Entrepreneurs identified COVID needs — now GEWKC needs your help to solve them
September 15, 2020 | Startland News Staff
Challenges exposed by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic are prompting a more focused slate of programming for Global Entrepreneurship Week Kansas City, Jenny Miller said, as organizers of the community-sourced celebration open applications for virtual “GEWKC Prime-Time” events.
Prospective hosts will sign up for events in specific topic areas – such as starting a business, developing a marketing strategy, pivoting, preparing for funding and financing — that surveyed business owners requested.
Click here to read more about GEWKC’s decision to lean into recession-focused needs.
“This new, three-day virtual platform is designed to help people start businesses and help existing business owners rebuild, especially during the challenges COVID-19 has presented, but we also want it to be a space for community members to connect from anywhere,” said Miller, GEWKC organizer and senior director of regional ecosystem development at the UMKC Innovation Center. “The GEWKC team hopes to create a ripple effect that fuels relief, allowing entrepreneurs to forge new pathways to resilience and prosperity.”
In addition to networking, interactive breakout sessions and other virtual activities during the Nov. 17-19 virtual event series, organizers are planning the GEWKC Prime-Time sessions to be broadcast for anyone, anywhere to see, she said. Prime-Time events will also be recorded and made available to anyone after GEWKC.
Click here to see what event topics and times are available. Submissions are open now through Sept. 25.
Those interested in presenting are also asked to submit a basic abstract of their event to include learning goals and outcomes. Hosts selected for GEWKC Prime-Time events will be notified in early October.
“This new GEWKC virtual format not only allows for social distancing and safety but also invites speakers beyond Kansas City’s regional entrepreneurial community,” GEWKC organizers said.
During the day, attendees can participate in around 50 engaging, GEWKC Prime-Time events that will take place, virtually, over four hours during the day.
GEWKC will also open up to virtual and small, in-person GEWKC Community events, held throughout the community and region, giving aspiring and established entrepreneurs more chances to connect and network.
Registration for GEWKC Prime-Time events is expected to begin Oct. 12, with GEWKC events added through Nov. 11.
Since it launched in 2008, Global Entrepreneurship Week — an annual celebration in November comprised of thousands of events and competitions across the world — has expanded to 170 countries.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Topeka approves $5.9M for innovation campus, locking in key funding for animal health, ag hub
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. Plans…
Healium partners with T-Mobile, transporting veterans to DC memorials via virtual Honor Flight
Veterans living in rural America can experience the sights and sounds of the nation’s war memorials in Washington D.C. thanks to a Kansas City-area startup’s virtual reality technology, powered by T‑Mobile 5G. “We are losing our World War II veterans at a rate of hundreds a day, and sadly many may not live long enough…
Watch: Troost Village duo go behind the scenes of four-year development in historic East KC neighborhood
Editor’s note: The following story includes the first video in a four-part series taking a look under the hard hats at the Troost Village development, a $162 million project on Troost Avenue, the city’s longtime racial dividing line. Videos in this series are expected to debut on Startland News as the project unfolds. The finished…
KC’s long-running online indie music magazine just debuted in print; why its founder saved advertising for the black-and-white page
Flashy digital ads and gimmicky marketing schemes aren’t telling the stories (or singing the praises) of artists who run counter to Kansas City’s mainstream, said Aaron Rhodes, founder of a niche music magazine newly hitting the streets this spring. Readers shouldn’t be fooled, Rhodes said. His underground approach to ad sales for Shuttlecock Music Magazine…

