Startups to Watch celebration set to premiere in early 2021 as digital interview special

December 17, 2020  |  Startland News Staff

Startups to Watch 2021 set

If 2020 proved one thing, it’s that innovation can’t be tamed, Austin Barnes said in announcement of a 2021 return for the hotly anticipated Kansas City Startups to Watch list and the debut of a corresponding digital interview special. 

“Our team of reporters has been masked up and on the ground since Day 1,” Barnes, programming director at Startland News, said of the nonprofit news outlet and its doubled-down commitment to coverage of Kansas City starters in innovation and entrepreneurship throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. 

“That attitude of support won’t shift as we start to approach our annual coverage of rising local companies — many of which have not only survived the pandemic, but shown great resilience as a result of its challenges.”

Startland News plans to publish its Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2021 list in mid-January — an annual effort to call attention to the work of 10 metro companies that the publication’s editors believe hold strong newsmaking potential over the coming 12 months. 

Be among the first to receive the Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2021 list! Click here to subscribe to Startland News’ email newsletter. 

The annual list is generated after a massive cull of companies and consultations with area investment minds and leaders in entrepreneurship support circles. 

Click here for a look back at Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020 — which featured such companies as Tesseract Ventures and Stenovate. 

“The Kansas City Startups to Watch list has become a valuable tool for investors and program managers — especially those outside Kansas City — as they start to take a closer look at what’s being built here in the plains states,” Barnes said. 

“Our team sifted through a massive list of contenders for the 2021 list and we’re excited to publish the piece at a time when founders need our support more than they ever have before.”

What won’t look the same in 2021 is Startland News’ vehicle for celebrating the companies on its list — typically in the form of a high-end networking reception that concludes with an on-stage presentation of companies. 

“We didn’t want to drop the ball on celebrating the work of our Startups to Watch class of 2021,” Barnes said, adding an in-depth interview special is expected to premiere online Jan. 27.

The hour-long special report will see the entire Startland News team — rounded out by Tommy Felts, news director; and Channa Steinmetz, reporter — come together with founders for a closed-set, socially distant series of one-on-one conversations about their companies and the year ahead. 

Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2021 will be produced by Stellar Image Studios and presented in partnership with the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and Plexpod. 

Click here for tickets to the online premiere of Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2021. 

“We spent much of 2020 putting our heads together on ways to move the celebration forward,” Barnes said. “Reimagining it as a digital interview special — which we think will offer a more intimate, in-depth look at what these startups are doing — has been a surprisingly fresh take on something that’s become an annual staple in Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community.”

Additional programming opportunities for 2021 are also in the works at Startland News, with the  publication actively evaluating an evolving digital media landscape and taking a closer look at the needs of media consumers — especially in the pandemic-era, Barnes explained.  

“2021 marks our sixth year as a digital newsroom,” he said. “Kansas City has changed, our audience has changed, and our team has changed. There are some really exciting opportunities to better connect our coverage across platforms and we’re excited to share those publicly in the months to come.”

Interested in becoming a monthly supporter of Startland News’ nonprofit newsroom? Click here to support local news coverage of Kansas City’s entrepreneur community of startups, innovators, creatives, makers and risk-takers for as little as $10 a month.

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

    Tech Scouts: Your pitch ideas could help defend the US; Aug. 12 application deadline nears

    By Tommy Felts | August 9, 2018

    The U.S. Department of Defense isn’t just bullets and bombs, said Jack Harwell. A five-day October event — “Encountering Innovation,” which is organized by the DoD and the Small Business Development Center’s Kansas office — gives entrepreneurs the opportunity to pitch innovative solutions to a panel of the DoD’s “tech scouts,” said Harwell, advisor at…

    Flyover Capital team

    Flyover Capital celebrates $63 million sale of its second portfolio firm Agrible

    By Tommy Felts | August 9, 2018

    In a deal that further validates the vibrancy of the Midwest tech scene, leaders at Kansas City-based Flyover Capital are lauding the sale of its second portfolio firm since its launch in 2014. Flyover — a venture capital firm whose mission is to fuel the next generation of tech startups in the Midwest — is…

    Techweek KC

    Techweek KC speaker lineup spans blockchain and 3D printing to fintech and inclusion

    By Tommy Felts | August 8, 2018

    Techweek KC has released a diverse docket of events, panels and speakers that aim to inspire and mobilize the area’s tech and entrepreneur community. Now in its fourth year, Techweek KC returns Oct. 8-12 with national tech, venture capital, nonprofit and blockchain leaders, said Drew Solomon, senior vice president of business development at the Economic…

    Mayor Sly James, State of the City

    Digital Workforce launch emphasizes freelance opportunities for diverse ‘solopreneurs’

    By Tommy Felts | August 8, 2018

    “This room should mirror our city,” said Sly James, repeating a common refrain used throughout his time as Kansas City mayor. But as he addressed a crowd of freelance workers taking part Monday morning in the city’s launch of the Digital Workforce Development Initiative (DWDI), the remark came with a less-frequent follow-up. “And it does,”…