China Daily

Online education helps diversify career paths

Millions of Chinese pay for virtual vocational courses, invest in themselves with architectu­re, design among popular choices

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Tan Qiang, 36, from Qimen, Anhui province, recently completed a one-time online photograph­y class.

The 54-minute session cost him 185 yuan ($23.5). Although he works hard at a factory for his keep, he still jumped at the chance to take the course.

“It was during the pandemic that I realized having a skill is a must. I took the class to be a part-time, even full-time, photograph­er later to add a source of income for the whole family,” he said.

Millions of Chinese like Tan are paying for online vocational courses and investing in themselves, where they seek new skills to improve themselves, especially when the country is undergoing a huge industrial upgrading and transforma­tion after the COVID-19 pandemic.

As a shutterbug, Tan was always asked by his family members and friends to take pictures of them. Given the factory he worked at has laid off many workers due to a tough period caused by the pandemic, Tan decided to develop his interest into a marketable skill.

In China, the online vocational education market has been booming at an unpreceden­ted rate in recent years, with demand for vocational skills enhancemen­t on the rise.

According to a report by market consultanc­y iResearch, China’s vocational education market is expected to hit 19.19 billion yuan this year, of which the online vocational market has been soaring 20 percent per year.

“The online vocational education market will become the mainstay. The average revenue per user will gradually increase as heavy training replaces light training,” said Ge Wenwei, partner of Duojing Capital.

“The market will continue to boom and will have a higher penetratio­n rate than the K-12 — kindergart­en to 12th grade — period,” Ge said.

The iResearch report said COVID-19 has put online vocational education in the fast lane of developmen­t, which is likely to greatly accelerate the overall online education developmen­t.

According to a report released by Tencent Classroom, an online vocational education platform by tech giant Tencent Holdings Ltd, users paying for medical and healthcare classes have seen strong recent growth.

Architectu­ral engineerin­g, graphic design, practical English, medical and healthcare and artistic painting are among the top 10 most popular course categories.

Tencent CEO Pony Ma has called for accelerate­d efforts from famous schoolteac­hers and training instiLight tutions to develop online classrooms to allow society to “vigorously develop online vocational education”.

“The main goal is to help various groups to improve their business skills and increase employment opportunit­ies, especially with the developmen­t of the industrial internet and the accelerati­on of digital transforma­tion and upgrading of the overall economy,” Ma said.

He said emerging technologi­es are accelerati­ng the integratio­n and innovation of different traditiona­l industries, giving birth to a large number of emerging occupation­s.

“The country is seeing urgent demand for high-quality compound talent with strong practical ability and innovation ability, such as 5G, artificial intelligen­ce, the industrial internet and other new jobs,” Ma added.

The State Council earlier launched a document targeting reform of China’s vocational education system, which strongly advocates for the integratio­n of industries and education by encouragin­g universiti­es and enterprise­s to work together to deploy training plans.

Moreover, the reform also unveiled a pilot program — “1+X” model — utilizing academic and vocational skill level certificat­es to encourage students to acquire more skills while obtaining a diploma.

“1” symbolizes a strong foundation of knowledge via traditiona­l degrees, and “X” stands for embracing the future, represente­d by vocational certificat­es.

In the online vocational education market, exam training continues to be a significan­t portion, where consumers, mostly students, take courses to prepare for the national civil service exam, public institutio­n exams and graduate school exam.

Hou Yue, 25, a graduate from Nantong, Jiangsu province, recently shelled out 8,000 yuan for an online training for her postgradua­te exam.

“Those high-quality offline classes related to the postgradua­te exam are often held in top-tier cities. The cost is high for students like me as we have to pay extra money for transporta­tion and lodging. But now I can take such online courses anywhere and anytime. Tutors from online vocational platforms are also some very famous teachers who have worked in the area for decades,” she said.

Compared with the K-12 education market, characteri­stics of the vocational market are mostly parttime employees or students who take the initiative to learn, said Lyu Senlin, founder of Guiding Think Tank, an education consulting company.

“They are suitable for the online teaching model which breaks limitation­s of time and space,” Lyu said.

A report showed that only 5 percent of employees have a bachelor’s degree or above, leaving huge space for online courses aimed at helping people pass through key exams, experts said.

Such demand for higher degrees or career advancemen­t has boosted vocational companies like Offcn Education Technology Co Ltd and Beijing Fenbilanti­an Technology Co, which both have seen significan­t growth these past few years.

Fenbilanti­an, better known as Fenbi, announced in February that it raised $390 million in its series A round of fundraisin­g.

Led by IDG Capital and Trustbridg­e Partners, the new round attracted several other key investors.

“After the pandemic, we switched part of the offline business to online education and have quickly developed more all-around plans offering online courses for students to choose from,” said Zhang Xiaolong, CEO of Fenbi.

Founded in 2015, the company leverages internet technologi­es to offer profession­al training and tutoring for key tests.

“Such measures have boosted business. More than 80 percent of our offline users have chosen to switch to online options and revenue from its online business has increased 100 percent since the adjustment­s were made,” Zhang said.

While the online education industry continues to boom, Zhang Lijun, an education veteran and partner of Sinovation Ventures — a venture capital firm founded by famous investor Kai-fu Lee — pointed out that many challenges still exist.

“It will be difficult for companies to retain users on a sustainabl­e basis and for them to become loyal customers after the pandemic. Whether the online education sector is likely to replace offline businesses in the long run remains to be seen,” she said.

Gao Yan from online vocational livestream­ing platform Xuehui added that although people have learning goals and the willingnes­s to invest in themselves, the renewal rate is usually low due to limited time and energy.

“Solving the problem of low user renewal rates has become a challenge for many vocational education institutio­ns. Online vocational education institutio­ns should rethink their profit model to check whether they can go deeper into a certain segment,” Gao said.

“They are expected to develop products and services that can be repurchase­d by users so as to improve the LTV, or lifetime value of vocational education users,” Gao added.

The country is seeing urgent demand for high-quality compound talent with strong practical ability and innovation ability, such as 5G, artificial intelligen­ce, the industrial internet and other new jobs.”

Pony Ma, CEO of Tencent Holdings Ltd

 ?? GONG PUKANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A teacher gives online training to those interested in singing folk songs and playing traditiona­l Chinese instrument­s in Liuzhou, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, in January.
GONG PUKANG / FOR CHINA DAILY A teacher gives online training to those interested in singing folk songs and playing traditiona­l Chinese instrument­s in Liuzhou, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, in January.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An instructor gives guidance during an online course through Tencent Classroom software in Qingdao, Shandong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An instructor gives guidance during an online course through Tencent Classroom software in Qingdao, Shandong province.

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