Big winner at GEWKC: AltCap Your Biz turns The Next Paige with $42K+ in prizes
November 17, 2023 | Taylor Wilmore
Editor’s note: Startland News’ coverage of Global Entrepreneurship Week-Kansas City is made possible by the support of Husch Blackwell.
The value of local support should not be underestimated or taken for granted, said Elaina Thomas, winner of the $25,000 grand prize at Thursday’s AltCap Your Biz pitch competition.
“I feel blessed, I feel like I am in the right place, I could’ve started The Next Paige anywhere I wanted to, nationally, and I’m so glad I started in Kansas City,” said Thomas, founder of The Next Paige, Kansas City’s first Black-owned talent agency.
“The support here has been so amazing on what we are trying to do here by bringing this industry back to Kansas City,” she added. “I can’t do it alone.”
The AltCap Your Biz: Pitch Competition, in its eighth year, fuels Kansas City innovators, giving them the opportunity to pitch their business and win big during Global Entrepreneurship Week-Kansas City with cash prizes to accelerate their growth.
On her winning night, Thomas, full of gratitude, reflected on the personal journey it took her to get to the rewarding moment.
“As a Black woman entrepreneur, I’m thinking of all the challenges and the barriers that I had to cross to get to this point,” she said.
“I was a former performer and now a business woman. It’s an emotional moment and it’s not a theory, this is facts. I think the judges connected to the impact, we are doers in this community, and the evidence is tangible,” said Thomas.
Click here to read about the 2022 AltCap Your Biz grand prize winner.
Watch a video featuring Elaina Paige Thomas below, then keep reading for more AltCap Your Biz awardees.
Kemet Coleman and Elliott Ivory, co-founders of Vine Street Brewing, secured the second place $10,000 cash prize, propelling their brewery’s mission to foster inclusivity through art, community service, music, and the love of beer.
“I think we brought something authentic and unique, and something that could potentially be scaled more,” said co-founder Coleman.
With plans to expand their production capacity and build a new state-of-the-art cold room, the team has big dreams of pushing the margin on the brewery’s innovation.
“I think Alt Cap does a really good job at supporting local businesses, and we’re serious about ours, we’ve got good opportunities,” Coleman said.
The fan favorite of the night, Triumfia Houmbie Fulks was awarded $2,500 for her startup, CodeAlgo Academy, a 3D Computer Science gaming platform that teaches K-8 students coding.
“The fans saw the results,” said Fulks, who recently earned a winning spot among 2023 LaunchKC grant recipients. “As an engineer, I wish I had the chance to learn coding early on, and I feel like there are a lot of young people who also didn’t get that chance. So we are providing the opportunity for them to learn that you can.”
RELATED: LaunchKC awards $300K: Six new startups enter the winners’ circle with KC investments

Godfrey Riddle, Civic Saint, and Roy Scott, Healthy Hip Hop, center; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News
The $5,000 Changemaker award was split equally between Godfrey Riddle, founder of Civic Saint, a sustainable housing organization, and Roy Scott, founder of Healthy Hip Hop, an online platform offering hip-hop for children and families.
Additional pitchers who competed Thursday included:
Co-Angler (John Bledsoe), Springfield, Missouri — An online platform dedicated to connecting anyone and everyone who shares a passion for fishing.
Nexodesk (Jimmy James, Lopez Maradiaga), Kansas City, Kansas — Designed for startup and business owners, Nexodesk creates solutions for tech problems with professional services.
The Black Pantry (Brian Roberts), Kansas City, Missouri — A one-stop shop for all things Black-owned, such as quality pantry and self care products.
The AI Hub (James Spikes, Taylor Burris), Kansas City, Missouri — An art incubator with co-working lounges, fully equipped studios, and hubs to develop skills.
VenBoo (Juaquan Herron), Kansas City, Missouri — An app allowing organizers to post their vendor opportunities and connect with different vendors across the Midwest.
Wrax (Frankie Elder-Reedy), Pleasanton, Kansas — A harness designed to better fit breasts and prevent bouncing during workouts.
Yes! Athletics (Deb North), Topeka, Kansas — A women-owned sporting goods company that offers feminine styles and colors in traditionally male sports gear.
Click here for a photo gallery of the pitch competition from AltCap.
Featured Business

Taylor Wilmore
Taylor Wilmore, hailing from Lee’s Summit, is a dedicated reporter and a recent graduate of the University of Missouri, where she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Journalism. Taylor channels her deep-seated passion for writing and storytelling to create compelling narratives that shed light on the diverse residents of Kansas City.
Prior to her role at Startland News, Taylor made valuable contributions as a reporter for the Columbia Missourian newspaper, where she covered a wide range of community news and higher education stories.
2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Royals roll out the blue carpet for entrepreneurs with campaign focused on small businesses that define KC, its fandom
Editor’s note: The Kansas City Royals is an advertiser with Startland News, although this report was produced independently by Startland News’ nonprofit newsroom. Kansas City’s hometown baseball team is coming to the plate with a new pitch as opening day nears: a marketing campaign for the Royals that puts its city, fans and inspiring local…
Made in KC reveals plans for Barrywoods shop in the Northland (and where it’ll open next)
Made in KC is intentionally growing where local demand takes it, said Keith Bradley, detailing the brand’s expansion plans that hinge on customer convenience and include a new store in a prominent Northland shopping center. “We realized that we don’t have a strong presence in the Northland,” said Bradley, a co-owner of Made in KC…
National pain points meet local solutions at C3KC; How ‘energy of the day’ can spark lasting change
Editor’s note: The Junior League of Kansas City — through its C3KC conference — is an advertiser with Startland News. Fostering conversations about the most-pressing concerns facing communities not only helps expose the best of Kansas City innovation, said Becky Haddican, it also serves as a catalyst for even greater collaboration in the future. Now in…
AI-generated bedtime stories are just the first chapter in JQ Sirls epic venture to make the publishing industry more inclusive
Every great children’s story deserves the opportunity to be published, JQ Sirls said, adding his own footnote that more people are qualified than they think to create them. “I could put 1,000 people in one room and tell them all to write a short story about their childhood. While many of them may have a…




