Friday, March 30, 2007

The Direct To Consumer Conundrum

I'm digging this blog idea. Prior to starting SMARTHINKING, I was a freelance writer for education and technology issues. I wrote for a variety of magazines and institutions -- Converge magazine (now defunct), Wired (a couple of very small pieces), CEO Forum on Education and Technology, National School Board Association, and others. This feels like those days again...

In the last six months, there has been resurgent interest in selling online tutoring services directly to consumers. One company plans to offer low-cost tutoring from tutors located in India and has raised over $10 million to try it. Another company is trying to raise a similar amount to aggressively expand into the direct-to-consumer market. This investor fervor hearkens back to the days of the late '90's when investors and companies showed similar irrational exuberance over the online tutoring market (from which my company benefited, to a degree).

The last decade is littered with companies that have tried to sell online tutoring services directly to consumers. In the late '90's one company raised close to $20 million on the theory that it could create a market for tutors offering their services and students needing tutors. Another well-known company invested close to $40 million to develop a direct-to-consumer online tutoring service. While both of these companies are still around, their business models have radically changed. After plowing through its $20 million, the first company bought a much smaller company that allowed them to sell services directly to public libraries -- effectively abandoning the direct-to-consumer model. It is now trying to resurrect the direct-to-consumer channel. The second company integrated its online tutoring offerings into it's place-based tutoring services -- effectively creating a hybrid tutoring option. Neither company has come close to justifying the original investment. From my own experience, SMARTHINKING ran several well-executed pilot programs targeting the direct-to-consumer market with very little success.

Tutoring seems like a market ripe for "disintermediation." According to Eduventures, the tutoring market is worth $4.5 billion and growing at 15% per year. It's also highly fragmented with price points ranging from $8 - $200 per hour, varying levels of quality, and imperfect mechanisms for quality assurance. In short, it seems like a perfect market for the aggregating ability of the Internet. In theory, some company should be able to offer a consistent level of service at a relatively low price to create a respected online tutoring brand that would aggregate both tutors and students. In practice, this has not been the case.

So, what happened? One answer might be that students don't really like online tutoring. Perhaps face-t0-face tutoring provides a level of personal interaction that is lacking on the Internet. While this is undoubtedly true, online tutoring offers other advantages like convenience of time and place, anonymity, archiving, and others. Further, usage of SMARTHINKING's online tutoring services is growing by more than 50% per year with most students using the service more than one time. Student surveys show that students really like the service. So, again from our experience, this isn't the case.

I believe that that the direct-to-consumer market hasn't worked because there is a mismatch between the market to whom online tutoring appeals and the consumer purchasing patterns for educational services. There are 2 types of tutoring. They are "prescriptive" and "drop-in." Prescriptive tutoring is where a student attends regularly scheduled tutoring sessions, frequently with the same tutor. Often, this tutoring will be tied to a pre-tutoring assessment to identify student weaknesses. The largest market for Prescriptive tutoring seems to be in the K-7 grades. Drop-in tutoring is where students get help from tutors when they need help. Essentially, this is a call center model for tutoring. Almost the entire consumer market for tutoring resides in the Prescriptive market. All of the well-know tutoring companies offer Prescriptive tutoring services. Prior to the advent of the Internet, Drop-in tutoring was restricted to places where students could be aggregated to create sufficient volume to offer a drop-in service. In practice, this was limited to learning assistance centers (ie. math labs) at colleges and universities. The Internet has allowed Drop-in tutoring to expand beyond the residential school. Because Drop-in tutoring requires students to initiate the interaction, this is most appropriate for high school and college students.

This is a rough and incomplete generalization, but I believe that education has 2 functions. These are socialization and knowledge transfer. When students are young, socialization is more important. As students age, knowledge transfer gains in importance. No matter how well constructed, online tutoring is simply a less powerful socialization experience than face-to-face tutoring. Therefore, online tutoring has not been as popular or successful with younger students. On the other hand, the convenience of the drop-in model of online tutoring is excellent at knowledge transfer. This model is used successfully by older students -- typically high school and college students. So, to sum up, online tutoring works well for older students, but not as well for younger students.

This is another rough and incomplete generalization, but consumer purchasing of educational products and services is restricted to three general categories. These are:
  1. Educational objects and toys -- like reading software or Leapfrog's toys;
  2. High stakes test prep -- SAT prep, etc...
  3. "Get Ahead" services -- Tutoring for young students.

Numbers 1 and 3 appeal to parents of younger students. Number 2 appeals to parents and students in the high school and college levels. Parents of high school students are willing to pay for test prep because there is a very clear goal in mind. They have not been willing to purchase Drop-in tutoring because the value isn't as clear. College students will spend a ton of money on tuition and textbooks, but don't buy much of anything after that. Again, because the relationship between an external tutoring service and passing a class isn't extremely obvious. What this means is that, the element of online tutoring that works well -- Drop-in tutoring-- is not well matched to the buying power and habits of the students for whom it works well.

It is entirely possible that I have misjudged the market dynamics. Perhaps the consumer market for online tutoring in the late '90's and early '00's wasn't mature enough yet. Perhaps the new marketing power of search engines is enough to create this consumer market. Perhaps today's investment in the consumer online tutoring market will prove to be rational exuberance. However, I don't think student and parent buying patterns have changed very much. Here are the lessons that I draw:

  1. Drop-in online tutoring works well.
  2. Drop-in online tutoring is best sold as an "add-on" to a school or as part of a bundled solution with another educational product.
  3. Students will come to expect Drop-in online tutoring as part of their educational experience, rather than purchase it independently.

The next year will tell if there really is a consumer market for online tutoring.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Introduction

I've been debating whether to start a blog for about a year now. After reading an article about corporate blogging in Wired yesterday, I figured now was the time to try. Doing it because others are doing it is certainly not the best reason to do anything, but there seems to be little harm in sharing my thoughts about my company (SMARTHINKING) and about American education.

I am the CEO and co-founder of SMARTHINKING.com. We are the leading provider of live, on-demand, online tutoring services to schools and publishers. I founded the company in July of '99 to allow high schools and colleges offer tutoring services to their students such that their students would be more likely to pass the general education courses in which they often fail. Our tutoring services are also bundled with a number of college textbooks published by Houghton Mifflin, Bedford Freeman & Worth, and LWW. Starting in June, they will also be bundled with textbooks from Pearson Education and Thomson Higher Education.

The things that differentiate us from other online tutoring providers are:

  1. We offer live, drop-in math tutoring 24 hours a day, 7 days a week (in the Fall and Spring).
  2. We provide an online writing lab where students submit essays for critique and return within 24 hours.
  3. Our services are vetted and selected by educators (like teachers and professors) who must be assured of the academic and pedagogical credentials of our team and our tutors.
  4. Our services are also bundled with textbook publishers, allowing our clients to find flexible ways to pay for services.
  5. Most of our tutors are part-time employees, as opposed to independent contractors. While it would be cheaper and easier to have independent contractors, IRS regulations forbid signficant training of independent contractors. To do online tutoring well, we find that significant pedagogical training is required.

So, this is my first post. I'll be back shortly...