Raised in the heart of the tech industry, Authentiya founder Ellia Morse expected to return home to Silicon Valley to build her company. Instead, she found what she needed in Kansas.
“I didn’t have to go to the coast in order to get a grant or raise funds,” Morse said. “I was able to start right here where my community is.”
Morse was one of the founders sharing her story Friday as KU Innovation Park hosted the culmination of its 2026 ACCEL-KS cohort alongside participants in the Park’s Lab2Market accelerator. The event celebrated months of progress while connecting entrepreneurs and researchers with the people, expertise and resources to keep moving their ideas toward the marketplace.
For Morse, ACCEL-KS provided more than proof-of-concept funding. It reinforced that Kansas could be the place to launch and grow her company.
Supported by the Kansas Department of Commerce and administered by KU Innovation Park, ACCEL-KS pairs proof-of-concept funding with commercialization education and business support to help innovators transform promising technologies into market-ready businesses while strengthening Kansas’ innovation economy.
Throughout the morning, participants shared two-minute updates on the progress they’ve made through the programs. Participants also learned about additional opportunities through the Kansas Department of Commerce and the Patterson Family Foundation’s new Fellows program.
The day also included the Park’s Lunch and Learn, Product Leadership in the AI Era, where technology leaders discussed how artificial intelligence is reshaping product development while reinforcing that strong leadership, customer focus and thoughtful execution remain competitive advantages, regardless of the technology.
In the afternoon, founders traded the stage for conversations. Leaders from Park company Icorium shared lessons on building strong teams and company culture before participants rotated through roundtable discussions with experts in commercialization, capital, AI and product strategy, entrepreneurship and business growth.
For researchers participating in Lab2Market, the biggest challenge often isn’t the science. It’s understanding how to turn years of research into a company.
“Commercialization doesn’t feel like a black hole anymore,” said Dr. Michael Washburn, professor of cancer biology at the University of Kansas Medical Center and a Lab2Market participant. “We know there are people here in Kansas who can help us through the process. Before, we had absolutely no idea.”
That shift is exactly what Lab2Market is designed to foster. Through six months of customer discovery, commercialization training and mentorship, researchers gain the tools, connections and confidence to move discoveries beyond the laboratory and into the marketplace.
By the end of the day, founders had practiced pitches, challenged assumptions, expanded their networks and gained practical guidance for the next stage of growth.
For Morse, that next step means building Authentiya in Kansas. For Washburn, it means turning years of research into a company with a clearer path forward. For every founder and researcher in the room, the destination is different.
What they shared was momentum, and the confidence to keep building.


















