HERImpact $50K pitch competition returning March 8; Here’s how KC women entrepreneurs can apply
December 16, 2022 | Startland News Staff
Women business owners and social entrepreneurs in Kansas City are encouraged to compete this spring for up to $50,000 in a Shark Tank-style funding event aimed at investing in women’s ambitions to start and scale local businesses.
“Expanding access to capital and mentorship is critical to women’s success as they start their own businesses,” said Yisel Cabrera, senior manager of economic mobility at Ford Motor Company Fund, which partners with 1863 Ventures to invest in the competition and the HERImpact program.
All women entrepreneurs located in Kansas City and the 14 surrounding counties in Kansas and Missouri are encouraged to apply, organizers said. The deadline is Feb. 10.
Click here to apply for the HERImpact Kansas City Pitch Competition.
The public live pitch event is set for 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. March 8 at the Bloch School of Management on the campus of the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
“We encourage women business owners at the pre-seed and seed level to apply to the competition for the chance to be awarded a cash grand prize,” said Maxwell Young, director of communications of 1863 Ventures.
Since 2018, Ford Motor Company Fund has awarded $350,000 in total funding — in addition to training and other critical resources — to women entrepreneurs in Kansas City, Missouri, Washington, D.C., Miami, and Detroit.
The HERImpact Entrepreneurship Summit recently returned to Kansas City in November, gathering entrepreneurs for a day-long series of fireside chats and panels.
Conner Hazelrigg, the 2021 HERImpact Pitch Competition winner, welcomed attendees last month and spoke to the imperative of impact and socially conscious work through the development of her company 1773 Innovation Co. and its solar-paneled electric charging stations.
RELATED: ‘Sunshine Box’ inventor earns $25K prize in pitch competition for women-led social ventures

Kira Cheree, Entrepreneur Business Basics; Dr. Shelley Cooper, Diversity Telehealth; Alana Henry, The Writique; Melissa Roberts, Federation of American Scientists; and Amanda Villarreal, Plex Capital, speak during a panel at the HERImpact Entrepreneurship Summit in November at UMKC; photo courtesy of 1863 Ventures
The acknowledgment of humanity — that business owners should be conscientious — was a common theme addressed during the Entrepreneurship Summit, said 1863 Ventures’ Young, noting remarks by Colleen Monroe, founder of Floraloom, which designs floral arrangements with the support of women’s shelters; and Cynthia Fails, founder of LaunchCrate Publishing, which is leveling publishing rights for authors.
Access to capital also dominated the conversation, with sessions featuring Charlotte Clark, co-founder of Foresight, which is creating an investability score to replace traditional credit metrics for entrepreneurs; and Karis Harrington, chief of business development at Kansas City G.I.F.T., which has granted more than $680,000 to 35 Black-owned businesses.
DC-based 1863 Ventures is an independent, Black-led national business development nonprofit and venture capital accelerator for New Majority founders (i.e., individuals who have been historically marginalized). It first brought its summit and pitch competition to Kansas City in summer 2021.
Ford Motor Company Fund is the American automaker’s philanthropic arm. Since 1949, Ford and Ford Fund have invested more than $2.2 billion in initiatives that ensure basic needs are met, provide access to essential services, offer tools to build new skillsets and open pathways to high quality jobs.
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
He wanted a dress shoe as comfortable as bare feet; How Joey Ahearn is reimagining wingtips to boots one step at a time
A newly unboxed, Kansas City-laced premium shoe company offers a single promise: to make often-uncomfortable men’s dress shoes healthy to wear — without stomping out fashion. “I grew up wearing Converse and Vans and socks and lacing really tight every day,” recalled Joey Ahearn, a physical therapy assistant, as well as founder and CEO of Free…
Moss-backed design studio nurtures nature indoors with sustainable pieces ‘neither living nor dead’
Green statement pieces across Kansas City’s Midtown and Crossroads neighborhoods — from Westside Flats to the spas at The Laya Center and the herb dispensary at Fresh Karma — boast just a snapshot of the story behind the mossy growth of The Fat Plant Society. The eye-catching biophilic designs — which have the appearance of a…
A test of Fit Truk’s core strength: People assume it’s a franchise, mobile gym owner says
One of Hailee Bland Walsh’s biggest affirmations came in the form of a question: Is Fit Truk a franchise? “As someone who has built businesses from the ground up, that is very validating and a huge compliment,” said Bland Walsh, co-founder of the fully-equipped outdoor gym truck, as well as the owner of City Gym…
Demo Day: UMKC E-Scholars partners with KC Arts Institute for more authentic entrepreneurial representation, director says
Art and entrepreneurship so often go hand-in-hand, noted Alex Krause Matlack. “Many artists will inevitably become entrepreneurs because they can create their own brand or business to showcase their craft,” explained Krause Matlack, the director of Entrepreneurship Scholars (E-Scholars) at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. “This semester, E-Scholars has a new partnership with Kansas City…


