New $20M fund supercharges VC dollars in Kansas City

February 29, 2016  |  Bobby Burch

In conjunction with a metro-wide effort to boost the area economy, Kansas City will soon have a new co-investment fund that aims to accelerate early-stage businesses.

As part of the KC Rising economic initiative, the “KC Rise Fund” hopes to improve a common gripe in Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community that there’s not enough capital to fund local innovation. The fund, which already has raised nearly $10 million in soft commitments, will co-invest in local startups that successfully nab a term sheet from another venture capital organization. Local partners will invest at least $1 for every $5 invested by a VC.

The co-investment model reduces risk and streamlines the necessary due diligence to review an opportunity. Darcy Howe, managing director of the KC Rise Fund, said that capital formation is imperative for the future of Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community.

“Capital is the engine, the oil and the glue of our economy,” said Howe, who’s worked in investment banking for more than 30 years. “When you don’t have capital, great ideas don’t happen. The idea of additional capital formation in Kansas City is really important. Hopefully, it will help grow the economy and make Kansas City grow more like our peer cities.”

Already with broad support, the fund has about 60 investor entities that have pooled their capital together to accelerate area businesses. Alongside families and individual investors, three Kansas City organizations have also joined the fund. Great Plains Energy Inc., the University of Kansas Medical Center, JE Dunn Construction and Lockton Inc. have each offered capital to the fund.

Howe said the fund will target businesses located within the 14-county area that represents the Kansas City metro. Howe said that once the fund reaches its $20 million target, it will likely have a ripple effect in the local economy of more than $120 million in capital in about 10 years.

“Success breeds success,” said Howe, who also co-founded the Women’s Capital Connection. “We need businesses to be successful in a public way. We need the community to be more aware and excited about the innovative things going on in Kansas City. When that happens, it will breed more success.”

Led by more than 200 volunteers, the KC Rising effort hopes to improve Kansas City’s economic standing after the region’s slow recovery from the great recession. The 10-year initiative will measure progress in three primary economic categories — gross regional product, number of quality jobs and median household income — against 30 cities of similar population.

KC Rising will target two industry “clusters” — design/construction and life sciences — to help the area grow via trade, ideas and human capital. Though comprised of dozens of partner organizations, KC Rising is primarily led by the Kansas City Area Development Council, Mid-America Regional Council and the Civic Council of Kansas City. The group plans to create a live dashboard to track progress over the years.

Scott Smith, the retired CEO of HNTB Infrastructure and co-chair of the KC Rising Steering Committee, said that the effort aims to instill a more strategic mindset in Kansas City.

“Let’s look at it like a business: If we’re Kansas City Inc., how would we go about dealing with stagnated economic performance?” Smith said. “Nothing can change overnight. It will be a longer-term 10- or 20-year perspective. … Part of this is about helping the Kansas City business community as a whole become more strategic, nimble and always looking forward.”

[adinserter block="4"]

2016 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    C2FO CEO Sandy Kemper talks failure, VCs, maximizing time

    By Tommy Felts | May 14, 2015

    From a Kansas City arena to the founders of one of the nation’s largest financial institutions, the Kemper name is well known in Kansas City. But it’s more than just Sandy Kemper’s name that drew a sold out crowd at Kansas City’s May Startup Grind event. Kemper leads one of Kansas City’s fastest growing companies…

    Think hiring: Employees vs. contractors

    By Tommy Felts | May 14, 2015

    In this Think column, Venture Legal founder Chris Brown explores the dynamics a growing company faces when it needs to hire an extra set of hands. The Think column helps entrepreneurs to stop and think about the various aspects of starting and running a business. Read ThinkViral President Anne Cull’s introduction to the series here.  You’ve started a company, closed…

    Tech startup, KCSV among finalists for small biz awards

    By Tommy Felts | May 14, 2015

    The Kansas City Kansas Chamber of Commerce announced Thursday its small business award finalists. The awards celebrate businesses that are financially successful, have a dynamic idea and are making an impact on the community. This year’s finalists include two members of the startup community. RFP365, which created software that eases the request for proposal process,…

    1MC recap: program traces roots, features The Swapping Co., OneDayKC

    By Tommy Felts | May 13, 2015

    Kansas City’s 1 Million Cups tried something new today. And by new, it was actually old. The event met in its original venue, Kauffman Labs, which served as an intimate setting for attendees. Entrepreneurs and community members gathered around desks and viewed presentations projected onto a white board. “The venue change happened today because our…