UMKC contest awards $35K+ to winners, feeds student-community innovation

May 5, 2020  |  Tommy Felts

Max Kaniger, Kanbe's Markets

One startup’s winnings from Friday’s Regnier Venture Creation Challenge are expected to have a near-immediate, tangible impact on Kansas City — helping Kanbe’s Markets provide produce in one of its corner markets for an entire year.

“This means that about 4,500 people will have consistent access to fresh, healthy, and affordable food on Kansas City’s east side,” said Max Kaniger of Kanbe’s Markets, reflecting on his social enterprise’s $5,000 prize at the student venture contest.

What is Kanbe’s Markets?

Founded in 2016, Kanbe’s Markets is a 501c3 nonprofit organization with four full-time employees and three part-time employees that developed an unmatched food distribution model in the Kansas City region. The Healthy Corner Stores (HCS) model was designed to enhance equitable food distribution by intervening on hunger issues for the 400,000 food-insecure individuals and families living in Jackson County food deserts.

Kaniger, a graduate of the University of Missouri-Kansas City, competed as a community business finalist — a new slot designated for non-students to showcase work being done in the larger community during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“As a non-profit, we really appreciated the opportunity to share our work with so many incredible Kansas City leaders,” Kaniger said, noting increased need within the areas Kanbe’s Markets serves. “Given the current crisis, there are now thousands more people in our city facing food insecurity.”

Click here to learn more about Kanbe’s Markets or to donate to the ongoing effort.

Kanbe’s Markets was one of several RVCC winners Friday, collectively taking home more than $35,000 in prize money at the conclusion of the virtual competition. The event is part of the Regnier Institute at UMKC’s arsenal of programming intended to accelerate startup ideas to launch in a safe environment.

Click here to read more about the virtual Regnier Venture Creation Challenge. 

“UMKC and the Regnier entrepreneurship program provided me with the solid foundation necessary to build my business,” Kaniger noted. “UMKC and the community of alumni have been supporting Kanbe’s from the very beginning. Having that network behind us is a big part of why we are where we are today.”

Among the other prize winning student finalist teams from the 2020 Regnier Venture Creation Challenge:

General track

  • Calving Technologies (Mizzou) – $5,000
  • Jensen Applied Sciences (Iowa State University) – $4,000
  • Interplay (UMKC & E-Scholars) – $3,500
  • ChordaWorm Lures (Iowa State University) – $3,000

Blue KC healthcare innovation

  • WartPatch (UMKC) – $5,000
  • Flyover Counseling (E-Scholars) – $1,000
  • Norah Health (Mizzou) – $1,000
  • Striae Away (Missouri Science & Technology) – $1,000
  • The GuideLine (Missouri Science & Technology) – $1,000

Specialty award winners

  • Generation Green (UMKC & Enactus) – $1,000
  • Linda Tong Planners (Iowa State University) – $1,000
  • Dart (UMKC, E-Scholars & Enactus) – $1,000
  • MARGOLOH (Blue Valley CAPS) – $1,000
  • Vivas y Muerto (Kansas City Art Institute) – $1,000
  • SNidAP (UMKC) — $500 (Innovation Prize)

Click here for more detailed descriptions of each student finalist team.

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

    Recipe for empathy: These students prepared hundreds of protein-packed, free meals for their food-insecure peers

    By Tommy Felts | May 9, 2024

    High school students in the Kansas City area are doing their part to stamp out food insecurity one recipe at a time, Tamara Weber shared. Kids Feeding Kids — a sister program of Pete’s Garden, both founded by Weber — partners with high school FACS and CTE culinary classes to teach students about critical topics…

    PopBookings rallies as KC startup looks for its own key hires: ‘We’re back in a big, big way’

    By Tommy Felts | May 9, 2024

    After dialing back its event staffing platform’s operations during the pandemic, Kansas City-grown PopBookings is back online in the Midwest — ramping up hiring as it works toward a Series A funding round by year’s end. “Kansas City has a real nurturing feel to it. And this community is why I believe we’ll have our…

    $11M renovation in the works for historic hub of Black entrepreneurship; project ties into 18th Street pedestrian mall plans

    By Tommy Felts | May 9, 2024

    Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by AltCap, an ally to underestimated entrepreneurs that offers financing to businesses and communities that traditional lenders do not serve. For more than one hundred years, the Lincoln Building has served as a cornerstone of commerce and community in the 18th and Vine district. The historic district —…

    MTC’s spring $1.4M investment cycle loops Facility Ally, DevStride into equity deals 

    By Tommy Felts | May 8, 2024

    Two Kansas City startups are among a handful of Missouri companies receiving a collective $1.4 million in investment allocations through a state-sponsored venture capital program. Facility Ally, led by serial entrepreneur Luke Wade; and DevStride, co-founded by Phil Reynolds, Chastin Reynolds, Aaron Saloff and Kujtim Hoxha; must now complete the Missouri Technology Corporation’s due diligence process…