Stephanie Moore
Stephanie Moore is the Principal Strategist of Moore SMarketing and Communications and currently serves as the Director of Community and Medical Relations at the DiPasquale Moore Law Firm in Kansas City, Missouri. In this dual capacity, she leverages her strategic communications expertise to build trusted, culturally resonant connections between institutions and the communities they serve. Stephanie is a Centurion with the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, currently in the Apex Class of 2026—an initiative that cultivates civic leadership through service, dialogue, and policy engagement. She also contributes her voice to the KSHB 41 Community Advisory Board, guiding equitable media representation and community accountability.
In service to public institutions and governance, Stephanie currently serves as the Communications and Marketing representative for Carter Development Group, the company conducting research for the City of Kansas City’s Commission on Research for Reparations. She recently served Washington Business Dynamics to conduct fiscal policy research for the City of Kansas City, ensuring responsive and data-informed decision-making in relation to the CARES ACT and Biden’s Infrastructure Bill. Her client portfolio spans government entities, judicial offices, civil rights divisions, infrastructure agencies, and political campaigns, including the Black Alliance Political Action Committee, Oklahoma County District Judges, the Oklahoma Department of Transportation Civil Rights Division, Oklahoma Floodplain Management Association, and the Oklahoma School of Science and Mathematics, among others. Stephanie brings deep political campaign experience, having managed electoral strategy for candidates across levels of government—including a now-seated Oklahoma County Commissioner and former State Representative.
Her communications career includes leadership roles such as Content and Marketing Manager for Oklahoma City Home & Garden Magazine, Marketing Coordinator for a regional broadcast television station, and as a publisher of over 42 self-authored titles (often centering themes of faith, personal empowerment and legacy within African American communities). A past president of the Oklahoma Media Network, originally a chapter of the Alliance for Women in Radio and Television (AWRT), Stephanie has long been a steward of inclusive storytelling and media equity. She previously served on the Advisory Board for Harding Fine Arts Academy, continuing her commitment to advancing access and excellence in public education.
