Tax service wins Missouri Startup Weekend as entrepreneurs embrace ‘building great stuff’
April 10, 2024 | Tre Kent
Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Missouri Business Alert, a member of the Kansas City 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.
COLUMBIA, Missouri — St. Louis natives David Beach and Bryan Edelman won Missouri Startup Weekend with SolvTax, a project they described as “TurboTax for business personal property tax.”
Beach said he had been toiling with this idea for several years, but Startup Weekend gave him a chance to bring it to life.
“This will help business owners manage a very complex and error-prone area of tax that they don’t have the ability to outsource, especially locally,” Beach said.
The event, which ran from Friday through Sunday at EquipmentShare headquarters in Columbia, featured 11 teams. Those teams formed around business ideas pitched Friday evening, and they spent the next two days building on those ideas. On Sunday afternoon, they presented to a panel of judges, competing for the first-place prize of $15,000 and other benefits to help them continue working on their startup ideas.
The teams were judged on criteria from three different categories: customer validation, execution and design, and overall business model.
Each team had to condense a weekend of work into a five-minute pitch to try and sell the judges on its idea.
Teams presented a wide range of startup ideas, several of which were trying to tackle problems through the use of artificial intelligence tools. One aimed to help small businesses reach more clientele through emails. Another sought to make voters more aware of where politicians’ funding is coming from.
Music Den took second in the competition. The startup idea is focused on creating physical locations where people can rent rooms to practice musical instruments.
During its pitch Sunday, the Music Den team said it was in the process of opening its first location in Columbia.
Even Startup Weekend participants whose teams did not place said they were leaving the competition with something.
“Just the experience of trying to start something,” said Isaiah Pani, a team member of Sincerely, which pitched an AI tool aimed at helping small businesses expand their clientele over email. “We failed a lot, and you’re going to learn so much more from that. … We are able to make something good at the end because of those failures.”
The event gave individuals a chance to compete against one another and interact with entrepreneurs from a variety of industries.
“Being able to network here is incredible,” said Kamber Hawkins, a University of Missouri student and co-founder of RoomU, an application meant to help college students find compatible roommates. “There’s not a whole lot of opportunity, especially when you’re young, like we are in college, to network with entrepreneurs who are successful.”
Beach and Edelman, the SolvTax co-founders, jokingly said Sunday their next step was to catch up on some sleep. But they added that they want to continue progressing with their startup, specifically by making the interface more automated.
The winners praised the overall atmosphere of the event.
“You build great stuff when you’re around great people who are also building great stuff,” Edelman said. “So just to be a part of the community is fantastic.”

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Film to promote Walt Disney’s historic Kansas City animation studio gets $10K boost
Efforts to restore the original Laugh-O-gram Studio building along Troost Avenue are getting a bump from a Missouri Humanities grant and a matching donation from a longtime local supporter of the arts in Kansas City. Thank You Walt Disney — a not-for-profit dedicated to the preservation and restoration of Walt Disney’s first animation studio, the…
Feds award $500K for Goodwill, LaunchCode jobs training effort through STEM Tech Challenge
Nearly a half-million dollars in federal funds are expected to help two local programs forge a new STEM-based job training initiative to help Kansas City-region job seekers find permanent high-wage careers in tech. U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kansas, on Wednesday announced a $499,196 award from the U.S. Department of Commerce to Goodwill MoKan (Goodwill of…
JQ Sirls is the king of his own universe; his new book puts a distinctly Black hero at the center of it
JQ Sirls started popping through the multiverse as a child; escaping through various worlds and alternate realities via stories like “Where the Wild Things Are,” “Peter Pan,” and “The Wizard of Oz” — as well as magical realms he created himself. “Those are my DNA,” said Sirls, a Kansas City-based author, artist and the entrepreneur behind…
His KC theater shines spotlight on queer voices; How one playwright is giving stage time to a new wave of talent
Kansas City’s theater scene should be a safe and comfortable space, said Kevin King, detailing his effort to specifically provide a place where queer voices can not only feel heard, but celebrated. “Since 2019, we’ve been basically gay all the time,” said King, producing artistic director at Whim Productions, an LGBTQ+ theater company with a…
