Porter House KC receives $175K from JPMorgan Chase Foundation to support inclusive entrepreneurship 

October 21, 2021  |  Startland News Staff

Dan Smith and Charon Thompson, Porter House KC

An investment by the JPMorgan Chase Foundation will help The Porter House KC fill a void in entrepreneur support programming in Kansas City, said Dan Smith.

“Our goal is always to find a solution to the problem. We felt there was a gap. There was a whole population of people being missed. People who come from where we came from weren’t being calculated in Kansas City’s ‘entrepreneurial city,’” explained the co-founder of the Porter House KC (PHKC), a program of Credit & Homeownership Empowerment Services (CHES).

JPMorgan Chase announced the $175,000 investment on Wednesday — aiming the funds toward helping provide entrepreneurship access and resources to underserved populations.

The Porter House KC is an inner city-based co-working community that provides entrepreneurship access and resources to underserved populations in Kansas City, Missouri.

PHKC operates as a launch pad and bridge for businesses unable to access support in the existing entrepreneurial and small business ecosystem.

The nonprofit provides a 12- to 15-week, cohort-based small business training program for low-to-moderate income and underserved small business owners/entrepreneurs. The training includes small group in-person and virtual sessions, one-on-one mentoring, and assistance with accessing capital. Sessions are taught by specialized consultants and include guidance on accounting, legal services, marketing, strategic planning, and accessing banking resources.

PHKC was launched in 2018 by serial entrepreneurs and fraternity brothers Smith and Charon Thompson, who — with a few startups on their resumes — pledged to do more than just focus on their own success. PHKC is the embodiment of how they’ve made good on their promise to help other small business hopefuls in their community get off the ground, Smith said.

“JPMorgan Chase is focused on strengthening small business ecosystems in Kansas City by providing access to capital and technical assistance that lies women- and minority-owned businesses,” said Nathaniel Tesmer, executive director for middle market banking for JPMorgan Chase who also heads the firm’s leadership team in Kansas City. “Many of these small businesses have been historically excluded from mainstream systems and disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. We’re proud to support PHKC’s work.”

The investment is expected to focus on mitigating the impact of the pandemic by:

  • Helping doors stay open for small businesses owned by Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) 
  • Increasing the number of successful starts by BIPOC-owned small businesses in Kansas City, and
  • Strengthening the coordination and quality of services offered to entrepreneurs of color in the Kansas City small business ecosystem 

In a 2019 report from LendingTree, Kansas City and St. Louis rank 49th and 50th, respectively, out of 50 major metropolitan areas where minority entrepreneurs are succeeding. In Kansas City, the report states, just 30.7 percent of minority-owned businesses generate $500,000 or more and just 42.6 percent of minority-owned businesses in Kansas City have been in operation longer than six years.

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

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

        Zach Anderson Pettet, Money 20/20, Cordell Carter II, Aspen Institute Socrates Program, Terri Bradford, Federal Reserve of Kansas City, and Donald Hawkins, kinly, at the C3KC “Fintech is Revolutionizing Banking” session

        National pain points meet local solutions at C3KC; How ‘energy of the day’ can spark lasting change

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2023

        Editor’s note: The Junior League of Kansas City — through its C3KC conference — is an advertiser with Startland News. Fostering conversations about the most-pressing concerns facing communities not only helps expose the best of Kansas City innovation, said Becky Haddican, it also serves as a catalyst for even greater collaboration in the future. Now in…

        AI-generated bedtime stories are just the first chapter in JQ Sirls epic venture to make the publishing industry more inclusive

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2023

        Every great children’s story deserves the opportunity to be published, JQ Sirls said, adding his own footnote that more people are qualified than they think to create them.  “I could put 1,000 people in one room and tell them all to write a short story about their childhood. While many of them may have a…

        ‘When puppets talk people listen’: It’s not just storytelling anymore for one of KC’s most beloved children’s theaters

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2023

        A Kansas City arts institution known for years as the Mesner Puppet Theater is animated with new life, said Meghann Henry, detailing a mission pivot for the freshly sewn and rebranded What If Puppets. Evolution at the nonprofit has taken a turn toward early childhood education since the retirement of Paul Mesner in 2016 —…

        M25 drops Midwest Madness bracket for best startup hub: 4-seed KC faces up-hill battle (Here’s how to vote)

        By Tommy Felts | March 13, 2023

        Bracket update: Since this story’s original publication, Kansas City has advanced to the Midwest Madness bracket’s Round of 32. Voting on Kansas City’s next match-up — against 5-seed Lafayette, Indiana — begins Tuesday, March 21. As sports fans fill out March Madness brackets this week, a Chicago-based venture capital firm is encouraging Midwestern founders, investors…