Dapper rapper, ‘SNL’ star, top CEOs join student pitch competition as KC celebrity judges

May 20, 2020  |  Tommy Felts

Kemet Coleman, Kemet Creative; Heidi Gardner, “Saturday Night Live”; Lisa Ginter, CommunityAmerica; Wendy Guillies, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation; and Sandy Kemper, C2FO

Editor’s note: The following is part of Startland News’ ongoing coverage of the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, as well as how innovation is helping to drive a new normal in the ecosystem. Click here to follow related stories as they develop. STARTLAND is the parent organization of Startland News, though this report was produced independently by Startland News’ non-profit newsroom.

When student pitch teams from across Kansas City take over Zoom next week to compete for $5,000 in cash prizes, it’ll be all eyes on their solutions to COVID-19 challenges, said Katie Kimbrell.

Katie Kimbrell, STARTLAND

Katie Kimbrell, STARTLAND

“We are all looking to the youth to lead us in years to come,” said Kimbrell, director of education for STARTLAND, the parent organization of Startland News and the organizer of the COVID-19 Student Pitch Competition alongside CommunityAmerica Credit Union.

Among those hoping for inspiration after two months of pandemic difficulties: a handful of Kansas City celebrity judges that includes “dapper rapper” Kemet Coleman, CEO and artist at Kemet Creative; Heidi Gardner, KC native and a current cast member on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live”; Lisa Ginter, CEO of CommunityAmerica; Wendy Guillies, president and CEO of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation; and Sandy Kemper, founder and CEO of C2FO.

In addition to the $5,000 cash prize and the opportunity for virtual face time with heavy-hitter judges, winners are expected to earn an opportunity to implement their pitch plans through Kansas City business mentors.

“The pitch rally is about making ideas real,” said Kimbrell. “It is a way of saying: This project doesn’t culminate in an essay for your teacher, it culminates in a real product. Pitching — formal or informal — is a constant factor in getting real ideas off the ground, because it’s about getting people — different stakeholders — on board. You can’t build and launch ideas without real people on board.”

Click here to RSVP to watch the student pitch competition as it unfolds.

Judges will help determine the winners from among eight finalist teams pitching at the May 27 virtual competition — already pared down from 350 local high school and college students who were distributed across more than 40 teams. The competitors are all spring innovation interns from CommunityAmerica’s Innovation Lab.

Click here to read more about CommunityAmerica’s virtual innovation internship effort.

STARTLAND organized the pitch competition with CommunityAmerica as a voluntary extension of the six-week innovation internship, Kimbrell said, noting nearly all the interns opted to participate.

Katie Kimbrell, KCSFedu, Kansas City Startup Foundation

Katie Kimbrell, MECA Challenge, STARTLAND

“The vision was to create a platform for students to meaningfully apply and practice the principles of innovation and design thinking to the global crisis we’re all suddenly living in,” she said. “The pitch competition was a several-weeks adaptation of our MECA Challenge program, putting students in diverse design teams and pairing them with entrepreneurial mentors to coach them in building solutions.”

Click here to read more about the MECA Challenge, a sister program to Startland News that serves as a one-day innovation challenge for local high school students.

“We believe where deep learning happens is when our youth are collaborating to solve messy, ambiguous problems with their own ideas, and working to make these ideas real,” Kimbrell continued. “It’s also about meaningful preparation — how do we expect our youth to be problem solvers and leaders later if we aren’t empowering them to solve real problems now?”

In the run-up to the May 27 pitch competition, STARTLAND and CommunityAmerica tapped founders from across the entrepreneur spectrum — Toby Rush, founder of EyeVerify; Riddhiman Das, co-founder of TripleBlind; Danielle Lehman, founder of the Open Belly podcast and Curbside KC; Chris Goode, founder of Ruby Jean’s Juicery; Kaitlin Abdelrahman, founder of On Call Halal; and Matt Baysinger, co-founder of Swell Spark — to engage students using people already at the forefront of Kansas City innovation, Kimbrell said.

“Every founder we brought in had an incredible story of something they had built — it was like a very personal, local conversation of ‘How I Built This,’” she added, referencing the popular, entrepreneur-focused podcast. “They had stories that embraced failure and risk, and were each so inspiring. They transparently shared about what they built during the pandemic, or how they had to pivot their business.”

Anita Newton, CommunityAmerica

Anita Newton, CommunityAmerica

Exposure to such authentic business challenges — as well everyday impacts — was among the key drivers behind the pitch competition, said Anita Newton, chief innovation officer for CommunityAmerica and board co-chair for STARTLAND, though the idea for the internship program itself had more practical origins.

“The purpose of the intern program and competition is to engage teens who are out of a summer job by offering paid, real-world experience,” Newton said in a press release, adding that participation is completed in a safe online environment and can go on participants’ resumes.

The public pitch competition allows an opportunity for the community — not just parents and organizers — to rally behind the students and a new way of solving problems through collaboration and risk, said Kimbrell.

“To put it another way: to lean on empathy to launch solutions that are novel and useful,” she said.

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

    NBA hires Alight Analytics to collect, analyze data from fans’ social engagement

    By Tommy Felts | March 19, 2018

    The volume of data created within a professional sports team’s fan base is enormous, said Matt Hertig, chief executive officer of Alight Analytics. “Being able to see all of that data together across all of the popular social channels — from Facebook, Youtube, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat — in one place and really understand the correlation…

    Photos: LaunchCode christens KC’s newest techies with graduation celebration

    By Tommy Felts | March 16, 2018

    An Afghan immigrant. A mother of six. An English grad turned techie. A man now able to provide for his family. They’re all among the graduates and inspirational stories highlighted during LaunchCode’s graduation ceremony that recognized the newest members of Kansas City’s tech community. LaunchCode on Wednesday graduated 60 students from its rigorous LC101 coding…

    Christian entrepreneur hopes to convert believers to veganism

    By Tommy Felts | March 16, 2018

    Kris Taylor’s inspiration for a vegan, Christian lifestyle traces back to the first book of the Bible, she said. Modern people eat meat because of original sin and the fall of man, as described in Genesis, Taylor said. “But if you go back to the creation story in Genesis, every seed-bearing plant was given to…

    Caffeine tours give ‘pub crawl’ experience for lovers of coffee, tea and chocolate

    By Tommy Felts | March 16, 2018

    Escaping corporate life in New York, Jason Burton moved to Kansas City in 2004 and began pouring his work into a new passion. As a marketer for Kansas City’s Roasterie, Burton soon recognized coffee and tea lacked the social component of events and festivals that are more associated with specialty beverages like beer and wine.…