Scale VC launches Fund II with $5M investment led by UM System, Shelter Insurance

May 2, 2023  |  Startland News Staff

Founders within Scale's several cohorts; photo courtesy of Scale

COLUMBIA, Missouri — Venture capital fund and studio Scale VC raised a $5 million round of funding in less than six months, said Brett Calhoun, highlighting the potential for growing a nationally recognized startup city in the middle of the country.

“Successful founders are everywhere — and that includes right here in the heart of the country,” noted Calhoun, who serves as the managing director and partner at Scale VC.

The University of Missouri System and Shelter Insurance led Scale’s Fund II, along with 34 other limited partners. In addition to the investment, Scale’s partnership with the UM System includes an on-campus student accelerator sponsored and supported by Scale and EquipmentShare — a fast-growing and nationwide construction equipment rental and technology company also based in Columbia, Missouri. 

Mun Choi, president of the University of Missouri

The student accelerator will focus on connecting students across all departments and universities of the UM System — University of Missouri-Columbia, the University of Missouri-Kansas City, the University of Missouri-St. Louis and Missouri University of Science and Technology — to forge innovative companies.

“This investment and partnership builds upon our efforts to turn the UM System and our state into an innovation destination — a place where big thinkers can start and grow their transformational ideas,” said Mun Choi, president of the University of Missouri. “I am proud that our universities are helping build the next generation of high-growth companies in Missouri.”

With Fund II, Scale will have the capital to support more than 30 companies through investments ranging from $50,000 to $150,000 in the next three years. That includes three startups that the fund will incubate in a venture studio from internal ideas. Corporate investors, like Shelter Insurance, will have the opportunity to be a design or co-incubation partner with these new companies. 

Amanda Martin, director of innovation at Shelter Insurance

“This partnership is an investment in more than our regional economy,” said Amanda Martin, director of innovation at Shelter Insurance. “It demonstrates our belief that our Midwest values don’t just coexist with innovation — they drive it. We are proud to work with Scale and our fellow investors to build the next generation of companies creating economic growth in the communities we love.”

From the heart of Missouri, Scale has recruited successful operator-limited partners and advisors dedicated to empowering founders who are strengthened by overcoming adversity, said Willy Schlacks, co-founder of EquipmentShare and Scale. Whether founders struggle because of constraints of their geographic location, pedigree, social class, immigrant status, gender or other barriers — Scale accelerates access to the knowledge, networks, and resources to remove roadblocks, he continued.

“My brother Jabbok and I started Scale to share what we learned from building companies and empower other founders to create legacy wealth and legacy companies,” Schlacks said. “I would even argue that since starting Scale, I’ve learned just as much as the 40-plus founders we’ve supported.”

Scale is focused on identifying those who display a disproportionate ability to persevere and then unlock invaluable operational knowledge for them to accelerate their company-building learning curve, Calhoun added.

“The Midwest or flyover states are generally overlooked when it comes to headlines, which is partly because founders in flyover locations are not used to telling their stories. In reality, the Midwest is flourishing with many humble world-class operators building massive companies who want to support other founders,” Calhoun said. “We are on a mission to empower founders to build generational wealth from the middle of the country, random suburbs, or even existing innovation hubs. We’ve seen this first-hand — founders can come from all walks of life.” 

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2023 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Madden and Tovah Tanner, Royale Cohesive Network

    How a KC mom and her 12-year-old co-founder are rewriting the book on entrepreneurship

    By Tommy Felts | July 6, 2021

    Guiding young people through the ins and outs of entrepreneurship is a family affair for Tovah Tanner, a metro woman on a mission to create a Kansas City that thinks critically, holds values, and possesses life skills that build lasting wealth.  “My son, Madden Tanner, is our co-founder. He’s 12 years old,” Tanner said, recalling…

    Ronald Rice, Franklin's Stash House

    Crafted within hip hop culture, Black-owned KC cannabis brand hopes to reshape a flowering industry

    By Tommy Felts | July 6, 2021

    It isn’t enough to be first, Ronald Rice said, announcing Franklin’s Stash House’s entry into Greenlight stores — a move that sees the Kansas City cannabis company become the first Black-owned brand sold at a dispensary in the state. “While this deal represents a big milestone in the evolution of Missouri’s cannabis industry, the legacy of…

    ‘Feelings matter’: Why KC culture experts’ new anxiety rating could prevent stress from ruining careers

    By Tommy Felts | July 1, 2021

    Editor’s note: The following story — a spotlight on a member of the Plexpod community — is sponsored by Plexpod, a progressive coworking platform offering next generation workspace for entrepreneurs, startups, and growth-stage companies of all sizes. Measuring the unmeasurable is Culture Think Tank’s specialty when it comes to company culture, said William Lindstrom. “With the…

    Angela Presnell, lilhoopgirl

    She earned 21K followers with a plastic circle; now Angela Presnell hoops to transfer social media popularity to a paid platform

    By Tommy Felts | July 1, 2021

    An Instagram page launched in 2016 to document then-college freshman Angela Presnell’s progression in hooping today reaches more than 21,000 followers — and sends the active entrepreneur across the globe to teach her artform in person. “I needed some sort of creative outlet that could be totally mine,” said Presnell, the 24-year-old Kansas Citian behind…