Rock Chalk hustle: KU launches ‘Startup Jayhawk’ event series to demystify entrepreneurship
April 18, 2023 | Matthew Gwin
Editor’s note: The University of Kansas’ School of Business is a partner of Startland News.
LAWRENCE — A three-day startup event series at the University of Kansas is expected to help shine a spotlight on student entrepreneurship and innovation, said Brian Anderson, noting an intentional effort by KU’s School of Business to make startup life more accessible — especially for those who can’t yet see themselves as founders.
Startup Jayhawk is set for April 25-27, featuring two programming sessions each day — including a student-led fireside chat, a side hustle panel discussion, and a reverse pitch competition where students will compete for $5,000 in scholarships.
The debut event series is all about acknowledging accomplishments and elevating what’s possible, emphasized Anderson, professor of entrepreneurship and management and entrepreneurship area director for KU’s School of Business.
“This notion of celebration was really important to us,” he said. “We wanted to create a space where students can engage with each other and engage with KU’s entrepreneurship ecosystem in a way that lowers barriers, that lowers friction, and — in a lot of ways — demystifies the entrepreneurship process.”
Click here to view a full schedule and description of each Startup Jayhawk event, including a keynote session with Jeni Britton, founder and chief creative officer of Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams.
Among its goals, Startup Jayhawk aims to create opportunities for students to build meaningful connections with professionals from a diverse range of industries and backgrounds, Anderson said.
“Everything that we do is centered around student opportunity and creating value for students,” he said. “So for Startup Jayhawk, it’s a way for students to see what is available … and really be able to make connections.”
Those relationships can be valuable when students meet an entrepreneur or business founder whose personal background relates to their own, Anderson added.

Kansas City founders Juaquan Herron, Venboo; India Wells-Carter, Fresh Factor; and Sam Kulikov, KC Pioneers; participate in a panel conversation during Startland News and the KU School of Business’ entrepreneurial lunch and learn series; photo by Austin Barnes, Startland News
“[That’s true] particularly for students who are coming from very different life perspectives, being able to make connections with entrepreneurs who they can identify with, who allow them to imagine new possibilities, [is valuable] because they made a connection with somebody who is coming from a similar life experience and can be a role model or a mentor,” he said.
KU’s School of Business also partnered with Startland News this spring for a separate “entrepreneurial lunch and learn” series that brought Kansas City startup founders to campus to provide students with real-world experiences and stories — from conversations on funding and market validation to entrepreneurs detailing how they went from working in someone else’s startup to founding their own.
The final session in the five-part event series wraps this week.
Embracing the challenge
The reverse pitch competition at Startup Jayhawk will provide students with a tangible opportunity to make an immediate impact on an existing business. At least eight teams of students are expected to propose a product idea to J Thomas Home, an Olathe business that makes custom handmade floating shelves.
The top four teams will collect a piece of $5,000 in scholarship money, and may even have their products adopted by J Thomas Home, according to Ryan Rains, director of entrepreneurship co-curricular programs for KU’s School of Business.
“Rather than students needing to come up with the problem as the entrepreneur and try to find a market, we’re bringing the market to them and saying, ‘Here’s the problem they’re facing. What ideas and recommendations do you have?’” Rains said.
The challenge targets easy student engagement, Anderson added, noting that students should be able to participate even without having a deep understanding of cabinetry.
“It’s a fun problem,” Anderson said. “It’s meant to be a way for students to engage in problem solving and ideation without having a lot of technical understanding of how to make a cabinet or how to make a shelf.”
The KU School of Business aims to cultivate an environment that encourages students to try new things and remove the fear of failure, Rains said.
“I think one of the huge benefits is that we’re actually creating a space, and then we’re setting up structure, not pressure,” he said. “We’re creating communities for students to try.”
That safe environment, when paired with steady support and mentorship from faculty at the business school as well as industry leaders, leads to accountability and — ultimately — learning, Rains added.
“It’s different than going online and finding a video and then trying by yourself,” Rains said. “That’s hard to do sometimes, but in these experiential learning spaces with others, by having weekly check-ins, there’s sort of a built-in accountability.”
“You don’t have to start a business,” he continued. “That’s not the ultimate goal. It’s about trying and learning. By being a part of something with other students, there’s more internal communal motivation to try something and learn.”

Capitol Federal Hall, University of Kansas School of Business; interior rendering courtesy of the University of Kansas
You can do this; you can do it now
Now in its first year, Startup Jayhawk is envisioned as an annual event, Anderson said, and serves as a culmination of the School of Business’ efforts to reimagine and reinvest in entrepreneurship.
“This past year, we’ve really taken a deep dive into our programs and specific courses, and really looked for ways to create more opportunities for students to engage, lower barriers to engagement, and open up our programs to students across campus,” Anderson said.
Part of that reimagining focuses on catering programming to students who may not yet envision themselves as entrepreneurs, or may not have interest in technology, Anderson said.
He categorized students into three groups: “now” entrepreneurs, who already have side hustles and entrepreneurial ideas; “later” entrepreneurs, who have interest down the road; and “serendipitous” entrepreneurs, who can’t yet imagine themselves as entrepreneurs.
“When you think about the University of Kansas, the later entrepreneurs and the serendipitous entrepreneurs are by far the largest group on campus,” Anderson said. “For most of them, their interests are going to extend well beyond technology. … We wanted to address this other population of students where technology may not be part of the equation and maybe that dream right now doesn’t exist more than a side hustle.”
All in all, KU’s School of Business hopes Startup Jayhawk and similar events will offer students a chance to begin imagining their own entrepreneurial journey — and realize they can make an impact sooner than later, Anderson said.
“We’re going to help you take the first step,” he said. “It might seem a little scary, but there’s never been a time in history where the barrier to being an entrepreneur has been lower. There’s still risk; there’s still uncertainty; but what we’re hoping to communicate to students is, ‘You can do this, and you have support.’”
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
High demand, low profits: Happy Food Co pulls meal kits from stores, pivots to catering
Love wasn’t enough to sustain the original model of Happy Food Co., but the meal kit company’s ability to pivot opens new doors, said Kiersten Firquain. “For a startup in Kansas City … it is difficult,” Firquain, head chef and co-founder of Happy Food Co., said of geographical challenges that contributed to its restructuring, a…
Outcrafting Carhartt: KC denim guru opened the door to a hidden maker speakeasy, affordable US-made workwear
The high-stakes world of makers — especially those hoping to develop a national brand built on quality craftsmanship — can require connections beyond what someone finds in a simple Google search, said Ryan Martin. “You kind of have to know somebody,” the Kansas City denim guru behind the KC Jacks workwear line and the couture…
WISE Power shifts energy from Hy-Vee Arena to Sporting KC, debuting cutting-edge tech lounge March 7
A new partnership with Sporting KC gives a Kansas City-founded startup naming rights to the new WISE Power Shield Club at Children’s Mercy Park, as well as a new lease on its emerging entertainment concept previously set to debut at the Hy-Vee Arena. “WISE Power has designed technology products and services that are incredibly innovative…
ZOHR relocates HQ to Dallas; KC lauded as its test site, but too limiting to grow brand nationally
Everything’s bigger in Texas for ZOHR — including the startup’s potential to drive onto the national automotive scene, said Komal Choong. “Kansas City has been our test market to prove out key elements of our growth and market expansion strategies,” said Choong, co-founder of ZOHR, confirming Tuesday that the on-demand tire service startup has relocated its…










