UMKC pitch contest puts Cafe Cà Phê closer to Jackie Nguyen’s big goal; winners range from students to emerging startups
April 30, 2022 | Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts
The University of Missouri-Kansas City continues to brew innovation — and the return of its Regnier Venture Creation Challenge (RVCC) Friday poured proof, offering more than $88,000 in critical cash prizes to percolating ventures that spill far beyond its classrooms.
“I moved to Kansas City from Washington D.C. over the summer and I started following Cafe Cà Phê on Instagram before I moved here,” said Katya Siddall, vice president of product development and innovation at Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City and presenter of two BlueKC Healthcare Innovation Awards — one of the returning categories in the newly retooled, multilevel competition and showcase of innovation.

Jackie Nguyen, founder and owner of Cafe Cà Phê, records the announcement of the coffee shop’s first-place win in the James and Rae Block Kansas City Startup Awards at the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge
Siddall took the stage in the Bloch Executive Hall moments after the popular Columbus Park-ground, Asian-owned, woman-owned coffee shop secured the contest’s first-place win in the James and Rae Block Kansas City Startup Awards and its $15,000 cash prize.
Jackie Nguyen, founder and owner of Cafe Cà Phê, has gained notoriety in the city’s startup and small business circles for her ability to use passion to overcome plight — vowing to open a brick-and-mortar space for Kansas City’s first Vietnamese coffee shop without taking on any debt.
Friday’s win, if applied to the total of Cafe Cà Phê’s ongoing GoFundMe campaign, would put the small business a few shots over its $75,000 fundraising goal, all but confirming success for Nguyen who was unavailable for comment following the award announcement.
Cafe Cà Phê’ previously won $20,000 in funding from AltCap during its Global Entrepreneurship Week-hosted AltCap Your Biz contest.
Click here to read more about Nguyen’s plans or here to contribute funding.

Risa Stein, founder of SeeInMe, accepts the second-place award in the James and Rae Block contest at the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge
Another woman-founded venture took second in the James and Rae Block contest. SeeInMe, a profile-based platform that helps the public connect with communication-diverse people of all ages, founded by Risa Stein, secured $10,000.
While UMKC-launched ventures saw success in other categories, contenders from other parts of the community (and the state) continued to dominate the annual competition — which sought to dole out more than $88,000 in total prizes.
Additional winners of the 2022 RVCC include:
BlueKC Healthcare Innovation Awards
First Place: Speak IT, $15,000
Founded by Julian Lu, Kai Skallerud, Ajla Salic, and Chris Callan, students at Washington University-St. Louis, Speak IT is a voice-enabled assistive technology for healthcare providers.
Second place: MiDoc, $10,000
Founded by Dr. Linda Wu, Washington University-St. Louis, MiDoc is an electronic stethoscope for use in telemedicine.
Regnier College Startup Awards
First Place: Farm Story, $15,000
An educational platform that connects farmers with consumers and offers insight on where food comes from.
The contest also awarded a total of $750 in excellence in innovation prizes.
Second Place: Crib Coaching, $10,000
Founded by Jill and Justin Bertelsen, UMKC, Crib Coaching has gamified the experience of parenthood, offering new parents an educational outlet to level up their parenting skills.
Third Place: Allter, $5,000
Founded by Michelle Gerschkovich, UMKC, Allter collects and analyzes customer data and produces sizing recommendations for online shoppers.
Outstanding Undergraduate Venture: Sky Sprayers, $2,500
An agtech-focused drone replacement for self-propelled sprayers.
Outstanding Social Venture: Hormonetopia, $2,500
Founded by Najjuwah Walden, Washington University-St. Louis, Hormonetopia teaches women “how to have a better period,” aiming to create greater access to information on the experience of menstruation through an online platform.
Outstanding Creative Enterprise: Tate Berry, $2,500
Berry, UMKC, founded a 17-piece progressive big band and coupled it with a content marketing agency and events company.
Featured Business

2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘Prognosis is pointless’: Journey Pro KC wrestling owner forces cancer statistics to tap out
Story and photos by Channa Steinmetz, Startland News | Video by Catherine Hoffman, Flatland Two years after his diagnosis, DJ Stewart still has never googled “glioblastoma.” “I have Grade 4 glioblastoma — meaning the highest, most aggressive grade. If you go down that rabbit hole on the internet, it’s a terrible thing to do.…
Pantry Goods brings wall-to-wall organic, European-style shopping to Midtown micro market
The expansion of Pantry Goods from an online service into a Midtown micro market has brought with it a bushel of changes — all organic — for Marcelle Clements as she continues her mission to grow support for small businesses and sustainable living. “It was a great move,” said Clements, founder of Pantry Goods, recalling her…
He wanted to post his pronouns on LinkedIn sooner, but first this startup founder had to come out to himself
The word was simple — sprinkled into a potentially impactful email introduction last week with little fanfare — but for Lee Zuvanich, reading it felt like Christmas morning. His. “When I came out on LinkedIn this summer — with my pronouns and everything — it wasn’t really a choice,” said Zuvanich, a trans man who now…
LaunchKC’s latest: a Social Venture Studio to tackle social, racial, environmental issues
A new Kansas City-based social venture studio is expected to help social entrepreneurs avoid grant starvation — and depending too heavily on financial gifts — in lieu of models that focus on innovative steps toward sustainability, said Father Justin Mathews. “I got very excited about social venturing — this idea of being able to harness…







