Big wins up the odds: KC’s standing among Midwest peer cities rises in new M25 ranking
August 9, 2022 | Tommy Felts
Headline-grabbing success stories and newly boosted state funding for startup support are a powerful combination, said Victor Gutwein, detailing Kansas City’s higher 2022 spot on M25’s annual ranking of Midwest startup cities.
Kansas City rose to No. 11 of 59 in the deep dive report — which explores how micro-environments in the Midwest are performing in relation to each other on key factors like startup activity, access to resources and business climate.
Click here to check out the full ranking, which saw a first-ever shakeup among the Top 3 Midwest startups.
RELATED: A growing unicorn herd and more capital than ever before
After five years bouncing between the Nos. 12 and 13 slots, the City of Fountains switched ranking positions for 2022 with Cleveland, Ohio, which has been lagging since 2017.
The two cities share much in common, but KC beats Cleveland with its upward trajectory, said Gutwein, founder and managing partner at M25 — an influential venture fund in Chicago with Kansas City-built portfolio companies like Whipz, backstitch, Super Dispatch and Zohr.
Click here to read more about Whipz recent $1.8 million pre-seed round.
“Kansas City and Cleveland are neck and neck on number of startups, but KC has twice the score on ‘Big Outcomes’ — which is from BacklotCars’ exit; C2FO’s and PayIt’s big fund raises,” Gutwein told Startland News. “That’s a pretty big edge.”
Angel activity is higher in Kansas City, he added, and although Techstars Kansas City recently closed shop, KC still outscores Cleveland on accelerator programs.
“With so many pre-seed funds, accelerators have gotten less important for getting startups off the ground,” Gutwein noted, referencing changing dynamics in city-specific impact from accelerators, in part, because of remote programs during the pandemic. (In turn, M25 adjusted down the weighting of accelerators in its 2022 rankings.)
Click here to read more about how M25’s Midwest Startups Rankings are scored and here to read Gutwein’s blog that goes behind the scenes of the report.
Signs of KC’s increasingly mature ecosystem — marked in no small part, Gutwein said, by multiple large coastal Series A rounds (think the $24M Series A for TripleBlind led by General Catalyst and the $15M Series A for Kinly led by Forerunner) — position Kansas City to break into M25’s Top 10 soon, he said.
One of the other critical factors in KC’s favor: the dramatic increase in state funding for the Missouri Technology Corporation, which supports startups through direct co-investments and a matching grant program.
The program went from having its funding entirely withdrawn in 2020 to $3 million allocated this year — then jumping to $31 million in fiscal year 2023.
“10-xing the amount of available money for MTC is huge. I’ve already seen the impact,” Gutwein said. “Some of the companies we’re looking at are already set to get matching funds from MTC. And not long ago, MTC had basically become a non-ingredient in the ecosystem.”
“It’s exciting because Indiana and Nebraska both have very active direct investment programs, Iowa has loan programs, Illinois has a really good tax credit and Fund of Funds, so you have competition via state resources on almost all sides,” he continued.
On the other side of the border, support is less rosy, but still promising, Gutwein said.
“Kansas as a whole is lower now than Missouri on resources; it has a very good tax credit program, but that’s about it,” he said. “We’re really optimistic and excited about the future in Kansas, however, because of its selection as one of five states to get approved for State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) funds.”
“Who knows exactly what that will look like, but the expectation is Kansas putting most of that $69 million bucks toward some sort of equity program for angel capital, so you’d think that will really impact the startup scene,” Gutwein continued.
Click here to learn more about M25’s exploration of Kansas City’s ecosystem.
Across the region, smaller startup scenes are feeling the ripple effect of increased state support (and the promise of it), he said, as well as their own individual success stories.
On the Kansas side, Wichita shot from No. 47 to 41 in 2022, and Topeka rose from dead last (No. 59) to 51.
“Kansas cities are all seeing a boost from incoming government support,” Gutwein explained, noting plenty of room for growth especially with the state’s most populous city.
Click here to read more of Startland News’ coverage of the Wichita and Topeka startup scenes.
“Wichita’s ecosystem is currently developing slower than I would expect,” he said. “In part, that’s because we’ve yet to see any really major funding rounds coming out of Wichita. It has a population of roughly 400,000, so it’s not tiny, right? But so far it doesn’t out-punch its size like a college town typically does.”
Columbia, Missouri, for example — home to the University of Missouri — jumped five spots (No. 27 to 22) in M25’s rankings.
“Unlike a lot of cities of its size, it has an amazing big outcomes score because of EquipmentShare,” Gutwein said, referencing the surging scaleup that’s proven one of the fastest-growing equipment rental and technology companies in the nation. “Columbia has an excellent accelerator, Scale, that’s active and spitting out more startups.”
“And what we’re seeing is that the accelerator is attracting a lot of venture money to a relatively small ecosystem and having a big impact.”
2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Crossroads distillery asks KC to make a toast in honor of founder lost in weekend motorcycle wreck
Update: A crowdfunding campaign has been launched to support the family of the late Jeff Evans. Click here to learn more or to donate. [divide] With doors temporarily closed early this week (July 21-22) to mourn the loss of co-founder Jeff Evans, the team behind Mean Mule Distilling is asking its community to “grieve with…
KC govtech startup: You shouldn’t have to know how local government works to get answers (or make impact)
Even a ripple can make waves, said Mitch Mabrey, an exited cleantech founder whose new cause finds him on a mission to ensure that the voices of residents from all walks of life are more broadly heard — and answered — by their government officials. Resonus, his Kansas City-based political information platform is designed to…
Northland BBQ spot opens, building flavors, menu from side hustle to storefront
After a decade-long journey building his BBQ business — from tailgates to a just-opened brick-and-mortar restaurant — Wardell Hooks Jr. would only change one thing along the way: He’d have quit his full-time job sooner. “My thing is the joy,” said Hooks, founder of Off the Hook BBQ, describing the feeling of accomplishment from his…
Match this: ‘Ted Lasso’ filming in KC another win for city’s tax credit pitch, mayor says
Scoring state-side shooting locations for the newest season of “Ted Lasso” reflects a strategy by the KC Film Office that’s straight from the hit Apple TV+ series’ playbook: the harder you work, the luckier you get. “‘Ted Lasso’ filming in Kansas City represents everything we’ve been working toward,” said Rachel Kephart, director of the KC…


