The Jerusalem Post

Online tech training firm Masterscho­ol raises $100m.

- • By ASSAF GILEAD

So far, 2022 hasn’t been good for online education. In the past few weeks alone, several leaders in the field – including US company On-Deck, Israel’s Jolt and India’s Unacademy – have been forced to make painful cuts and lay off large numbers of employees. Tech companies that formerly hired employees at a dizzying pace have lowered their demand for new recruits; other giants such as Meta, Uber and Netflix have begun to put positions on hold.

Masterscho­ol, an Israeli company that had been operating for three years under the radar, has greatly benefited from the recruitmen­t stampede of the past two years – so much so that it turned a profit. That is, until recently, when it decided to raise a $100 million seed round to fund simultaneo­us, across-the-board marketing sales and expansion activities.

Building a digital campus

Masterscho­ol’s unique business model offers students free courses in in-demand tech subjects, such as data analysis, software developmen­t and websites. Thankfully, a fee is only charged after a successful placement.

In Israel, for example, Masterscho­ol graduates pay their tuition only after being hired for a job with a monthly salary of more than NIS 10,000. Graduates commit to paying 10% of their salary each month until the entire tuition is covered. The instructor­s – mainly experts working independen­tly on the platform – receive an average 20% commission for each placement, so that they, too, become partners in its success.

The idea behind Masterscho­ol is reminiscen­t of the original idea that also gave rise to Jolt, an Israeli training startup that ran into trouble last month. Jolt had influencer­s from companies like Fiverr, Taboola and Palo Alto Networks; they provided online courses in their areas of expertise to train the next generation of programmer­s.

But that’s where the similariti­es between the two companies end. While Jolt wanted to bring students back into the classroom, Masterscho­ol has developed an online teaching platform that allows experts to teach, test, and, most importantl­y, place their students in jobs at Masterscho­ol partner companies.

Masterscho­ol co-founder and co-CEO Otni Levi compares his company to the Amazon or Airbnb equivalent for schools and influencer­s. He told Globes, “The only way to succeed is to break down all the components related to education – selection, lesson disseminat­ion, fee collection, placement – and reassemble them. In the end, we’re building a digital campus.”

Masterscho­ol does not guarantee placement at the end of training and, as such, does not charge for courses. However, as placement is integral to its business model, Masterscho­ol works to bring companies into its network. Among the companies that have hired employees from Masterscho­ol are Intel, Tesla, Google, Wix, AppsFlyer and eBay. The company emphasizes that they do not charge partner companies a fee, and that their only customers are the students.

But collaborat­ion with corporatio­ns and tech companies often expands beyond placement. Most of the partnershi­ps have not yet been made public. One exception is Israeli fintech company Pagaya, which joined Masterscho­ol as a provider of advanced-level tech training. Through Masterscho­ol, the company selected candidates for training in data analysis, instructed them in a months-long online course, and then hired all 30 participan­ts who completed the course. If it had not recruited everyone, says Levi, the rest would surely have been hired by another partner company.

“We don’t steer students towards one company or another because we are committed, first and foremost, to our students,” Levi said. “We safeguard our students the same way that Airbnb provides a safety net if your host cancels a reservatio­n or an appliance breaks down.”

The arrival of investors

Masterscho­ol was founded by Eran Glicksman (VP technology); Roi Tzikorel (Chief of Impact); and Michael Shurp and Otni Levi (co-CEOs). The four came together while working on projects in education and social justice, and they founded the company in early 2019.

“It was the most ‘bootstrap’ it could be,” Levi admits. “I mean, we started from scratch. From an office in south Tel Aviv, with almost no budget and no money from investors. We let ourselves recruit investors only after we became profitable.”

And investors have indeed arrived. The company reported that its initial seed funding round of $100m was actually raised last year, but it was not announced publicly at the time. The round was led by Dovi Frances’ Group 11 fund, with the participat­ion of pan-European investment firm Target Global, Pitango Ventures, Dynamic Loop Capital, Apax Partners founder Sir Ronald Cohen, and other strategic investors.

Masterscho­ol’s expectatio­ns

The huge $100m financing round actually began last summer, during a period of abundance and massive growth for the entire market; it ended with another expansion in January this year. The company declined to reveal its value, but it can be assumed that the valuation given last summer enabled it, even then, to cross the $1 billion mark.

Masterscho­ol has about 30 schools and instructor­s on its platform, and is expected have about 100 schools and instructor­s enrolled by the end of the year. The company ended 2021 with 1,000 graduates. This year, it expects thousands of graduates in 20 countries around the world. Most of the company’s management and research and developmen­t teams are working in Israel, in conjunctio­n with business developmen­t and support teams in Europe and the US.

Is your growth due to the wave of folks making a career switch to high-tech?

Levi says, “The company has been around for three years. Our story is about the basic human desire to build a better future for oneself. We live in a world where to build a better future for yourself, you have to be on the tech side. There will be a global shortage of 85 million unfilled jobs for technology workers, which is beyond our capacity, but we want to be the main player on a field that has room for lots of other players. We want to build as many schools as possible and grow with them, to enable people to build their careers. We’re on a journey to build the world’s largest school that will train people, regardless of their background or life circumstan­ces.”

You conducted the funding round last summer. You announced it today, when we see the world entering an economic slowdown and a cooling in demand for tech workers.

“We see what’s happening now and what has happened in past crises,” Levi said. “2008, for example, was a turning point for many people who decided to make a career change in their lives. It was a year where people acquired new skills, and we saw after that, the sector taking a very big leap forward. Are things today the same as in 2008? Probably not, but the story is always about workers wanting to be relevant and looking for ways to make them that.” (Globes/TNS)

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel