KC Velocity launches as re-imagined Lee’s Summit accelerator goes metro-wide
November 11, 2021 | Startland News Staff
An entrepreneur-backed support organization for early stage founders and business leaders across Kansas City went live this week — the culmination of an intensive rebranding campaign for an accelerator previously geared specifically to Lee’s Summit.
“KC Velocity is focused on matching growing businesses with experienced, invested experts in a variety of essential capacities including finance, accounting, marketing, and technology,” organizers said, detailing the goals of the nonprofit initiative, formerly known as Velocity Lee’s Summit.
“Launching or growing a business always involves risk, but access to expert advice allows risk-takers to make the leap with confidence and conviction. By expanding its focus to the Kansas City metropolitan area, the organization hopes to broaden the pool of available professional experts and deepen its impact on growing businesses across the city.”
Interested entrepreneurs can fill out an online survey to be connected — free of cost — with local business leaders who possess the necessary expertise to facilitate their growth and success.
Click here to learn more about KC Velocity and to fill out the online survey.
Originally, Velocity was funded by Lees Summit, but budget cuts because of COVID19 prevented the city from any further funding, said Kevin Fryer, who serves as executive director. The group’s leadership saw the funding change as an opportunity to expand its reach and service offering and decided to go metro wide, he said.
Many Kansas City startup community members likely are most familiar with the former Velocity LS’s popular Pitch Pub Crawl events, which saw founders from across the city pitching during a rolling event through three Lee’s Summit bars in one evening.
“The Pitch Pub Crawl has been a huge success for Velocity and we’ll continue hosting it,” Fryer said. “We’ll be doing other events as we expand out.”
The newly rebranded KC Velocity group is led by serial entrepreneur Fryer and Keri Lauderdale Olson, chairperson of the nonprofit organization.
The effort is committed to fostering entrepreneurship and local businesses through connections that provide critical, relevant, and timely information and develop the tools needed for success, said Fryer, himself a fixture of Kansas City’s startup scene for more than a decade as a co-founder of the SparkLabKC accelerator program and co-founder of JobShakers.
Programming for KC Velocity is industry-agnostic, Fryer told Startland News, emphasizing the biggest impacts would be felt by individuals who are early in their careers — with especially high potential for those leading non-tech, but scalable companies (where resources and institutional knowledge are not as readily available).
A budding entrepreneur might, for example, erroneously rush to incorporate their business as an LLC, Fryer said, not realizing such a move could jeopardize interest from venture capital firms down the line.
KC Velocity would help guide such leaders toward a course more aligned with their end goals, he said.
“But if you haven’t been through it before, how would you know?” Fryer said.
The rebranded group debuted Tuesday with Global Entrepreneurship Week Kansas City and events across the metro.
Featured Business

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Healium partners with T-Mobile, transporting veterans to DC memorials via virtual Honor Flight
Veterans living in rural America can experience the sights and sounds of the nation’s war memorials in Washington D.C. thanks to a Kansas City-area startup’s virtual reality technology, powered by T‑Mobile 5G. “We are losing our World War II veterans at a rate of hundreds a day, and sadly many may not live long enough…
Watch: Troost Village duo go behind the scenes of four-year development in historic East KC neighborhood
Editor’s note: The following story includes the first video in a four-part series taking a look under the hard hats at the Troost Village development, a $162 million project on Troost Avenue, the city’s longtime racial dividing line. Videos in this series are expected to debut on Startland News as the project unfolds. The finished…
KC’s long-running online indie music magazine just debuted in print; why its founder saved advertising for the black-and-white page
Flashy digital ads and gimmicky marketing schemes aren’t telling the stories (or singing the praises) of artists who run counter to Kansas City’s mainstream, said Aaron Rhodes, founder of a niche music magazine newly hitting the streets this spring. Readers shouldn’t be fooled, Rhodes said. His underground approach to ad sales for Shuttlecock Music Magazine…
Leah Hermida brought coffee home to KCK; her Windmill KC cafe already needs more space
In the shadow of the Kansas City skyline, new entrepreneurial energy is brewing in Wyandotte County, the childhood home of Leah Hermida. “I knew the community really well,” Hermida said from her pandemic-opened, Turner-based coffee shop, The Windmill KC, noting she grew up in the city before eventually relocating to Overland Park. “I worked locally…


