Zach Pettet: It’s time to make some noise about KC’s secret bad ass investors

November 30, 2018  |  Zach Anderson Pettet

Editor’s note: Zach Pettet is the managing director of Fountain City Fintech and a fintech strategist at nbkc bank, with which Startland News has partnered on a Dec. 6 Innovation Exchange event. Opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone.

[divide]

Quiet wealth in Kansas City is a double-edged sword.

The upside? You have to love the humble nature of our city. Humble wealth is a rare thing in this world and Kansas City has it in spades.

The downside? Quiet wealth doesn’t build momentum in a startup ecosystem.

Zach Pettet, Fountain City Fintech

Zach Pettet, Fountain City Fintech

To be clear, we aren’t talking about a lack of investments — deals in KC that should be funded are getting funded. It’s a matter of how we discuss those investments and how publicly we celebrate the “badassery” happening right here in KC.

A good example of humble, quiet wealth making a sizeable impact in KC: Paul DeBruce.

DeBruce was awarded the Marion and John Kreamer Award for Social Entrepreneurship earlier this month at the UMKC Entrepreneur of the Year Awards. While the DeBruce Foundation is focused on philanthropic endeavors, the CEO and chairman has quietly made for-profit investments across Kansas City’s technology space.

Click here to read more about Paul DeBruce.

Watching the award presentation, I wasn’t the only one taking note of the under-the-radar nature of DeBruce’s widespread contributions.

“Who is this and how have I never heard of them?” Eric Jorgenson, director of growth at Zaarly and a somewhat recent transplant to Kansas City from San Francisco, asked me. “There are too many secret bad asses in this city.”

He’s right.

It’s an amazing story and it’s a damn shame that the city doesn’t know the whole story. I’d be shocked if 50 percent of the folks reading this have heard of the DeBruce family or the work they’ve done in KC. I’d be even more shocked if more than 5 percent of the readership could name a single investment that they’ve made.

Now, let’s be clear, quiet investment is better than no investment. Again, this is not kvetching about investors sitting on the sidelines. It’s concern about a lack of noise around those success stories of those getting into the game.

We will never come close to becoming the “Most Entrepreneurial City in America” — an initiative launched by the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce — if we don’t step up and MAKE SOME NOISE.

I’ll never forget when Digital Sandbox’s Jeff Shackelford stood up at 1 Million Cups Kansas City after the EyeVerify exit and proclaimed that we need to be loud and overt about the amazing stories transpiring in our own backyard.

He’s right too. And we’ve done a better job since the EyeVerify sale to Alibaba, but there’s more work to be done.

If we truly want a robust ecosystem as a city, it’s important that we do away with a bit of our humility. We must step up to the plate and tell the stories about the successes that are happening under the radar.

If you’d like to chat, ask or argue about any of this, register here for the coming Innovation Exchange at nbkc bank. We’ll be opening the bag on Kansas City investment secrets, as well as introducing a couple founders from our first Fountain City Fintech class.

[adinserter block="4"]

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Business, civic leader: Chains of slavery were built for profit (then and now) — together we must dismantle them

    By Tommy Felts | June 9, 2020

    Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Jeff Simon is managing partner of Husch Blackwell’s Kansas City office. Simon is currently on the board of STARTLAND, the parent organization of Startland News, and previously served as president of the Kansas City Board of Police Commissioners, chair of the Kansas City…

    OHUB founder: Your silence is an investment; I’m calling out so-called allies

    By Tommy Felts | June 1, 2020

    Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Rodney Sampson is founder of Atlanta-based Opportunity Hub, as well as OHUB’s Kansas City minority accelerator, OHUB.KC, which operates through a partnership with the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri. Opportunity Hub is a non-financial partner of Startland News. [divide] Hello tech,…

    ESHIP Communities: 10 ways Kansas City can support its businesses and entrepreneurs

    By Tommy Felts | May 7, 2020

    Editor’s note: This story is sponsored and was produced by Forward Cities, a non-financial partner of Startland News and a national nonprofit that is managing the implementation of the ESHIP Communities program as a grantee of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. Any opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author. [divide] ESHIP Communities Kansas City is…

    Open letter to KC landlords: Face the COVID-19 music; If not for a pandemic, then what?

    By Tommy Felts | April 29, 2020

    Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone. Tyler Enders is co-founder of Made in KC, a brick-and-mortar and online retailer of locally made goods with locations downtown, in the Crossroads Arts District, on the Country Club Plaza, and across the metro. Made in KC is a non-financial partner of Startland News. Enders’…