How one KC startup studio helps feel-good ventures grow impact while actually making money

October 6, 2023  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

Christian Hill, Thrive Homes, talks with Social Venture Studio demo day attendees; photo courtesy of Social Venture Studio

Running a social venture comes with an inherent challenge for founders, shared Jacqueline Erickson Russell, emphasizing they must balance purpose and profit.

Social Venture Studio — powered by LaunchKC — offers support along that journey, added Erickson Russell, the founder and CEO of Social Impact Advising Group and consultant for the Kansas City-based program.

“Complex challenges in our communities require complex solutions,” she explained. “Social ventures use business tactics and models to create social change, so we want to equip them with the best-in-class techniques from both a business and social lens.”

Social Venture Studio — launched in 2022 — just celebrated the conclusion of its second cohort with a demo day, where companies revealed their updated pitches to potential funders and supporters, at Keystone Community Corporation’s event space in the East Crossroads. Keystone and Social Impact Advising Group administer programming for the studio.

Social Venture Studio 2023 cohort: Willie Apala Flaherty, AskSAMIE; Craig Mason, Raise Health Innovations; Dr. Brandy Archie, AskSAMIE; Dikshi, SenseGrass; Kevin McGinnis, Keystone Innovation District; Christian Hill, Thrive Homes; Catina Taylor, Dreams KC; Jacqueline Erickson Russell, Social Impact Advising Group; Jeff Blackwood, New Frontier Mobile Diagnostics; and Corey McCartney, FaceKC

Willie Apala Flaherty — co-founder and CTO of AskSAMIE, a curated marketplace making aging in place possible and one of Startland News’ KC Startups to Watch in 2023 — echoed Erickson Russell, adding that it’s difficult to find balance between meaningful, impactful work and making money.

“Social Venture Studio helped illuminate how to build our business with these things in mind while growing my own entrepreneurial skill set,” he continued.

Seven startups — including AskSAMIE, which is led by founder Dr. Brandy Archie — completed the four-month program that is custom-designed for social entrepreneurs to grow their business and increase their community impact, Erickson Russell said. The program offers a variety of benefits and opportunities that are designed to meet entrepreneurs at their unique stage of growth, such as grant funding, business mentoring, cohort peer connections, curriculum focused on social impact, and technical assistance.

RELATED: Meet the founders tapped for Launch KC’s second Social Venture Studio

“This cohort was incredible,” she noted. “We noticed our applicant pool this year had more social ventures who were at the scaling point, which is what we are prepared to help with. There were six for-profits and one non-profit, but through the program, multiple organizations saw the need to create hybrid models and unique ways to become more financially sustainable and programmatically impactful.”

Christian Hill — the co-founder of Thrive Homes, an Overland Park-based home modification company that provides ADA-related modifications to those in need, such as disabled individuals, and elderly, with funding from Medicaid payers in Kansas and Missouri — said the work that the organizers of the Social Venture Studio are doing is crucial to provide the necessary support for the next generation of social entrepreneurs looking to make a social and economic impact in Kansas City. 

RELATED: Thrive Homes builds ‘life-changing’ independence for those struggling with mobility, aging in place

The studio played an important role in Hill’s continued leadership development and allowed him to get better at telling the story of Thrive, who it is helping and how it helps them, he noted.

“Our experience with Social Venture Studios was incredible,” he explained. “The connection to mentors, comradery and collaboration with the other cohort members, and insight into ways we can continue to improve our business from industry leaders in Kansas City was invaluable. There were friendships and partnerships made through SVS that have and will continue to outlast the program and I cannot recommend it highly enough.”

“The diversity of thought and perspectives from the speakers and presenters — many of whom are industry leaders in their respective fields — also was invaluable in helping us continue to perfect our processes and ensure our mission is more clearly stated and intertwined into everything that we do,” he added.

Hill and co-founder Logan Forbis will be carrying these lessons and connections with them as they move forward and try to scale quickly, yet methodically, to meet the ever-growing demand for accessible home modifications, he said.

“As the demand continues to increase due to the demographic changes, only 9 percent of homes in the U.S. today are accessible,” Hill noted. “We plan to aggressively continue our growth to meet the need and make as many of the other 91 percent of homes accessible as possible. One of the key factors that we believe will drive our growth is the development of a custom software that allows us to manage the complexities of billing Medicaid and completing construction projects at a national scale.”

SenseGrass co-founder Dikshi, right, talks with Social Venture Studio demo day attendees; photo courtesy of Social Venture Studio

Other startups in the 2023 Social Venture Studio cohort include:

  • Dreams KC, (Catina Taylor), Kansas City, Missouri — Dreams KC is an educational non-profit social enterprise dedicated to eradicating illiteracy.
  • New Frontier Mobile Diagnostics, (Jeff Blackwood), Kansas City, Missouri — New Frontier Mobile Diagnostics is a company founded to improve access to care and health equity for people in healthcare deserts through diagnostic imaging. New Frontier’s sonographers bring portable imaging equipment to doctor’s offices and clinics, providing patients quality, affordable diagnostic answers for conditions including heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and complications during pregnancy. Click here to read more about New Frontiers’ efforts to expand its services to rural and underserved populations.
  • Raise Health Innovations, (Craig Mason), Kansas City, Missouri  — Raise Health Innovations takes leading technologies and applies them in new proactive models to reimagine pathways to better health outcomes.
  • SenseGrass, (Lalit Gautam), Louisville, Kentucky — SenseGrass offers 360 farming solutions based on cutting edge technology like Nano-Satellite Mapping, Rover Bots and AI-based mobile and web application to make farming more efficient.

 

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

    Kauffman Capital Access Lab

    Kauffman launching Capital Access Lab investment pipeline for underserved entrepreneurs

    By Tommy Felts | February 13, 2019

    Every new business should have a fighting chance at success — regardless of the entrepreneur’s background, said Victor Hwang, announcing a new Capital Access Lab to address opportunity gaps in Kansas City and across the U.S. “It is up to us to collectively break down systematic barriers to entry that adversely impact people of color,…

    Sandy Kemper, C2FO unicorn

    Hunting unicorns: C2FO spotlighted as startup likely to reach $1B valuation

    By Tommy Felts | February 12, 2019

    Leawood-based C2FO is among the nation’s highest-momentum startups, according to CB Insights and The New York Times, which teamed up to name 50 “future unicorns.” The U.S. companies on the list — which analysts involved predict will eventually be valued at $1 billion or more — largely are based on the coasts. Twenty-two are in…

    Jesse Nelson and Bo Nelson, Cafe Equinox

    Thou Mayest sprouts fresh coffee concept in the suburbs; new Crossroads flagship percolating

    By Tommy Felts | February 12, 2019

    Coffee needn’t be melancholy or monochromatic, said Thou Mayest founder Bo Nelson, bathed in warm sunlight at Cafe Equinox. “We have to wake people up,” said Nelson. “We’re trying to celebrate the diversity of life — humanity, plants, music, art — so many collisions. It’s not a distraction. It’s not a means to an end.…

    Atonix Digital Black & Veatch

    Atonix Digital using predictive analytics to tackle Black & Veatch first, then the world

    By Tommy Felts | February 11, 2019

    Black & Veatch offshoot Atonix Digital is re-engineering the future of its parent company’s customer base, said Paul McRoberts. Developed to offer software solutions to customers from Black & Veatch’s existing market sectors — power, water, and telecommunications — Atonix has the opportunity to move beyond its specific corporate origins to service other industries, said…