In the Black: Why Venture Noire is bringing capital resources from Arkansas to KC’s founders of color
September 14, 2021 | Austin Barnes
It’s time Black-led companies went from over-mentored and under-resourced to well-connected and infused with capital, Keenan Beasley said, announcing plans for establishing more equitable entrepreneurial ecosystems that begin, in part, with a presence in Kansas City.
“Kansas City is a very mature market,” Beasley, founder of Venture Noire, said of what he’s observed among the metro’s startup space and the talented roster of Black and minority founders making names for themselves within it.
“Every entrepreneur that I’ve talked to, so far, in Kansas City is already at the business growth stage — meaning they’re making revenue. What they’re trying to figure out is how to scale.”
While founders in other Heartland cities (unnamed by Beasley) have struggled to move beyond the ideation phase of venture creation, Kansas City-based Black founders and founders of color have a primary need: capital; something Beasley hopes to address head on Sept. 24 when Venture Noire hosts its first entrepreneurial support and networking event, “Let’s Venture.”
“We’re going to showcase a lot more information on what we’re learning and what we’re seeing. … We have some great speakers lined up. I’m excited to learn from everyone in the region,” he told Startland News, adding he’ll tour the region the following day and explore its opportunity zones in an effort to better understand the city with the hope of permanently expanding Venture Noire programming into the metro.
Kansas City-based founders joining Beasley are expected to include Jannae Gammage, The Agency Base; Dan Smith, The Porter House KC; and Thalia Cherry, Cherry Co.
Godfrey Riddle, Civic Saint is set to moderate the discussion presented in partnership with the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. Click here to register.
View this post on Instagram
In addition to community events, Venture Noire — which has until now focused much of its efforts in Arkansas — leads a virtual, 8-week accelerator program called “In the Black,” the Dare to Venture one-on-one mentoring program, and produces a line-up of entrepreneurship-focused podcasts.
Click here to read about the Walton Family Foundation’s $1.3 million grant helped provide the foundation for Venture Noire’s In the Black accelerator.
The organization was founded in 2019, following Beasley’s exit from his millennial-focused creative agency in New York City.
“Typically you come off of these wins and you expect to feel really good and instead I actually felt very isolated. I realized there wasn’t a robust, diverse, startup ecosystem [in New York City] … there wasn’t a community,” he recalled.
“Venture Noire was started to build community — an ecosystem.”
With its initial meetups happening in Beasley’s apartment, the early incarnation of Venture Noire started to reveal the stories and struggles of founders in an eye-opening way, he added.
“This was casual, before we were formed as an organization, [we were inviting] diverse entrepreneurs to come together and I realized there was one key theme and it was this kind of lack of confidence — not in their own personal abilities, but in feeling that the ecosystem was set up for them to win.”
While organizations intended to guide underserved entrepreneurs are in no short supply nationwide, not every group presents opportunities to create genuine community connections or to build necessary knowledge that can grow a business long term, Beasley said.
“Every entrepreneur is not aware [of resources that exist]. When they’re going through their journey, they just feel alone. And I said, ‘OK, we have to change that,’” he said.
“We can build confidence in these entrepreneurs by bringing the ecosystem right to them.”
Not only can Venture Noire bring mobility to the concept of a startup ecosystem, the organization also hopes to focus on creating as much exposure for Black and minority-led ventures as it possibly can, Beasley said.
“There’s now a lot of competition and a lot of talent in the middle of the country. I think our job is to help increase the exposure and to make a lot of these venture capitalists, these private equities, some of these larger banks and institutions, these corporate partners aware of a really thriving and emerging startup ecosystem,” he said, adding the organization also hopes to help create jobs.
“We support [communities] through economic impact … helping entrepreneurs scale and grow their business and create a larger and larger workforce. So I think if we’re doing that, we’re succeeding and that’s something that we’re hyperfocused on.”
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
Featured Business

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Quartet of startups hop into the Digital Sandbox KC
Four early-stage businesses recently entered the Digital Sandbox KC program. The new startups demonstrate the ingenuity Digital Sandbox aims to attract for its grant-funding efforts, said Jeff Shackelford, director of Digital Sandbox KC. “From helping students prepare for college to analyzing voting records to predict legislative outcomes, the startups in the Sandbox are a great…
Newest Techstars KC class tackling payday loans, food safety, bots for business
Techstars Kansas City has revealed its 2018 cohort of startups. The 10 companies will make a big impact not only on Kansas City but the global economy, said Lesa Mitchell, managing director of Techstars KC. “Although our companies come from many industries, they share in common that they are all solving problems to make the…
(Video) ESHIP Summit attendees ask: Can entrepreneurial support efforts actually be sustainable?
When more than 600 attendees gathered this week in Kansas City for the second ESHIP Summit, they each came with their own ecosystems, businesses, local governments and support networks in mind. They also brought questions. “What are they doing in their cities? What’s worked and what hasn’t worked? What can we adopt back at home…

