Great Jobs KC aims to impact 50,000 Kansas City scholars within a decade — one life at a time

October 8, 2025  |  Brian Escobar

Natalie Lewis, chief operating officer of Great Jobs KC; photo by Brian Escobar, Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri (EDCKC)

Editor’s note: The following story was written and first published by the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri (EDCKC). Click here to read the original story.

[divide]

Natalie Lewis is no stranger to complex work.

As chief operating officer of Great Jobs KC, she oversees programs that connect thousands of Kansas Citians with scholarships, tuition-free job training, and real employment opportunities. With a background in nonprofit leadership and a focus on equitable pathways to opportunity, Lewis has become a driving force in the region’s workforce strategy.

Her organization awards traditional college scholarships valued at up to $50,000 to high school juniors and adult learner scholarships valued at up to $25,000 to adults 24 years and older. Its programming was designed to change thousands of individual lives and transform the region by preparing the local future workforce and contributing to the regional economy. 

So when Lewis talks about Great Jobs KC, she starts with scale and boldness.

“We’re serious, 50,000 individuals in our region in the next 10 years. We’re already serving 17,000. That’s a lot of people,” Lewis said. “The thing that makes it a reality is, No. 1, the boldness to even try.”

That boldness comes with a clear model: scholarships, tuition-free training, and wraparound support so people do not just earn credentials, they step into careers with benefits and long-term mobility.

How Great Jobs KC operates

At the center is ecosystem building paired with direct service. Great Jobs KC is not only awarding scholarships. It is wiring together education, employers, and community support so people can move.

  • Scholarships and training — Residents can access college scholarships or tuition-free training built around in-demand careers. Training is short term and skills based. Many participants receive paid training so they can focus without losing income.
  • Employer partnerships — Companies sit on advisory boards, co-design training, and in some cases co-fund upskilling. “If they have entry-level health care providers who want to move up, we will go fifty fifty with that employer,” Lewis explained. “That creates room for our scholars to enter those entry-level roles.”
  • Wraparound support — The program anticipates real barriers. “A flat tire, a car that breaks down, or no childcare can knock a student out of the game,” Lewis said. “We are designing solutions so momentum does not stall.”
  • Continuous learning — As industries change, training changes with them. “We have to build a community that is ready for continuous learning,” Lewis noted. “Short term training will be the way you upskill, period.”

This hybrid approach, direct support plus systemic partnership, allows the work to scale while staying personal.

Fueling growth with vision, funding

Great Jobs KC’s momentum shows up in enrollment growth, scholarship volume, employer involvement, and the ability to move people from a waitlist into paid training and jobs.

Lewis points to three ingredients that make this possible, and what each delivers:

  • Funding that builds capacity — “Systemic level funding that lets you build. And that came through the Kauffman Foundation and Mr. Kauffman’s vision.” Investment turns pilots into programs, adds seats in short term training, and helps move people off the waitlist. It powers the push from serving about 17,000 people today toward the 10-year goal of 50,000.
  • Leadership that scales what works — “It takes the right mind and heart. When CEO Earl Martin Phalen joined in 2022, our scholarship program was stable. Now we award almost four times as many.” Focused leadership lifts throughput. More awards, faster pathways, clearer accountability.
  • Partnerships that align the ecosystem — “We could not do it without looking at what the ecosystem was already doing. Chambers, KC Rising, EDCKC, all of those entities were already trying to solve. So it takes partnerships.” Partners help match training to real openings, bring employers to the table as advisors and hirers, and surface barriers like transportation and childcare so solutions are built into the work.

Scaling to meet need

The demand is real. Great Jobs KC has secured about 136 million dollars toward a 250 million dollar need, and the waitlist continues to grow.

“Our most immediate need is assistance with getting people off the waitlist,” Lewis said. “We built this hope. People wondered if it was too good to be true. Now they are showing up, but we need the rest of the funding.”

Employer partners are another critical piece. The goal is at least 100 active companies engaged in shaping pathways and hiring from the pipeline.

“They are hiring our employees, they are advisors to us, and at a corporate level they are giving at a different level than they even anticipated. That is what it takes to solve systemic problems like unemployment and lack of access.”

Great Jobs KC college scholarship awardees in 2024; courtesy photo

Lives changed, communities strengthened

Great Jobs KC offers tuition assistance to approved career training programs in high-demand industries, including construction, healthcare, information technology, logistics/warehousing, manufacturing, and service careers. With the support of Great Jobs KC, adults 17 and older can acquire the skills needed to secure a career making at least $45,000 per year in one year or less.

During the interview for this feature, Lewis pointed to a board behind her filled with names.

“Imagine 2,300 names already in better paying jobs, some coming to us homeless, some working two or three jobs,” she said. “One young woman finished a six-week program, landed a job, and within six months earned a promotion. Another graduate completed CDL training and is now making about 90,000 dollars a year with benefits.”

These individual wins ripple outward, Lewis added.

“One life becomes two lives, becomes a street, becomes a community,” she said. “That is how we are building a stronger Kansas City.”

For Lewis, the point is not only filling today’s openings. It is preparing people for what is next.

“There are jobs right now that we do not even know we will need,” she said. “Short term training will be the way you upskill, period.”

A call to action

So what can Kansas Citians do today? Lewis is specific.

  • Residents — “I want people who need a better life and a better job to go to our website, GreatJobsKC.org. Be bold enough to take the first step, even if people have counted you out before.”
  • Employers — “Call me. We want employer partners. Join our advisory board, tell us what you need, and co-create solutions.”
  • Donors — “Help us move people off the waitlist. Every donation matters, and we also need systemic investment at scale.”

Lewis closes with the vision that keeps the team moving.

“When we are successful, and we will be successful, generational wealth becomes possible for people who not long ago were in poverty,” she said. “Our employers will thrive, and our region will thrive. That is the future we are building together.”

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

        Joey Mendez and Buck Wimberly, ULAH

        Fund Me, KC: ULAH asks Kansas City to help save Westwood menswear store as pandemic debt looms

        By Tommy Felts | July 7, 2025

        Startland News is continuing its long-running “Fund Me, KC” series to highlight area entrepreneurs’ efforts to accelerate their businesses or lend a helping hand to others. This is an opportunity for business owners and innovators — like menswear retailers and trendsetters Joey Mendez and Buck Wimberly — to share their crowdfunding stories and potentially gain…

        These 15 KCMO projects just got a $19M+ boost; funding focused on inclusive community investments

        By Tommy Felts | July 7, 2025

        A pair of high-profile projects at 18th and Vine — restoring the Boone Theater and its Kansas City jazz legacy, along with transforming the long-vacant Workhouse Castle into a boutique hotel — offer just a few notes from a chorus of just-funded redevelopment initiatives aimed at buoying small business and tackling challenges in Kansas City’s urban core.…

        Meet 7 startups just funded to turn potential into Kansas City-built tech innovation

        By Tommy Felts | July 7, 2025

        The latest crop of Digital Sandbox KC companies — earning up to $20,000 in project funding for their concepts — are poised to make significant impacts within their industries, said Jill Meyer, noting a through-line from digital health to AI-powered construction and fantasy sports solutions. “These exciting innovations show some great promise, and we’re honored…

        Cosmo Burger brings its mouth-watering tots, boozy milkshakes to East Crossroads’ bustling streets of eats

        By Tommy Felts | July 3, 2025

        Bringing Cosmo Burger to the Crossroads required cousins Atit and Jugal Patel to cook their plans to perfection, serving up the brand’s first full-service brick-and-mortar location after years of trial by griddle. The result: a beefed up version of the owners’ original concept in one of the city’s most popular dining and entertainment districts. “This…