Winning alumni revive Columbia Startup Weekend to unlock Midwest talent, find the next billion-dollar startup
January 12, 2022 | Channa Steinmetz
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation.
Techstars Columbia Startup Weekend is an opportunity for everyone — from students still in school to individuals who have been in the workplace for decades — to get connected to the entrepreneurial ecosystem, said Willy Schlacks.
“The idea of trading your stable job for sleepless nights to build your dream can be tough to stomach. Startup Weekend brings entrepreneurs out of their comfort zone to pitch their ideas and take the leap of launching a startup,” said Schlacks, co-founder of EquipmentShare and the Scale accelerator. “There’s hidden talent all around us. Sometimes entrepreneurs just need a little boost of confidence and support to make their existence known.”
Techstars Startup Weekend allows individuals to think, work and build as if they are in a startup for 54 hours. Participants can sign up with an idea and pitch for a startup, or to network with others and be part of a team. Attendees vote for their top pitches and teams are formed shortly after. Throughout the weekend, teams are mentored by veteran entrepreneurs.
By the end of the weekend, all teams give a final presentation and a winner is selected by a panel of judges. The event is intended to be a collaborative forum for sharing, learning, building and having fun, the organizers noted.
Click here to learn more about Techstars’ Columbia Startup Weekend.
After a year hiatus because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Columbia Startup Weekend is back — this year hosted by Scale in partnership with Techstars. It’s set to begin Friday, Feb. 25 and wrap up Sunday, Feb. 27 at EquipmentShare’s corporate office.
“We formed Scale to foster the development of entrepreneurs by focusing more on the person than the idea,” said Jabbok Schlacks, CEO and co-founder of EquipmentShare and Scale. “Hosting Startup Weekend aligns with Scale’s mission to identify entrepreneurs with the potential to build high-growth, scalable companies and bring good ideas to the marketplace.”
Click here to learn more about the Scale accelerator.
Click here to read more about a recent $230 million funding round for EquipmentShare, which the Schlacks brothers founded, along with co-founders Brad Siegler, Jeff Lowe, and Matthew McDonald, in 2014 after starting as an idea at Startup Weekend in Columbia.
With Scale as this year’s host, the winner of Startup Weekend will be invited to participate in Scale’s second cohort beginning in April, noted Brett Calhoun, who serves as the director of operations at Scale and the chair of Columbia Startup Weekend.
“There is no investment upfront, but there’s potential for investments,” Calhoun said. “They also get us as 24/7 mentors; they get to work in our office space and tap into our network of investors and customers. … Plus, the winner will receive a month of free media placements.”
The founders of EquipmentShare and Zapier are all prior winners of Columbia Startup Weekend and will be in attendance to mentor or judge throughout the weekend, Calhoun added — noting that the two startups have built their way up to multi-billion dollar valuations. (Zapier reached a $5 billion valuation in 2021.)
“Startup Weekend is an amazing place for anyone curious about entrepreneurship to dip their toes in the water,” said Wade Foster, co-founder at Zapier, a software integration startup now based on the West Coast. “Whether you have an idea already and want to try and get something started or you’re hoping to see other entrepreneurs in action. In 54 hours, you’re sure to learn a ton!”
All who are interested in entrepreneurship are encouraged to apply, regardless of experience, Calhoun emphasized.
“We think there’s a lot of hidden talent here,” he shared. “One community we’re really targeting is the computer science department at Mizzou. I’m trying to build a pipeline for students to the scale portfolio companies; they could potentially even be cofounders of a startup.
“[Approximately] under 1 percent of students in the engineering department at Mizzou are going into startups, so we’re trying to change that and also keep them local,” he added.
Registration for Columbia Startup Weekend does not have a deadline, but tickets are currently discounted 30 percent until Feb. 11.
Click here to register for Columbia Startup Weekend.
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

2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
USDA approves KC biotech startup’s secret weapon in the fight against cancer in dogs
Full USDA approval of a Kansas City startup’s bone cancer therapy for dogs reflects a more-than-decade-long commitment to improving the lives of pets and their families, said Tammie Wahaus, CEO of ELIAS Animal Health. The U.S. Department of Agriculture Center for Veterinary Biologics recently approved the first-in-class ELIAS Cancer Immunotherapy (ECI) treatment for canine osteosarcoma…
This (still) ain’t luck: How a decade of grit proved these urban heroes are ‘more than just clothes’
MADE MOBB’s ‘collaboration is community’ mindset takes the stage as streetwear brand named an Urban Hero Earning the title “Urban Hero” allows the owners of MADE MOBB an opportunity to publicly give themselves flowers, they said, sharing a twist on the slogan from one of their most popular tees. MADE MOBB — a Crossroads-based streetwear…
Look inside: North KC brewery adds game bar to the block (plus one of KC’s favorite sandwiches)
A game bar with a vintage national park theme is coming to North Kansas City next month — with Bay Boy sandwiches packed for the short trip. The Commons is an extension of Cinder Block Brewery at 110 E. 18th Ave. The craft brewery opened in September 2013. When a dance club recently closed next…



