Ford opens door to July 29 pitch competition, $50K in prizes for women entrepreneurs

June 28, 2021  |  Startland News Staff

Stephanie Cummings, Please Assist Me, center, winner of the 2019 HERImpact DC pitch competition; Photo by My Bella Images LLC

The Ford Motor Company Fund is bringing a new pitch competition — and $50,000 in prizes — to Kansas City this summer as part of its effort to boost women social entrepreneurs.

Announced during the final moments of last week’s HI-HERImpact virtual entrepreneurship summit for Kansas City, the planned July 29 competition is part of a national effort powered by the Ford Motor Company Fund and 1863 Ventures and is open to women-run social impact ventures in the Kansas City metro.

“Kansas City, Missouri, enjoys a tremendous history of innovation,” organizers said in a release. “HI-HERImpact is excited to partner with entrepreneurs, investors and ecosystem builders in the region to support local entrepreneurs.”

Click here to apply for the HI-HERImpact pitch competition. The deadline is July 9.

Winners of the competition are expected to split $50,000 in prize money; divvied up between two $5,000 awards for early stage businesses, one $10,000 and one $25,000 prize for later-stage businesses, and one $5,000 audience choice winner.

“We do programs like this in other locations, and having the chance to do it in Kansas City is a great pleasure,” said Tony Reinhart, director of government and community relations, Midwest and Southern Region, at Ford Motor Company.

The June 23-24 HI-HERImpact summit was the Ford Motor Company Fund’s debut experience in Kansas City, organizers said, crediting Reinhart — who also serves as president of the Northland CAPS board of directors — as an influential force in bringing the program and pitch competition to the metro.

Kansas City’s social entrepreneurs should be inspired by the legacy of Henry Ford, whose industry-reshaping vision started as humbly — and fraught with detours — as any other venture, Reinhart said Thursday during the summit.

“It’s hard for people to believe that at one time Ford Motor Company was a startup; and more importantly, that Henry Ford was an entrepreneur,” he told the audience. “After Henry left the farm and went into Detroit, he had a job as chief engineer for the Edison Illuminating Company, but he had a passion for the burgeoning development of automobiles. He got two or three different patents and gave up that good-paying job, and eventually went out and started the Detroit Automotive Company and then the Henry Ford Company, which were not nearly as successful of startups as the Ford Motor Company, which he started in 1903.

“So there’s something to aspire to.”

Ford brought a segment of its operations to Kansas City in 1906, Reinhart said, detailing local connections to the global brand that continue to this day.

“We created a sales office down on Winchester Avenue, which became a Model T production facility in 1909. Back then, we were making 70 Model Ts a day; now at our facility up north of the river, we make 65 F150 trucks an hour and 45 transit vans an hour,” he said, referencing Ford’s Claycomo plant. “So that tells you how much the industry has changed over the years.”

Watch Day 1 of the HI-HERImpact virtual entrepreneurship summit below. The slate of local panelists included Conner Hazelrigg, founder and CEO of 1773 Innovation Company; Tammy Buckner, CEO and co-founder of WeCodeKC and COO of PlaBook; Katie Mabry Van Dieren, founder of the Strawberry Swing Indie Craft Fair and Shop Local KC; Adrienne Haynes, managing partner of SEED Law; and Lauren Conaway, founder and CEO of InnovateHER KC.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2021 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        OpenCities team

        OpenCities sells: Denver govtech company acquires Australian startup with Kansas City HQ

        By Tommy Felts | June 22, 2021

        An Australia-based govtech startup with a sizable Kansas City operation has sold.  OpenCities — a hub-like platform that digitizes city forms and requests — was acquired by Denver-based Granicus, the companies announced Thursday, solidifying a deal that’s expected to better define what the future of civic engagement might looks like. Financial terms of the acquisition were not…

        Christopher and Ajia Morris, The Greenline Initiative

        60 percent of Black residents on KC’s east side are renters: How one small biz hopes to reverse redlining’s hit to homeownership

        By Tommy Felts | June 19, 2021

        An investment in The Greenline Initiative is, on its face, an investment in the future of Kansas City’s historic and re-emerging east side, said Ajia Morris.  But there’s more to the effort than meets the eye, the effort’s co-founder explained, detailing ways she and her husband, Christopher, hope to uplift the metro’s Black community; a…

        Charon Thompson and Daniel Smith, the Porter House KC

        C2FO donates all marketplace revenue it earned Friday to three KC nonprofits for Juneteenth

        By Tommy Felts | June 19, 2021

        Editor’s note: C2FO is a financial supporter of Startland News; and Kansas City G.I.F.T. is a non-financial partner of Startland, the parent organization of Startland News. This story was produced independently by Startland News’ non-profit newsroom. One of Kansas City’s biggest tech startups wanted to make Juneteenth a day of “action and awareness,” the company…

        Joey Mendez and Buck Wimberly, ULAH

        Styling into women’s fashion, ULAH sees its next season in brand extensions, not duplicating stores

        By Tommy Felts | June 18, 2021

        When ULAH opens its first women’s store concept this fall, it’s expected to be just the first retail extension of the popular upscale men’s boutique — and a sign the brand is fine-tuning its niche after a major e-commerce shift. “We already have a huge customer base — and a lot of them are women,…