Ford Fund Fellowship ranks KC alongside Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas; opening applications to local entrepreneurs
December 27, 2023 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
For the first time, Kansas City entrepreneurs have an opportunity to apply for the Watson Institute’s Ford Fund Fellowship, Milena Kirillova shared.
The international venture and leadership development program — in its third year and supported by Ford Motor Company Fund — is a virtual, 16-week program designed to equip highly promising entrepreneurs and community leaders with the skills, resources, and experiences to grow the impactful ventures that they are building, explained Kirillova, search manager for the Watson Institute.
“Working within the Kansas City community this year has already demonstrated how many amazing entrepreneurs there are in Kansas City,” she continued, “and how many communities they are impacting through through their work.”
The Boulder, Colorado-based Watson Institute powers fellowships to support highly promising, historically disenfranchised rising entrepreneurs and leaders in partnership with leading corporations and foundations.
Applications for its fellowship close Jan. 15. Click here to apply.
Forty entrepreneurs — 20 from U.S. priority locations (Kansas City, Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Louisville, Memphis) and 20 from international locations (China, Germany, Mexico, Romania, South Africa, United Kingdom) — will be chosen for the fellowship, which will run from March 4 to June 27.
“I’m really excited that this year we get to work within Kansas City, and hopefully it will continue to be one of our priority locations down the road,” said Kirillova.
“We’re looking for someone who is an entrepreneur or a community leader and who is deeply committed to creating sustainable and scalable impact within the Kansas City community,” she continued. “The ideal venture stage for this fellowship are those in the problem-solution fit or product market-fit phases, with engaged customers or beneficiaries and demonstrated outcomes in both impact and revenue.”
The expected time commitment for participants is about eight to 10 hours per week, spread across three days, she noted.
“It’s award-winning training that covers topics like foundations, data and metrics, go-to-market, funding, team management, pitch, and much more,” Kirillova said. “We also have a lot of opportunities for mentorship and opportunities for fellows to connect within the network of other entrepreneurs.”
In addition, the Ford Fund Fellowship program includes an impact series led by renowned leaders, entrepreneurs, and practitioners, basecamp workshops held by fellows in their own communities, and a summit event to conclude the fellowship, according to the institute.
Plus $40,000 in venture development stipends will be distributed among chosen fellows based on their progress and impact throughout the fellowship.
The program also offers dedicated support to alumni of the fellowship, Kirillova said. Past fellows include Luka Perkovic — founder of TopCourse, which provides STEM training and curriculum for middle school and high school students and educators across West Tennessee — and Kristin Calabria — founder of the BRIDGE Lab Foundation, which offers preventative and interventive mental health support to teachers, school administrators, students, and caregivers across San Diego and Los Angeles schools.
“We facilitate events where we connect current fellows with program alumni and we connect alumni with opportunities that they need to grow their projects,” Kirillova said. “We also have an alumni community where we share different opportunities that are specifically targeted toward Ford Ford Fellowship alumni.”
The Watson Institute’s Ford Fund Fellowship is the second entry into Kansas City’s entrepreneur company by the Ford Motor Company Fund. The not-for-profit corporation partnered with 1863 Ventures to bring the HERImpact pitch competition to Kansas City, most recently in March 2023.
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Garmin CEO reveals startup origins, tech hiring challenges, culture of innovation
It began like any other startup, said Clifton Pemble, Garmin’s sixth employee and now CEO of the $11 billion GPS tech firm. “I joined Garmin and it was literally just days later that we were gathered in a little place over at 95th and Pflumm — two rooms in a small strip mall kind of…
1 Million Cups wraps month-long black entrepreneur showcase
Celebrating differences strengthens everyone, a white 1 Million Cups volunteer told a room full of black entrepreneurs and business owners Wednesday evening. “Diversity and inclusion are important to us year-round here at 1 Million Cups,” said Kyle Smith, communications coordinator at KCSourceLink and a 1MC Kansas City community organizer. “And I am very well aware…
C2FO raises massive $100M round for global expansion
In what is believed to be the largest venture-backed funding round in the Kansas City area’s history, C2FO is lighting the fuse on its global expansion with a $100 million capital raise. The Leawood-based financial tech firm’s round was led by Munich-based Allianz X and Abu Dhabi-based Mubadala Investment Company, and included participation from Temasek,…
Techweek KC returning with big LaunchKC, Techstars, BetaBlox demo days
One of Kansas City’s biggest conference series for entrepreneurs is returning in October alongside some of KC’s most premier accelerator programs, said Amanda Signorelli, CEO of Techweek KC. Demo days for Techstars KC and BetaBlox will join LaunchKC as signature events during the Oct. 8-12 conference, she said. “Combined with the nationally recognized LaunchKC competition…

