nbkc launches Entrepreneur in Residence incubator: ‘I have a whole company behind me’

June 18, 2019  |  John Jared Hawks

Less than a year after its inaugural Fountain City Fintech accelerator debuted, nbkc bank has launched a new incubator program designed to tackle common banking industry problems with start-up-style ideation, problem solving, and tenacity, said Megan Darnell.

The goal: building new companies along the way, the nbkc program manager said.

Megan Darnell, nbkc bank

“Kansas City has every single resource needed to be a fintech hub, minus a bunch of fintech startups and companies,” Darnell said. “One of the reasons we really wanted this program is the idea of building that network of financial technology companies ourselves in Kansas City.”

nbkc bank is now one month into its first-ever “Entrepreneur in Residence” program. The three-month-long incubator is designed to help both the bank and startups solve challenging business problems, according to Darnell.

“If we can open up our doors and to really find good sustainable solutions to those [problems], then we can enable our founders to scale their business to other community banks, and then on the flipside allow community banks to have their problems that aren’t necessarily ‘sexy’ be solved,” Darnell said.

Entrepreneurs currently involved with the program include Donald Hawkins, and duo Jim Starcev and Mark Calhoun. During the incubator, entrepreneurs have access to a $5,000 monthly stipend, bank data, a live testing sandbox, office space and leaders inside nbkc bank, as well as support and guidance from nbkc’s Fountain City Fintech team.

The startup founders are expected to use the resources to choose a focus area, perform problem research, develop an alpha solution, validate the solution, and then build a company around the solution.

Donald Hawkins

Donald Hawkins

For Hawkins, founder and CEO of Griffin Technologies, the problem of choice relates to bank-consumer interaction. (His latest venture is as-yet unbranded.)

“Banks have transaction data, they have risk analysis, they have credit scores, but when it comes to knowing when to contact their customers, they don’t know,” Hawkins explained. “Our tagline is, ‘Connecting brands to consumers in the moments that matter.’ That’s what our technology does for our banking customers.”

Hawkins’ product centers around delivering insights gleaned from banks’ apps.

“After having a conversation with Zach Pettet [nbkc vice president of fintech strategy] and Megan about possibilities and doing customer discovery, we realized that we had the ability to build software development kits that banks could embed in their mobile applications to receive insights,” Hawkins said. “Right now we are in the process of getting our products ready to ship.”

Mark Calhoun and Jim Starcev

Starcev and Calhoun — co-founders of PerfectCube — are exploring ways to leverage existing industry data toward consumer credit score improvement, a well-known but muddled problem in the banking industry. The two are hoping to dust off the issue by bringing a new, entrepreneurial mindset to a typically risk-averse industry — doing business under the company name SNRM (SuperNinjaRocketMonkey, Inc.).

“The data that’s out there is scattered, some of it’s misinformation, some of it’s predatory, some of it is helpful but not necessarily readily available,” Calhoun said. “Our goal is to take all this information, all the all the data we get from consumers, lenders, and other sources, and boil it down to where we can help make somebody’s life better.”

Though they are tackling different problems, the three entrepreneurs agree: access to nbkc’s resources has accelerated their work in concrete ways.

“They really open up access to virtually anyone in the bank,” Starcev said. “The bank has been able to provide us a lot of information that would be hard for us to get otherwise.”

“Having direct access All the way up to the CEO of nbkc has been incredible,” Hawkins said. “Things that would normally take me about six months to process and ideate through, with this Entrepreneur in Residence program, we’re able to get knocked out in less than a month.”

“When you have people involved in this program who are just as focused on helping your company win as you are … as entrepreneurs, we typically don’t get that,” he added. “It’s normally us fighting the fight, and maybe a few mentors, but now I feel I have a whole company behind me.”

 

[adinserter block="4"]

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    LISTEN: Ground Truth Ag puts real-time objectivity into grain grading; here’s how it makes your food safer

    By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

    On this episode of our 12-part Plug and Play Topeka podcast series, we speak with Kyle Folk, CEO and founder of Ground Truth Ag — a next-gen ag-tech company using AI, machine vision and near-infrared spectroscopy to deliver real-time grain-quality data across the farm-to-market workflow. Folk shares how his upbringing on a Canadian farm inspired…

    MidxMidwest teases lineup for three-day investor-innovation event (and the startup party of the year)

    By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

    Building on Kansas City’s ambitious spirit, a new blend of music, startups and community is expected to meet at the crossroads of innovation, said Alexa Heying, pulling back the curtain on plans for the region’s flagship Midwest tech conference. “The goal of MidxMidwest is to create the connective tissue between founders, investors, and corporates so…

    Peek inside: Buffalo State Pizza takes another slice of ownership with fresh-baked downtown OP relocation

    By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

    Three decades of pizza at a popular downtown Overland Park corner might have come to a close this week, as the crew at Buffalo State Pizza Co. picked up the last of what they could carry and walked it a half block down the street to the shop’s new home near another local favorite, The…

    One cabin, one chair, one cut: Barber swaps rushed for rustic at his no-distractions shop in the woods

    By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

    LONE JACK, Mo. — A short drive to visit this barber — his cabin tucked away in the oaks and hickories about 35 minutes from the heart Kansas City — is about more than just the journey to a great hair cut, Micah Holdaway said; it’s about the experience. After running Barberhouse Men’s Hair Studio in…