Combat to capital: Vetelligence founder secures NMotion investment, accelerator deployment
May 8, 2023 | Tommy Felts
A Kansas City-based startup focused on guiding military service members into tech careers is among the latest companies selected for a top regional accelerator — strengthened by its founder’s own background as a veteran-turned-entrepreneur.
Vetelligence — led by Zachary Oshinbanjo, who served nearly four years as an indirect infantryman and specialist in the U.S. Army before founding his startup — joined the 12-week investment-for-equity NMotion Growth Accelerator. The 2023 cohort kicked off May 3.
Each company in the cohort receives $100,000 in return for 7.5 percent equity in their company, along with access to more than 100 mentors and the opportunity to pitch to about 50 early-stage investors.
“We invested in Vetelligence because Zachary brings deep domain expertise and lived experience to bear on a market opportunity we’re well positioned to help leverage,” said Scott Henderson, managing principal of Omaha-based NMotion. “Through grit and determination, he’s been able to create a skills map that charts out a path between various military credentials and the most commonly needed tech jobs.”
“We can’t wait to help build out his vision and help connect him to key people at StratCom, Nebraska Tech Collaborative, gener8tor Skills, and across the region to create high wage career opportunities for our country’s veterans,” he continued.
Click here to explore Vetelligence.
In its first few days, the NMotion Growth Accelerator hosted its eight cohort members in-person for a mixture of workshops featuring NMotion/gener8tor staff and notable startup founders (like Kyle Tut of Pinata and Derek Homann and Rick Knudtson of Workshop), tours of the local startup community, and cohort adventures (scavenger hunt in downtown Omaha, exploring the newly opened Luminarium, coffee with NMotion investors, and a Lincoln startup crawfish boil).
“What we’ve observed about Zachary these past few days and throughout the selection process is a humility matched with expertise,” Henderson said Friday. “He’s the embodiment of ‘still waters run deep.’ He has an economy of words and when he speaks, the rest of the cohort listens intently.”
Oshinbanjo noted he was attracted to NMotion because of its proven outcomes and hands-on approach; and it’s a source of pride the accelerator isn’t far from home, he said.
“There are tons of programs available that provide training, resources and connections now; it really has become a time where an entrepreneur who lives in Kansas City or the Midwest for that matter can grow their business without looking to the coast or other metro hubs,” Oshinbanjo said. “My intent by going through the program is to continue to grow the business. I’ve really taken the time to be strategic with the development of the platform through research and user engagement, the NMotion program will allow me to apply those learnings in a real way.”
Click here to read more about the rest of the 2023 NMotion Growth Accelerator cohort.
Being accepted into NMotion shows Oshinbanjo’s work through the Pipeline Pathfinder program, as well as on his own, has been meaningful, he said. A pilot in January brought solid insights, setting the stage for a coming beta test, Oshinbanjo detailed.
The founder teased more to come, and soon.
“Vetelligence was started here in KC and we’ll be looking to partner with organizations here that want dedicated, driven and disciplined talent,” he said. “We’ll start by solving problems in our own backyard with the support of the Kansas City community.”
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KCMO turns to entrepreneurs for new ideas on budget support; Advocates to rally at work sessions
Raised voices and a commitment to civic engagement earned entrepreneurs an additional $350,000 in city support for the 2019 budget year and a second attempt is about to begin, explained Rick Usher. “It really goes back to when the resident work sessions started in 2018,” Usher, KCMO assistant city manager for entrepreneurship and small business,…
Biotech firms: Health innovation can’t grow in KC with wet lab space in such short supply
ELIAS Animal Health is advancing a technology that can fundamentally change how cancer is treated in both humans and animals, said CEO Tammie Wahaus, yet finding lab space in the metro has been one of the biotech startup’s biggest tests. “We’re doing a lot of cell culture work, which requires wet lab space, but there…
Two novice gardeners in an Olathe lab could harvest Kansas’ first legal hemp harvest
Potential for a high-yield payoff grows with each day as Michael Wilson and James DeWitt inch closer to their first hemp harvest — likely the first in the state in modern times, they said. “It’s the jumping off point to create a repeatable process,” said DeWitt, co-founder and CEO at United American Hemp. “We’ve learned…



