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The St. Louis startup ecosystem is held back by hard-to-find investment capital

The Gateway Arch and St. Louis skyline is seen from a C-21
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
The Gateway Arch and St. Louis skyline is seen from a C-21 jet in October 2022 while flying over the Mississippi River.

There鈥檚 an unfortunate reality for startups in St. Louis and the Midwest more generally: Early-stage investment capital is just hard to come by.

Programs from local organizations like Arch Grants focus on this gap, and the nonprofit announced last week that , and would each receive a $100,000 non-dilutive grant to support their continued growth in St. Louis. The three Growth Grant winners were all previous awardees through Arch Grants鈥 annual startup competition, said Arch Grants Executive Director Gabe Angieri.

鈥淭he goal of this program is really to double down on those companies that have come through [our] pipeline and help accelerate their growth,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese are companies that are going out to raise capital, whether to bring on a new key hire, access a new market [or] expand their suite of services or products.鈥

Many startups in the region, even the three that won the most recent Growth Grants, have experience with the funding gap that exists, especially with early-stage capital.

Startup companies are usually strapped for cash as they focus on growth, said Brian Lord, co-founder and CEO of iSite Media, an advertising signage network in the restrooms of large venues like Enterprise Center. But that squeeze can feel more acute in between major milestones early on, he said.

鈥淪t. Louis has the same hurdles that a lot of the markets we talk with have, outside of maybe [the coasts],鈥 Lord said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of gap between that initial investment and whatever that next marker is, typically $1 million in annual recurring revenue.鈥

It鈥檚 a slog he said his company faced during the COVID pandemic after being an Arch Grants recipient in 2019. The company is back on track, having surpassed that $1 million mark last year, Lord said, adding he expects to use the cash infusion to make new hires in the St. Louis community and expand the number of venues it operates in.

(Growth Grant recipients must be able to match the $100,000 award with at least $200,000 of outside capital.)

King of the Curve co-founder Heath Rutledge-Jukes also faced funding challenges early on in his venture, which he describes as a compendium to help students with the material in college courses and standardized tests for medical, nursing and other educational verticals. He said it was challenging to get meetings with local angel investors or family offices without an introduction.

鈥淭he cold call approach just doesn鈥檛 work here,鈥 Rutledge-Jukes said. 鈥淣ot that it necessarily has the best success everywhere, but it does have more success if you鈥檙e talking about East or West Coast venture capital.鈥

He started to get more traction with investors after becoming a part of Arch Grants鈥 2023 cohort, he said. And the $100,000 Growth Grant has helped his company eclipse two-thirds of the $1.5 million pre-seed fundraising goal that Rutledge-Jukes hopes to hit in March.

鈥淲e鈥檝e already begun to make commitments to local St. Louis jobs,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e hired two people so far to help with the development and content of the platform, going into more medical education content while also focusing on a product for more general education.鈥

For Angieri, this is the kind of success he wants to see among recipients of his organization's non-dilutive funding. Since 2021, Arch Grants has awarded 16 similar Growth Grants and the recipients have gone on to raise roughly $90 million and add more than 400 jobs in the St. Louis region, he said.

But Angieri emphasized the nonprofit cannot and should not be the only place early-stage startups find additional support.

鈥淲e just simply are not large enough as an organization,鈥 Angieri said.

Others in the startup community reflect this sentiment too.

鈥淎rch Grants is an amazing organization 鈥 we need 100 times more,鈥 said venture capitalist Vikram Lakhwara. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e kind of [borne] an outsized portion of this burden for a long time because investor tastes have changed and investors have become a little bit more risk averse.鈥

Lakhwara moved to St. Louis from San Francisco about three years ago and brings experience from his that backed Fair Flag Robotics, which John Deere .

Stakehouse鈥檚 Vik Lakhwara takes a selfie alongside (from left): SixThirty鈥檚 Atul Kamra, Pegasus Venture鈥檚 Steve Payne, regional champion Lu Alleruzzo, a co-founder and CEO of Immunophotonics, FinTop鈥檚 Rick Holton, Missouri Technology Corporation鈥檚 Julia Campbell, and TechSTL鈥檚 Emily Hemingway during the 2024 Startup World Cup Regional on Monday, Sept. 9, 2024, at The Post building in downtown St. Louis.
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
Stakehouse鈥檚 Vik Lakhwara takes a selfie alongside, from left, SixThirty鈥檚 Atul Kamra, Pegasus Venture鈥檚 Steve Payne, regional champion Lu Alleruzzo of Immunophotonics, FinTop鈥檚 Rick Holton, Missouri Technology Corp.鈥檚 Julia Campbell and TechSTL鈥檚 Emily Hemingway during the 2024 Startup World Cup Regional on Sept. 9 at the Post building in downtown St. Louis.

鈥淪t. Louis, it鈥檚 a very new ecosystem,鈥 Lakhwara said. 鈥淭he volume and density of investors, founders and supporters is not the level that it is in San Francisco [or] New York. It really reminds me of [Los Angeles] and Austin a few years ago.鈥

The relative lack of capital is the biggest gap he sees holding back most early-stage companies in the region, Lakhwara said.

鈥淚 think in St. Louis there鈥檚 probably a little bit of a learning curve,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 lot of people think that venture capital is just too risky of an asset class.鈥

It takes a different investing approach, like backing dozens if not hundreds of potential companies with the hopes that a handful achieve major valuations or high-dollar exits, or focusing on a niche portion of the market that an investor has clear expertise with, Lakhwara said.

He intends to take the former approach with his new , which aims to invest in companies with ties to universities in St. Louis and the Midwest more broadly. But while this will help to fill an important funding gap, it can鈥檛 neglect how investors help mentor the companies and founders they support, Lakhwara said.

鈥淥ne reason why the hit rate in Silicon Valley is so good [is] because there鈥檚 this density and volume of advisors, mentors, entrepreneurs that have been 鈥榖een there done that鈥 and are willing to pay it back and pay it forward,鈥 he said.

This attitude already exists in St. Louis to some extent, according to Shani Bennett, co-founder of Figozo, a platform that helps small businesses retain customers after an initial interaction. His company is also a Growth Grant recipient and was part of the Arch Grants 2022 cohort.

鈥淐oming to St. Louis and looking at the ecosystem, people are very collaborative,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e strongly believe in St. Louis and much prefer to work with organizations who believe in the fabric of St. Louis.鈥

To that point, he expects to use the capital infusion to hire more local people for his sales team and make upgrades to the company鈥檚 platform, Bennett said. He added capital is as important to entrepreneurship as the human connections you have.

鈥淚nvestment capital isn鈥檛 just some quiet capital where it just injects some money. You鈥檙e looking for individuals who can make those connections and get you to the next level,鈥 Bennett said. 鈥淯sually it鈥檚 the people that fall into place first, whether that鈥檚 customers or investors, they tend to rally the cause and be your biggest advocates.鈥

Eric Schmid covers business and economic development for 漏 2024 外网天堂.