LaunchKC grants competition eyes startups hoping to scale in KC; Applications now open

August 10, 2023  |  Tommy Felts

2022 LaunchKC staff and winners; photo courtesy of LaunchKC

When LaunchKC’s next round of grant recipients are announced this fall during Global Entrepreneurship Week, winning startups will receive game-changing exposure in addition to the $50,000 in prize money, said Jon Ruiz.

Jon Ruiz, EB Systems; photo courtesy of Pipeline Entrepreneurs

His venture, EB Systems, was among six winners in 2022 when the popular grants competition was rebooted by LaunchKC after a four-year hiatus with renewed backing from the Missouri Technology Corporation. The program awards $50,000 in non-dilutive grants to each successful finalist, along with access to a host of resources and support services.

“As a company that has been around longer, but remained innovative and lean, LaunchKC was a pathway for us to evolve past custom and consulting projects into distilling our core technology and intellectual property into a highly scalable product,” said Ruiz, co-founder and CEO of EB Systems alongside Brendan Waters.

“While receiving non-dilutable funds is always great, as a bootstrapped and cash flow positive business, something that was just as valuable to us was the exposure,” he continued. “Our issue wasn’t execution, we’ve executed projects with some of the biggest companies in the world, it was getting our foot in the door.”

Connections made through LaunchKC allowed EB Systems to start conversations and projects with some of the biggest companies and organizations in Kansas City, Ruiz said, which will allow the startup to “keep executing, scaling, and when we’re ready raise funding at our desired valuation.”

Applications for the 2023 grants competition — expected to culminate Nov. 14 at an event during Global Entrepreneurship Week Kansas City — are open now. The deadline to apply is Sept. 17.

Jon Ruiz, EB Systems, presents his startups to Missouri state lawmakers during a session organized by LaunchKC; photo courtesy of EB Systems

LaunchKC officials are already conducting a nationwide search for innovative and diverse early-stage startups looking to scale their businesses.

Qualified companies — which must be located in Kansas City, Missouri, or be willing to relocate to KCMO — will have their applications evaluated by a panel of reviewers comprised of LaunchKC staff, industry experts, entrepreneurs, past grant recipients, and business leaders.

Selection emphasis will be placed on tech companies with high-growth potential that prioritize equitable business practices and see Kansas City as an ideal home for their business, organizers said. 

Reviewers will narrow the pool of applicants through three rounds of judging. In the final round, about 20 applicants will participate in in-person interviews. As many as eight of the finalists will be selected and announced at the GEWKC event.

“We understand the power of local companies and believe that every startup has the potential to be the next big economic engine, job creator or KC headquarters,” said Jim Erickson, director of strategic initiatives for the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, which coordinates LaunchKC with the Downtown Council. “With nearly 100 local volunteers willing to help with the competition’s selection process, business mentoring and more, we know the community is behind this effort just as much as we are.” 

Since the first grants competition in 2015, LaunchKC has supported more than 100 companies and collectively, those companies have attracted more $250 million in follow-on capital, organizers said, noting more than two-thirds of companies who have participated in LaunchKC programming are women and/or minority-led.

“After being back for just a year now, the startups we’re helping are hiring local talent, building a strong pipeline for economic growth, and we’re looking forward to welcoming even more,” said Becca Castro, strategic initiatives manager for EDCKC and a core organizer of the grants competition. 

RELATED: Six Kansas City area startups among big winners in 2022 LaunchKC competition; Here’s who won $50,000

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

    How Trump’s views on climate raise questions for Kansas’ biggest bet: a $4B Panasonic plant in De Soto

    By Tommy Felts | February 3, 2025

    Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Kansas City PBS/Flatland, a member of the Kansas City Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, The Kansas City Beacon, and Missouri Business Alert. Click here to read the original story. Headwinds don’t dampen enthusiasm of company executives, government officials The mammoth $4 billion…

    Lula builds $28M round with bicoastal investor; plans deep expansion into new markets

    By Tommy Felts | February 3, 2025

    Securing Lula’s Series A funding round is not only validation for the Kansas City proptech startup, Bo Lais said; the $28 million in capital means a greater opportunity to enhance the ecosystem for all of his company’s stakeholders, he added. The funding will allow Lula — a leading platform for streamlined property maintenance solutions and…

    Invary’s $3.5M seed round gives startup homefield advantage to rewrite the rules of cybersecurity

    By Tommy Felts | February 3, 2025

    A $3.5 million seed round backed by two high-profile Kansas City funds is expected to help Invary redefine runtime security, said Jason Rogers, CEO of the Lawrence-based cybersecurity startup — making new funding headlines from within the KU Innovation Park. Invary — a pioneer in Runtime Integrity solutions built on NSA-licensed technology — announced the round…

    Closing KCK’s Black-owned coffee shop opens opportunity for Kinship to brew bigger, owner says

    By Tommy Felts | February 1, 2025

    When TJ Roberts posted on social media about closing Kinship Cafe, a Black-owned coffee shop in Kansas City’s Strawberry Hill neighborhood, he was surprised by the outpouring of support — a morale boost that not only gives him the spirit to keep fighting for the business, but expand it, he said. “When we posted about…