Meet the No Coast winners: Homebase founder, Garmin lead 2020 KC tech honors
September 16, 2020 | Startland News Staff
Tech is a team sport — a reality undefeated by COVID-19, the KC Tech Council said Wednesday, capping a two-day virtual No Coast ceremony that recognized the interconnectedness of Kansas City’s tech community with entrepreneurship, corporate innovation, education and policy.
Among the first winners unveiled: veteran startup founder and CEO Blake Miller, whose Homebase.ai employs 25 full-time and 10 part-time workers — posting 600-percent two-year average annual growth and earning a spot on Startland News’ 2020 list of Kansas City’s Top Venture Capital-Backed Companies.
Miller was honored with the No Coast Tech Connector of the Year Award.
“What sounds like an individual award to me is anything but, and with the isolation that everyone has experienced this year, I hope this moment in time really serves as an inspiration that a growth mindset and being connected with one another really will grow the pie for all of us, especially here in Kansas City,” Miller said, expressing gratitude on behalf of his team.
Click here to learn more about why Homebase, a smart living platform, was selected as one of Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2019.
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, the tech industry has validated its importance to Kansas City’s regional economy, said Ryan Weber, KC Tech Council president, and has demonstrated the resilience necessary to face today’s challenges.
“We would love to celebrate technology and a great industry supporting Kansas City in person,” Weber said in a kick-off video for No Coast. “But of course it’s 2020 things are different. Things have changed.”
For 2020, award winners were revealed not in gala setting, but via a series of video announcements featuring Cameos by such celebrities as former Chiefs guard Will Shields; singer-songwriter Melissa Ethridge; “The Office” actor Oscar Nuñez; and LeVar Burton, star of “Reading Rainbow,” “Star Trek: The Next Generation” and “Roots.”
No Coast award winners and finalists included:
Tech Connector of the Year
- Blake Miller — CEO of Homebase.ai (winner)
- Ed Lada — president and CEO of Goodwill of Western Missouri and Eastern Kansas (finalist)
- Dale Werts — partner, Lathrop GPM LLP (finalist)
Tech Champion of the Year
- Kathy Busch — chair, Kansas State Board of Education (winner)
- Ed Lada — president and CEO of Goodwill of Western Missouri and Eastern Kansas (finalist)
- Elijah Haahr — speaker of the House, Missouri House of Representatives (finalist)
Outstanding Contribution to Tech
- Garmin (winner)
- Cobalt Iron (finalist)
- MSTS (finalist)
Tech Educator of the Year
- Jenna Beckett — Centriq Training (winner)
- Frank Pflumm — Centriq Training (finalist)
- Scott Bromander — Prime Digital Academy (finalist)
The No Coast festivities also featured keynote remarks from Ann Gaffigan, director of technology operations at Dimensional Innovations, and Kristen Hammer, business development manager at Virgin Hyperloop.
Click here to watch Tuesday’s keynote presentations.
KC Tech Council’s No Coast festivities included an additional nod to the resilience of the local tech community amid COVID-19 challenges. Watch the video salute below.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
The education system is broken — these Kansas Citians want to fix it
As you may remember or have experienced with your own child, there seems to come a point in one’s educational journey where kids ask themselves — what’s the point? The answer has always been, so that you can get good grades, to get into a good college to then get a good job. The problem with…
What’s Kansas City doing at SXSW 2017 this year?
March is about to get weird. Startland News is once again returning to the weirdness of Austin, Texas, for the annual insanity that is the SXSW Conference. Like last year, we’ll be venturing to the Lone Star State to report on the Kansas City contingent at arguably the nation’s top conference for innovative ideas: South-by-Southwest…
Olathe-based Flow Forward raises $1M for vascular device
After completing a preclinical study, Olathe-based Flow Forward Medical nabbed another round of capital for its vascular device. The firm raised another $1 million from a group of unnamed, individual investors, bringing the firm’s total raised to $7 million. Flow Forward created the AFE blood pump system, which is designed for temporary use to quickly…
Park Hill toured the country for its new innovative learning program
The Park Hill School District is introducing a new approach to learning that aims to cultivate more innovative thinking among its students. Starting in Fall 2017, Park Hill conceptualized the LEAD Innovation Studio, a high school in which students will focus on project-, problem- and professional-based learning. The studio aims to not only address growing…



