, inspiring travel lovers to live their travel adventures.
- Kwinton Scarborough, PawConX — An app that maximizes social networking culture by embracing the natural interactions that happen at dog parks or similar communities, while keeping privacy and convenience as top priority.
- Parker Graham, Destiny — A fintech platform that helps banks and credit unions engage and grow revenue with their digital-first customers; one of Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020.
- Pat McLoughlin, Digs — A financial platform for building wealth through homeownership.
- Tiffany Watts, Biin — A marketplace that offers a quick and easy way to arrange or offer storage space in an experience that changes the future of self-storage.
“We are excited about the group of founders selected for our first Pitch and Pint event,” said Bo Lais, co-organizer of KC Collective and founder of Lula. “The selection process was difficult as there were a lot of deserving founders that applied, but this is just the first of many virtual pitch events we have planned.”
Here’s how it works: Founders will pitch via Zoom Webinar to an audience that has the ability to network with each other, panelists, and participants. After each pitch, judges will have three minutes for Q&A. A poll within Zoom will allow for judge and audience voting, followed by the announcement of first, second and third winners, as well as a final People’s Choice award.
The April 30 Pitch & Pint event is sponsored by nbkc bank, Bench, Prudential and Flyover Capital.
KC Collective, also known as the Founders Collective, has grown substantially during the past year because it provides a safe environment for Kansas City-based startups regardless of their stage, said Lais.
“Even founders that only have an idea on a napkin can receive the support they need to develop that idea into a real business,” he said. “Community support is necessary to help startup founders thrive, and we aim to be an important piece of the entrepreneurial ecosystem here in Kansas City.”
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
In second term, Mayor Q says he’ll help get City Hall out of entrepreneurs’ way as they build a more diverse economy
Creating economic equity in Kansas City goes hand in hand with building a sustainable city, said Mayor Quinton Lucas. “We will not be the city that we need to be — we won’t have the workforce, the entrepreneurs that we need — if we’re not actually investing in equitable tools in any number of ways,”…
Sandlot Goods takes a swing at a brick and mortar; new JoCo storefront expected to be a home run with brand’s fans
Sandlot Goods — Kansas City’s only local hat manufacturer — is hoping to score big with its first, dedicated, standalone retail space. The new location at Park Place in Leawood — 11530 Ash Street — is slated for a soft opening Aug. 15 and a grand opening Sept. 16, shared Garret Prather, Sandlot vice president…
‘Oppenheimer’ actor says new Missouri tax incentives could bring investors, more film productions to KC
David Dastmalchian’s screenplays for movies set in Kansas City now have a realistic chance to be filmed in and around his hometown, said the acclaimed actor, writer, and producer who grew up in Overland Park. Recently-signed legislation paves the way for increased film production in Missouri by reauthorizing — and strengthening — tax credit incentives…
She witnessed short-staffed hospitals as a COVID patient; How her ‘Airbnb for health care workers’ could save lives like hers
After her own hospitalization with COVID-19, Shapree’ Marshall set out to make sure local hospitals have adequate staffing to care for the community, she shared. In February 2022, Marshall — now a 2023 Pipeline Pathfinder cohort member — founded A Traveled Path Homes, which she describes as Airbnb for the medical industry. She plans to…
