Pipeline entrepreneur expands his Omaha-based senior living network into Kansas City

December 8, 2023  |  Tommy Felts

Mark Goetz, HomeCare Advocacy Network (HCAN)

A 10-market expansion for HomeCare Advocacy Network is expected to bring the Omaha-based company to Lee’s Summit and Overland Park as Mark Goetz and his team work to provide personal care and specialized services for seniors who wish to age in place.

“With one of the largest metropolitan areas in the Midwest, the Greater Kansas City area is a top market for expansion for HCAN over the next three to five years,” said Goetz, president and CEO of the company, as well as a 2022 member of the Pipeline Entrepreneurs fellowship.

Founded in 2019, HCAN uses a fanchine model meant to empower home care leaders — offering two investment options specifically designed for either mission-driven entrepreneurs or senior living providers.

Click here to explore more about HomeCare Advocacy Network.

“The need for HCAN’s home care services is increasing constantly with more decision makers who are curating better options for their senior loved ones,” Goetz said. “We see Kansas City as an area of the country that is underserved with an expressed need for services that provide high quality care creating independence for seniors and their families. We see there being eight to 10 total locations in and around Kansas City and this also helps us to centralize our franchise support efforts as well.”

The company now has 20 franchise offices and/or agreements in seven states: Nebraska, Minnesota, Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, Colorado and Florida, Goetz said, noting HCAN has officially sold all available franchise territories in Nebraska.

“Despite ongoing industry challenges, the HCAN franchise network is enjoying remarkable growth,” he said.

More than 500 prime HCAN franchise territories are still available across the United States, Goetz said, adding that home care is currently the fastest growing segment of the healthcare industry.

“More than 10,000 people turn 65 every day in this country, and an overwhelming majority want to remain in their homes as they age,” he said. “That’s why we say there’s never been a better time to jump into the home care industry.”

Mark and Sierra Goetz, HomeCare Advocacy Network (HCAN)

Goetz called it a privilege to work alongside mission-driven franchise partners who are committed to delivering high-quality care options to seniors in their communities.

Pipeline’s 2022 fellowship class at the Pipeline Innovators Gala in May 2022; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News

“Entrepreneurs who have grit and resilience you can find; we are looking for people who are fed by the need to make historic differences for families seeking care,” he said. “Being tied to a greater sense of purpose in an industry that requires you to bring your very best to build your own caregiver and office culture is critical. We are looking for individuals driven by purpose as well as the opportunity to serve; a unique individual.”

Goetz projected such partners will help HCAN’s business units triple where the company ended December 2022, he said, crediting his time in the Kansas City-based Pipeline fellowship for recharging his driving spirit.

Pipeline provides much needed perspective from entrepreneurs who have succeeded and failed,” Goetz said. “Pipeline developed relationships for me that now will last a lifetime with an experience wrapped in a social fabric of positive, risk-taking business owners who want to make a difference. This culture helped not only sharpen my organization’s skills and trajectory, it helped fuel my competitiveness.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Made in KC reveals plans for Barrywoods shop in the Northland (and where it’ll open next)

        By Tommy Felts | March 15, 2023

        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…

        Zach Anderson Pettet, Money 20/20, Cordell Carter II, Aspen Institute Socrates Program, Terri Bradford, Federal Reserve of Kansas City, and Donald Hawkins, kinly, at the C3KC “Fintech is Revolutionizing Banking” session

        National pain points meet local solutions at C3KC; How ‘energy of the day’ can spark lasting change

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2023

        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

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2023

        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…

        ‘When puppets talk people listen’: It’s not just storytelling anymore for one of KC’s most beloved children’s theaters

        By Tommy Felts | March 14, 2023

        A Kansas City arts institution known for years as the Mesner Puppet Theater is animated with new life, said Meghann Henry, detailing a mission pivot for the freshly sewn and rebranded What If Puppets. Evolution at the nonprofit has taken a turn toward early childhood education since the retirement of Paul Mesner in 2016 —…