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Vice President
Business Development
KCADC
816.374.5636
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KC Connects with German-based Internet Company: World’s largest web hosting company invests $42 million in Lenexa.
“1&1 has found an excellent business climate in Kansas, and we have been enthusiastically welcomed to the Kansas City Area, said Andreas Gauger, chairman, 1&1 Internet. 1&1 Internet is the recognized leader of Web hosting products in Europe and began serving U.S. customers in late 2003. The company selected a 55,000-sq.-ft. facility at College Crossing Business Park and will house 40,000 servers to accommodate the company’s fast growth."
KC Data Center Advantages
The Kansas City area’s central location, robust telecommunications infrastructure, superior energy capabilities and deep IT talent pool make it ideally suited to host data intensive operations.
Telecom
As home to Sprint’s world headquarters, major AT&T regional facilities, and now the first city in the world to receive Google Fiber, Greater Kansas City enjoys the benefit of one of the world’s most advanced telecommunications networks. It is a focal point both for long-haul fiber and transcontinental fiber networks.
In addition to its extensive fiber network, Kansas City benefits from the technological innovations of its telecom providers. For example, Sprint has deployed a set of four MAN (Major Area Network) rings throughout the KC area. The MAN ring architecture is designed to provide self-healing capabilities during two major causes of telecom route failures — fiber cuts and electronic outages. In addition to Sprint, SBC Communications is committed to technological innovation that benefits its customers, such as its new Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) capability.
Energy
An energy environment unmatched anywhere within the 48 contiguous states energizes the thriving Kansas City area economic climate. It’s an environment as rich in supply as it is affordable in price — an infrastructure prepared to support your company’s expansion, growth and visions for the future.
Like Kansas City’s telecom providers, local energy companies are industry leaders in both power reliability and customer service.
KCP&L consistently ranks among the best at providing constant, uninterrupted electric service. The company annually invests in improvements that contribute to power quality and delivery throughout its own system and the successful Southwest Power Pool, our area’s regional transmission coordinator. With a commitment to ongoing generation supply, line clearance, cable replacement and transmission line upgrades, the company has earned impressive gains in customer satisfaction as measured by J.D. Power and Associates.
Operational efficiencies have allowed the company to actually reduce prices four times since 1987, making Kansas City one of the most competitively priced energy markets in the country. And, recent advances in customer care and billing systems have made the customer experience as simple and seamless as possible.
In 2008 KCP&L acquired a company who provided electricity to more than a third of greater Kansas City, Missouri. This acquisition makes KCP&L the largest provider of electricity in the Kansas City region serving more than 80% of the region's customers.
The Kansas City Board of Public Utilities (BPU), a municipal electric and water utility, began operation in 1909. Today, BPU is an industry leader locally and nationally with the largest municipal utility in the state of Kansas.
BPU serves a large area of Wyandotte County. BPU also wholesales considerable electricity to cities in Kansas and Missouri.
Human Resources
The Kansas City area offers one of the deepest IT talent pools in the central U.S.
The pool of available labor in IT professions (over 34,000) is strong due to the concentration of financial services, telecommunications, data processing, software, and engineering firms in the Kansas City area:
While notable large IT employers in the Kansas City area have sustained or even increased their workforce over the past few years difficult economic conditions, some sectors have released substantial numbers of workers. For example, telecommunications employs 4,500 fewer workers in Kansas City than it did one year ago. Many of these are well-qualified IT workers formerly employed at Sprint’s world headquarters.
Major IT degree programs at the metro's colleges and universities graduate new workforce entrants in significant numbers. Fifteen institutions award bachelor's degrees, approximately 430 annually, in computer and information sciences. The two largest universities (University of Kansas and University of Missouri-Kansas City) also award graduate degrees in the field. Associate's degrees awarded annually exceed 200; and certificates awarded in computer science by area vo-tech, career, and community colleges exceed 4,400 annually.
Additionally, computing-related engineering programs in the metro (at four institutions) award about 130 bachelor's degrees annually. Graduate programs are also offered by KU. Annual associate's degrees awarded in computing-related engineering technology programs exceed 275.
Note that Kansas City is an employment destination for new graduates from major institutions in a multi-state region, so the recruitment pool of recent IT grads is in reality much larger than our own numbers imply.
Service Providers
Kansas City offers a myriad of opportunities and the right partners to bring it all together. Kansas City metro service providers.
Network Opportunities