Area investors, entrepreneurs urge for meaningful connectivity

November 18, 2016  |  Meghan LeVota

As Global Entrepreneurship Week wrapped up, Startland News marked the celebration Thursday with its second Innovation Exchange event.

In partnership with Think Big Partners, the Innovation Exchange offers news junkies context and behind the-scenes details to stories they read in Startland. The conversation covered what innovators, corporations and investors can do to make Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem more connected.

Startland editor-in-chief Bobby Burch led the discussion with Mycroft AI CEO Joshua Montgomery, KC Rise Fund managing director Darcy Howe and Shook, Hardy & Bacon chairman John Murphy.

Following the close of a $335,000 seed round and LaunchKC grant win, Lawrence-based Mycroft AI recently announced it would move its headquarters to Kansas City and open an office in Pacifica, Calif. Mycroft AI is an open source, voice recognition, artificial intelligence device similar to Amazon Echo.

Living in Lawrence, Kan. most of his life, Montgomery said that it was difficult to grow his company without the stable support of an entrepreneurial ecosystem.

“I really wanted to start a business in Lawrence just to demonstrate that it could be done,” Montgomery said. “And, I did. But entrepreneurship is not something that exists in a vacuum.”

Montgomery added that, when Techstars reached out to Mycroft AI to join its Kansas City accelerator program, he was “woken up” to the idea that an ecosystem can affect a startup’s potential for success.

Montgomery said the move to Silicon Valley is part of Mycroft AI’s efforts to tap a strong investment market while also bringing some capital back to the Kansas City area. The reason Silicon Valley investors tend to neglect the Midwest is because smart investors know to invest locally, Montgomery said.

“What I’d like to see going forward is for people in the local community to each start taking some small percentage and then reinvest in the local community,” Montgomery said. “We need to start doing that, or else we’ll always be on our hands and knees to the Silicon Valley venture community begging for their crumbs — when in fact, we’ve already got great entrepreneurs here.”

In conjunction with the regional economic development initiative, KC Rising, Howe launched the KC Rise fund to solve just that problem. She believes there needs to be more local venture capital investments in Kansas City.

To do that, Howe is connecting wealthy Kansas Citians with the startup community. Citing the more than $100 million exit by biometric security startup EyeVerify in September, Howe made the case that you can get large a return on investment in Kansas City.

Both Howe and Murphy agreed that there is a disconnect in the ecosystem — specifically that many prospective investors don’t know the area’s high-achieving entrepreneurs. While entrepreneurs are busy saying there is not enough capital in the metro, investors contend that Kansas City’s ideas just aren’t globally competitive enough, Murphy said.

Howe said that she feels a deep responsibility for KC Rise Fund to make its portfolio as high a quality as possible. If investors don’t earn enough return on their investments, it could inadvertently hurt startups, she said.

“My kids didn’t come back to Kansas City after college,” Howe said. “I don’t want young people who are achievers to feel that they cannot have killer jobs, careers, make money and do well in a place like Kansas City and feel they have to go to New York or wherever. I want to make this a place where you leave the woodpile higher than you found it, a place that’s cool to come home to.”

What Kansas City lacks in sex appeal it makes up for in community. Murphy said we need to be careful we don’t take that too far. Being “nice” should not inhibit Kansas Citians from growth, he said.

“We need to get over our ‘aw shucks’ mentality and learn to brag about ourselves,” Murphy said. “We also can’t create a strategic plan, put it on a shelf and just forget about it. The key to doing something – is to do something!”

The next Innovation Exchange is set for 4:30 p.m., Dec. 14 at Think Big and will feature Victor Hwang, vice president of entrepreneurship at the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.

[adinserter block="4"]

2016 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Lean Lab eyes $25K in national pitch contest

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2015

    The Lean Lab, a Kansas City-based education innovation incubator, is hoping to strike gold in a national pitch competition in California. The organization on Wednesday will be pitching its model in the Teach For America Social Innovation Awards, an annual competition in which the Lean Lab hopes to snag a $25,000 prize. Lean Lab is the…

    6 ways to be a startup community hero (for non-entrepreneurs)

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2015

    Melissa Roberts, marketing director of the Enterprise Center of Johnson County, shares how those interested in helping the startup community can effectively engage entrepreneurs.  In my work at an entrepreneurial service non-profit in Kansas City, I get to meet many passionate, community-minded people each day. Often, those people have no connection to our startup community, other than…

    Major network provider taps SquareOffs for ‘Rant Offs’

    By Tommy Felts | May 26, 2015

    SquareOffs recently landed a client that may place its web-based debate technology in front of millions of more people. The company partnered with digital media network Rant Inc. to offer its online debate and polling tech to engage Rant’s readers and increase their advertising revenue. “It’s one of the bigger contracts that we’re apart of,”…

    Week of events creates startups, builds entrepreneurial community

    By Tommy Felts | May 26, 2015

    The Kansas City entrepreneurial community is prepping for a week-long celebration of startups and entrepreneurship. 1WeekKC, which kicks off on May 29 and continues throughout the entire first week of June, will include a series of events created to empower entrepreneurs to come together, share ideas, get inspired, celebrate and connect. A group of community…