Forbes

| IVORY TOWER IN THE CLOUD

Long the domain of seedy degree mills peddling debt-laden vocational training, online education is now a priority, and a profit center, at top-tier universiti­es thanks to innovators like 2U Inc.

- By antoine gara

Long the domain of seedy degree mills peddling debtladen vocational training, online education is now a priority, and a profit center, at top-tier universiti­es thanks to innovators like 2U Inc.

In 2014, when Douglas Shackelfor­d was named dean of UNC’s Kenan-Flagler Business School, his most important strategic initiative was clear. UNC was a top-tier public university, but its Bschool, barely in the top 20, was on a mission to greatly expand its enrollment on the cheap.

“Our traditiona­l revenue sources were changing, and not in a good direction,” says Shackelfor­d, 60.

So UNC forged ahead with a little-known company called 2U, based in Lanham, Maryland. In exchange for 60% of future tuition revenues, 2U would invest $5 million to $10 million building out UNC’s software and marketing capabiliti­es, scour the globe for online applicants and, importantl­y, leave the admissions decisions and teaching to Chapel Hill.

The results have been impressive: Seven years after it launched its program with 2U, UNC is the largest online M.B.A. provider, with 938 students, most of whom pay full tuition. Only half as many are enrolled in the full-time residentia­l program. “We’ve doubled our student body without adding any buildings in Chapel Hill,” says Shackelfor­d, noting that tuition for MBA@UNC costs $124,000. In fact, online revenue has nearly tripled to $14 million, while faculty head count has held steady, and operating income has gone from a $1.4 million loss to a $5 million profit.

Known as an online-program manager, or OPM, 2U is the nation’s leading provider of software for universiti­es seeking to quickly expand enrollment digitally. Its cloud-based content-management platform allows students and staffers to seamlessly connect to universiti­es’ existing systems, handling everything from loading lectures and hosting intimate discussion groups to troublesho­oting technical glitches.

In its first decade, 38,000-plus students have en- rolled in 2U-administer­ed degree programs, and 2U is on track to generate as much as $412 million in revenue this year, a 44% increase. The company isn’t yet profitable since it’s launching programs at a quickening pace and only recoups its hefty initial investment­s by the fourth year of its typical tenyear contract. Still, 2U’s Nasdaq-listed shares have risen from their 2014 IPO price of $13 to $80, making the company worth $4.7 billion. “We have a massive amount of market runway,” says 2U chief executive and cofounder Chip Paucek, who’s aiming for 5% of the $80 billion global market for graduate degrees.

Master’s programs are 2U’s sweet spot, and its offerings to university administra­tors are soup to nuts. Besides software, the company has a small army of social-media-savvy marketers to assist in recruiting. It also finds placements for students in areas like education, nursing and social work. For Georgetown’s midwifery program, for instance, 2U partnered with hospitals so that each online student delivers 20 to 40 babies by graduation. When USC’s Rossier School of Education demanded that candidates have at least three semester-long teaching placements, 2U built relationsh­ips with elementary and high schools in 50 states. So far it has placed over 43,000 students.

For Cory Broussard, 37, who got his M.B.A. from UNC in 2014, it meant not having to quit his day job as an engineer on an offshore platform for Shell in the

“Here as elsewhere on this touching planet, imitation is the watchword and prestige the highest ambition.” —J.D. SALINGER

Gulf of Mexico. “The professors were just brilliant,” says Broussard, who, like all 2U students, attended periodic immersion sessions on campus.

OPMs have a dismal reputation in education circles because they have long been associated with for-profit boiler-room-type operations. They came under the scrutiny of the Department of Education, in part because they encouraged students to pile on government-backed loans to finance dubious degrees. By avoiding any notion of being an academic institutio­n, 2U has positioned itself as a white-label software-and-services firm with a blue-chip client base. Its graduate offerings are in fields with strong job prospects. Besides UNC, 2U has offerings with schools including Yale, NYU, UC Berkeley, Tufts, Northweste­rn and Vanderbilt.

Timing is everything in business, and 2U’s crisis-era launch was fortunate. With finances strained and digital technologi­es disrupting nearly every industry, top universiti­es finally accepted online degree programs as equal to on-campus alternativ­es. 2U has 64 degree programs with 26 universiti­es and is adding more than 14 new programs each year.

Paucek, 47, 2U’s mastermind, has been involved in educationa­l ventures since the early 1990s. In the 2000s, Paucek ran Hooked on Phonics for Sylvan Learning. After its parent company was sold, Paucek partnered with John Katzman, the founder of Princeton Review, to start 2U in 2008.

2U’s success has sparked a deluge of competitor­s, including a new outfit from Katzman, who left in 2012. There are others: Coursera, which operates massive open online courses (MOOC), manages a $22,000 a year M.B.A. at the University of Illinois and will soon start programs at Michigan and Penn. Edx, a MOOC founded by Harvard and MIT, offers a master of science in analytics from Georgia Tech for less than $10,000 and will launch 13 other programs. Overall, the number of OPMs is 30 and rising, according to Eduventure­s Research.

If that weren’t enough, schools like Harvard and Cornell are building their own systems. Short-sellers are thus eyeing 2U, as margin pressure is inevitable.

Paucek is undeterred. Last May he acquired short-course provider Get Smarter, which offers certificat­e programs in data science, artificial intelligen­ce and blockchain. Recently, 2U became the first OPM to offer a juris doctor. Paucek also plans to offer medical, dental and veterinari­an degrees.

Don’t underestim­ate 2U’s first-mover advantage. In academia, where risk-taking is anathema, reputation and word of mouth often trump hard economic analysis. “It’s a pretty simple business,” Paucek says, whose 2U stake is worth $100 million. “If the student wins, the university wins. If the university wins, we win. We believe that. It’s not some PR talk.”

 ??  ?? 2U chief Chip Paucek at the company’s headquarte­rs in Lanham, Maryland. The books may be props, but 2U’s $4.7 billion valuation speaks volumes about its acceptance at scholarly institutio­ns.
2U chief Chip Paucek at the company’s headquarte­rs in Lanham, Maryland. The books may be props, but 2U’s $4.7 billion valuation speaks volumes about its acceptance at scholarly institutio­ns.
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