Digital Crossroads: Techstars sees hints of KC’s future in its history as a collision point of ideas
September 19, 2018 | Austin Barnes
Techstars’ Oct. 11 programming during Techweek Kansas City finds inspiration in the past, Lesa Mitchell said, but it focuses on the metro’s future at a digital crossroads.
“In the old days, it was called the crossroads because this was actually where all the trains were going through from Mexico to Canada, and east and west across the United States,” said Mitchell, managing director of Techstars KC.
“I want to create a lens of what the digital future of the crossroads will look like,” she said of her block of Techweek KC programming, culminating with Techstars Demo Day festivities that highlight the current Techstars class.
Click here for tickets to Techweek.
The plan is to offer something for everyone, Mitchell said.
A morning keynote with Tim O’Reilly, chairman of O’Reilly Media, will set the tone for the future focused day of events, she said.
The first 500 attendees will receive a copy of O’Reilly’s book, “WTF? What’s the Future and Why it’s up to Us.”
“I think a lot of executives in the community will be very interested because [O’Reilly’s book] is very much about asking: What is employment going to look like in the future? What are jobs going to look like in the future?” Mitchell said.
Techstars panels also include:
- Technoloies enabling trust;
- Future of manufacturing and robotics;
- Future of venture: Impact investing;
- Leveraging breakthroughs in science and engineering to define new standards of efficiency; and
- Growing a startup company beyond venture capital
Techweek’s schedule promises to increase its diversity and inclusion programming in 2018, with Techstars programming following suit, Mitchell acknowledged. Panelist Claire Lee, managing director of Silicon Valley Bank, is expected to carry the topics into her discussion on the future of venture investing, Mitchell said.
“I’m sure that she’s going to talk about the problem and the opportunity of non-white men and their inability to attract investment capital and some of the trends that she’s seeing with that,” Mitchell said.
The overarching goal for Techstars KC is to bring together a group of diverse and informative panelists with ties to the Kansas City area, as well as adding voices who have an outside perspective, she said.
Featured Business
2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC startups graduate K-State accelerator, earning equity-free cash, greater conviction
A trio of Kansas City-built ventures — from sports apparel and mental health solutions for young athletes to tech that uses autonomous drones and 3D vision AI — were among the Kansas businesses earning funding through an eight-week accelerator at Kansas State University. The Center for Entrepreneurship Accelerator program at K-State — which provides participants…
LPOXY initiates $28M Series A financing with 5 Horizons Ventures to fund pivotal trial
PLATTE CITY, Mo. — Funding to secure the upcoming trial of a Missouri biopharmaceutical company’s solution for preventing a deadly gut infection could prove critical in the fight against a condition that claims 80 U.S. lives daily, said Dr. Larry Sutton. LPOXY Therapeutics, which is developing a novel non-antibiotic therapy to prevent Clostridioides difficile infections…
When farmers get paid faster, everyone eats; HitchPin brings fintech to ag, good to humanity, founder says
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. [divide] The fintech revolution typically overlooks agriculture, Trevor McKeeman said, noting that any move to bring tools — like a payment platform within a digital marketplace — definitely breaks ground…
Chocolate maker (and coffee roaster) earns bean-to-bar accolades from his Grandview base
Kansas City has plenty of confectioners, but it’s rare to find true bean-to-bar work, Mike King said. That distinction makes Encore Coffee and Chocolate’s process both resourceful and extraordinary. “There’s only a few of us that are making our own chocolate,” said King, founder of Grandview-built Encore Coffee and Chocolate. “I consider myself a chocolate…
