Global Entrepreneurship Week returns with dozens of events planned in Kansas City
November 8, 2023 | Ansley Franco
Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Missouri Business Alert, a member of the KC Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, Kansas City PBS/Flatland, and The Kansas City Beacon.
Click here to read the original story.
Kansas City’s annual multi-day educational and networking event for entrepreneurs begins Monday.
Global Entrepreneurship Week draws thousands of like-minded individuals to more than 50 events to interact, learn from experts and hear success stories for no cost.
Business professionals will lead sessions on such topics as how to be a “solopreneur,” the importance of personal branding and bookkeeping essentials.
The event’s main sessions will be held at Plexpod Westport by Park 39 from Nov. 15 to 17. Other events will take place at various locations around the Kansas City metro area over the course of a week.
Plexpod offers office spaces for entrepreneurs, startups and growth-stage companies of all sizes.
Gerald Smith, founder and CEO of Plexpod, said he is excited that his business was selected as this year’s central location for Global Entrepreneurship Week.
“It’s these types of events that really open you up to things that you wouldn’t experience otherwise,” Smith said.
Smith is a self-described lifelong entrepreneur. He started his career in digital media, working with brands like AMC Theatres and John Deere for 25 years.
“There’s a bit of a pay it forward for my wife and I with Plexpod. I absolutely love being around others that remind me of myself in starting their companies,” Smith said. “Entrepreneurship knows no boundary.”
Jess Dyroff, co-founder of Brightside Creative, plans to attend multiple sessions at Global Entrepreneurship Week. She started the company in April to transform businesses using creative strategy and branding expertise.
Dyroff said she is most interested in hearing the lessons from older entrepreneurs and is excited about the expertise people are showing up with at GEW.
“We’d love to just expand our reach and really put ourselves out there to meet new faces within the small business community,” Dyroff said.
Chris Bohannon, founder of Artist KC, also plans to attend. Bohannon is a retired middle school art teacher who left teaching in 2017 to open her business making custom acrylic paintings of pets.
This will be her fourth consecutive year participating in the event.
“I think the most appealing part of GEW is that everyone on stage presenting is an experienced entrepreneur that is offering you free advice and resources, and nothing beats hearing it from somebody who’s already been there,” Bohannon said.
On top of also attending the events, Madison Clark, founder of Grief Cards, will be leading a session about working with emotions.
“I’m talking about the intersection of where entrepreneurship and grief meet, and how to work with those emotions and build an entrepreneurial life that works with them instead of acting like they don’t exist,” Clark said.

Dr. Shelley Cooper accepts the $25,000 first-place prize at the AltCap pitch competition during Global Entrepreneurship Week 2022; photo courtesy of Dr. Shelley Cooper
The week will also feature the AltCap Your Biz Pitch Competition, where $40,000 will be awarded to four winners.
The competition was open to owners of businesses with less than $250,000 in annual revenue. Ten finalists will pitch at AltCap’s event 3 p.m. on Nov. 16.
Last year’s winner, Shelley Cooper, pitched Diversity Telehealth, a company that works to bring health care access to people who may not ordinarily have it.
On competition day, Cooper said she was completely surprised when she won the $25,000 first-place prize.
“It’s made a huge difference in my company and is still making a big difference,” Cooper said.
Diversity Telehealth is utilizing a portion of the winnings to cover a new feature that would expand the language options in the app to include Arabic, French, Swahili and Somali.
“I think the main bit of advice is to remember why you’re doing this … and just keep working at it and give it your best effort,” Cooper said. “Keep your heart in it.”
Entrepreneurs who are interested in attending the event can register online. Spots are limited and are available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
WiGo trips isolated travel in its tracks, connecting like-minded journeys through years-in-the-works app
WiGo Trips takes the isolation out of globetrotting, said Jaqui McCarthy, connecting people on a “LinkedIn for travellers” social networking app set to launch Saturday. Soon to be available on iOS and Android, WiGo is expected to feature a marketplace through which users can display and discuss travel plans, CEO and co-founder McCarthy said. Selected…
Daytime TV exposure weaves new challenge for once-bullied teen wig designer: a startup reality check
Fifteen-year-old Trenton Lee found his purpose on the brink of suicide, he recalled, glossing through the pages of a portfolio chronicling the first months of his newly launched Kansas City wig business — a path that ultimately led him to a couch alongside TV and radio personality Steve Harvey. “I was just at the lowest…
Target deals new verse to KC-born Mixtape card game; players could pick founder’s next tune
Mixtape allows players of the KC-made card game to “hide behind the song,” connecting without fear of vulnerability, said creator Joel Johnson. That appeal recently helped push the cross-generational, multi-genre product onto Target shelves across the country. Players draw cards with such scenario questions as, “What song or band changed the way you think about…

