Blip Roasters, Lifted Spirits leaders among latest ScaleUP! KC cohort, priming their businesses to scale
January 19, 2022 | Startland News Staff
Eighteen Kansas City companies — ranging from coffee, software, and cycling, to construction, human resources, hair care, fitness, and distilling — are slated to join the latest ScaleUP! KC cohort, the program announced Wednesday.
“ScaleUP! Kansas City has a long history and proven track record of helping Kansas City business owners get the confidence, one-on-one coaching and professional peer network they need to not only grow multimillion-dollar businesses, but also become business and community leaders,” said Jill Hathaway, program coordinator for ScaleUP! Kansas City. “ScaleUP! KC offers vital support for these businesses that fuel the economy in our metro.”
Beyond helping businesses scale, the program aims to create new jobs, open new locations, develop resiliency for the future and strengthen the regional economy. Now in its seventh year, ScaleUP! KC is the longest running program in Kansas City for scaling businesses, open to any industry and growth-minded entrepreneurs in the greater Kansas City bi-state region.
Click here to learn more about ScaleUP! Kansas City.
Members of the new cohort include:
- Amanda Anderson – Contractor Accelerator, Lee’s Summit, Missouri
- Christina Baanders-Decker – Midwest Cyclery LLC, Kansas City, Missouri
- Bobby Caffrey – Chopper Industries LLC, DeSoto, Kansas
- Ian Davis – Blip Roasters, Kansas City, Missouri
- Brittany Fugate – Cenetric Network Services Inc., Olathe, Kansas
- Laura Garfield – Idea Decanter, Lee’s Summit, Missouri
- Zack Gould – KnockTurn Labs, Pleasant Hill, Missouri
- Sara Greenwood – Greenwood Consulting Group, Mission Hills, Kansas
- Scott Holsman – Next Level Performers, Overland Park, Kansas
- Karen Hughey – KR-HR/Nucleus Training Solutions, Overland Park, Kansas
- Reda Ibrahim – RK Contractors LLC, Kansas City, Missouri
- Rickey Leathers – Savvy Salon, Mission, Kansas
- Elisabeth Megli – Theme Strategic Proposals, Grandview, Missouri
- Michelle Ortiz – MJ Fitness LLC, Kansas City, Missouri
- Cecilia Smith – The Facial Bar, Kansas City, Missouri
- Michael Stuckey – Lifted Spirits Distillation, Kansas City, Missouri
- Gerald Thompson – Handyman Pro of Northland KC, Lathrop, Missouri
- Bryan Tobiason – KC Home Photography, Gardner, Kansas
ScaleUP! KC is funded by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and the U.S. Economic Development Administration through the Mid-America Regional Council. Event sponsorship has been funded by Arvest Bank. Administrative support and coaching is facilitated by Missouri’s Small Business Development Center at UMKC, a program of the UMKC Innovation Center.
“Every business owner who completes the ScaleUP! Kansas City program gets a new perspective that helps them transition from working in their business to working on their business,” Hathaway said. “This 16-week program has a profound impact on the top-tier Kansas City business owners who enroll and opens real-world doors to new possibilities and goals they’ve been dreaming of. The coaching, connections and skill-building helps them navigate the unexpected with a clear vision and the confidence to tackle any challenge.”
Including this newest cohort, 193 Kansas City-area business owners have participated in this selective program.
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

2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Block by block: Prototype builds startup’s housing vision where everyone can afford their own castle
A mock home facade project on the grounds of Kansas City’s historic Workhouse Castle serves as a proof point for Godfrey Riddle’s rebooted Civic Saint — a social venture built on compressed earth blocks as its key to affordable, sustainable housing. “CEBs (compressed earth blocks) are great for Kansas City, because non-expansive sandy clay soil…
Resource revival: Digital Inclusion Fund relaunches with initial grants focused on devices
Kansas Citians can’t upgrade skills or devices they don’t already have, said organizers of a newly relaunched Digital Inclusion Fund — emphasizing a need to attack the metro’s digital divide at the infrastructure level. The fund is set to award up to $250,000 to 501(c)(3) public charities (including schools and churches) or governmental entities across…
New deal with lightwell keeps WeWork in Kansas City after closing Corrigan Station space
A freshly negotiated lease agreement with the developer behind the lightwell building in downtown Kansas City means WeWork will continue its two-floor coworking and flexible office space operation in the heart of the city’s central business district. WeWork has officially completed its lease rationalization with the assumption of its lightwell location contract, the company said…
Meet the founder distilling greatness (and fusion flavors) into Kansas’ first Black-owned vodka brand
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. WICHITA — Greatness isn’t given; it’s earned, said Troy Brooks. But it comes one step at a time, and not without its challenges, he said. The entrepreneur behind Kansas’ first Black-owned…


