Kansas City ESO icon Maria Meyers championed for bringing SourceLink to the world stage

June 20, 2025  |  Startland News Staff

Maria Meyers, founder of SourceLink, accepts the Ecosystem Champion Award at the Global Entrepreneurship Conference June 3 in Indianapolis; photo by Sean Molin

A decades-long effort to grow inclusive entrepreneurial communities by strengthening access to critical resources began as a grassroots movement in Kansas City, said Maria Meyers, whose work recently earned her global recognition — and a rare honor in recent years for an American recipient.

Meyers, the founder of SourceLink — a first-of-its-kind platform boasting more than 5,000 resource partners and that has facilitated nearly 800,000 referrals to entrepreneur support resources dating back to 2003 — was awarded the Ecosystem Champion Award at the Global Entrepreneurship Conference June 3 in Indianapolis. Meyers was one of five global finalists for the honor.

She first founded KCSourceLink, which connects entrepreneurs to resources and builds collaborations to fill gaps in the entrepreneurial ecosystem in the Kansas City region. The KCSourceLink model expanded nationally through SourceLink, which replicates that model in cities across the country.

“I am deeply honored to receive this award, and I credit all of the people in our strong entrepreneurial ecosystem in Kansas City for making the SourceLink model possible nationwide,” Meyers said. “Kansas City is a hotbed for entrepreneurial innovation, and it’s because of the tenacity and spirit of our region that SourceLink is a success today.”

Maria Meyers, founder of SourceLink, is announced as winner of the Ecosystem Champion Award at the Global Entrepreneurship Conference in Indianapolis; photo by Sean Molin

She was nominated for the Ecosystem Champion award “for her role as a trailblazer and author in America’s entrepreneurship ecosystem-building movement.”

The award honors “an individual with outstanding commitment and achievement to drive their local ecosystem’s positive, long-term and inclusive growth through programs and education to advance innovation and support startups.”

Meyers founded SourceLink in 2003 so communities nationwide could fill gaps in their entrepreneurial ecosystem, track entrepreneurial progress, serve as thought leaders in their communities and better aid entrepreneurs to fuel more business starts and business growth. Based in Kansas City, Missouri, SourceLink has fueled more than 200 organizations and completed entrepreneurship development projects in 40 states and territories.

From the archives: UMKC celebrates Maria Meyers for driving social entrepreneurship, ecosystem building in KC

Maria Meyers, executive director for UMKC’s Innovation Center, speaks alongside Dan Smith, co–founder of The Porter House KC, during a panel on Kansas City entrepreneurship at UMKC; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News

Maria Meyers, UMKC Innovation Center, speaks during ESO Day in November 2023 at The Offices at Park 39 amid Global Entrepreneurship Week-Kansas City; photo by Tommy Felts, Startland News

Meyers also serves as the vice chancellor of commercialization and entrepreneurship at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, and executive director of the UMKC Innovation Center. She credits the entrepreneurial ecosystem for the success of the many entrepreneurial endeavors she oversees.

“It’s the incredible entrepreneurial spirit of Kansas City that made SourceLink what it is today,” Meyers said. “Our doers, dreamers, and builders laid the groundwork that allowed us to expand and support thriving, inclusive entrepreneurship communities nationwide. Entrepreneurship is the heartbeat of every community, and when we equip innovators with the right resources, we create opportunity and prosperity for all.”

ICYMI: KC ecosystem leaders urge: Give your network to an entrepreneur

She has more than two decades of experience in creating successful companies in the high technology, biotechnology, manufacturing and museum industries. She’s lived the struggles of launching a startup, turning it into a small business and sustaining its growth.

Meyers also speaks frequently about entrepreneurship and economic development for leading entrepreneurial organizations, including the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a founding partner of SourceLink, the International Economic Development Council, the Federal Reserve Bank and regional economic development organizations.

Meyers is also the coauthor of the 2018 book “Beyond Collisions: How to Build Your Entrepreneurial Infrastructure.”

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

      2025 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Drug side effects could kill you; meet the KS lab team using DNA testing to save patients

        By Tommy Felts | March 26, 2024

        A clinical reference laboratory in Olathe is working to make DNA testing for genetically optimized medications more routine and accessible in healthcare, Dr. Ziyan Pessetto shared. Sinochips Diagnostics — founded in 2019 by Dr. Jiawu Song, along with Pessetto and Dr. Andrew Godwin — was conceived with the vision to make pharmacogenomics (PGx) an integral…

        PHKC planning to open its retail incubator in mid-May; here’s a first look inside the east side space

        By Tommy Felts | March 26, 2024

        A new space for entrepreneurs to test-run their retail businesses is envisioned as a 12- to 16-month stepping stone to their own permanent storefronts or locations, said Dan Smith, and the resource could be open as soon as this spring. “We’re preparing entrepreneurs to open their own brick and mortars on the east side,” said…

        Chingu founders, Mean Mule partner for KC’s first soju — a Korean nod to vodka, distilled with culture

        By Tommy Felts | March 26, 2024

        Serial foodpreneurs Keeyoung Kim and David Son are launching the Midwest’s first locally distilled premium soju — a pays homage to the traditions of soju, but embraces a new era of cocktail culture. Through a partnership with Mean Mule Distilling Co., the first release of Chingu Soju will be just 15-20 cases of the product. …

        WeCode KC, high school partner to launch cybersecurity program for students 

        By Tommy Felts | March 23, 2024

        A new program from an expanding Kansas City nonprofit plans to expose high school students to job readiness and life skills that prepare them for careers in cybersecurity, right out of high school.  WeCode KC, which promotes tech education and creating sustainable career pathways, recently announced a partnership with KIPP Legacy High School to introduce…