Page 44 - Forbes - USA (December 2019)
P. 44

Guild Education Cont.                                                        nonselective online programs spend more than



                                  I                                                        $3,000  to  attract  each  new  student.  Carlson


                                                                                           charges  schools  a  finder’s  fee  (she  won’t  say
                                                                                           how much) for the students she delivers from
                                                                                           her corporate partners.
                                                                                              So  far  Guild  has  signed  up  more  than  20
      42                                                                                   companies,  including  Disney  and  Taco  Bell.


       S                                                               HOW TO PLAY IT      Guild gets paid only if students complete their
       R                                                                   By Jon D.       coursework, so a full 150 of the company’s 415
       U                                                                  Markman
       E                                                                                   staffers  serve  as  coaches  who  help  employees
       N                                                                Pluralsight is a   apply to degree programs and plan how to bal-
       E
       R                                                               great way to play   ance their studies with work and family. When
       P                                                               the rise of online
       E                              It’s  9  a.m.  two  days  be-     education. The     a company like Walmart requests a customized
       R
       T      fore  Thanksgiving  in  Arkansas,  and  Walmart           company sells      training  course,  Guild  solicits  proposals  from
       N                                                                 subscriptions     as many as 100 education providers (nearly all
       E      executives are dragging their suitcases around            to firms looking


       •      a  windowless  office  building  in  search  of  a        to onboard new     of them online) and recommends the programs

       N      large  conference  room.  They  settle  on  an  in-      hires or upgrade    it  deems  best.  It  also  negotiates  tuition  dis-
       A                                                               the skills of exist-
       I      terior lunchroom with dull gray carpet, claim-            ing technology     counts and facilitates direct payments between
       R
       A      ing one side of a long table in the corner and           workers. And with   employers and schools, a big plus for workers
       R                                                               online courses in
       T      gesturing for their guests to sit opposite them.          cloud comput-      who would otherwise have to wait months to
       N      Ellie Bertani, Walmart’s director of workforce                               be reimbursed.
       O                                                               ing architecture,
       C      strategy,  says  she’s  struggling  to  find  quali-      cybersecurity,        Carlson,  an  alumna  of  the  2017  Forbes  30
                                                                        mobile, design
              fied  people  to  staff  the  company’s  expanding       and data science,   Under 30 list and a judge on the 2020 list, says
              network  of  5,000  pharmacies  and  3,400  vi-           its services are   she has already channeled $100 million in tu-
              sion centers. Her fellow Walmart execs are si-            in high demand.    ition  benefits  to  workers.  She  expects  2019
                                                                          During the
              lent, but Rachel Romer Carlson, 31, cofound-              quarter ended      revenue  to  top  $50  million,  and  Guild  inves-
              er and CEO of Guild Education, sees her open-             September 30,      tor  Byron  Deeter  of  Bessemer  Venture  Part-
                                                                        sales grew 34%
              ing. Without hesitation she says her team can                                ners predicts 2020 revenue of more than $100
                                                                        year-over-year,
              work  with  Walmart  and  find  a  solution  fast.        to $82.6 million.   million. In mid-November Carlson closed her
              “You guys and us,” she says, “let’s do it!”               Pluralsight went   fifth  round  of  financing,  led  by  General  Cat-
                                                                        public at $15 in
                 Carlson  flew  to  Bentonville  from  Guild’s         May 2018. Shares    alyst, bringing her total money raised to $228
              Denver  headquarters  the  day  before.  Dressed          zoomed to $38      million at a $1 billion valuation. In the sleepy,
              in  a  sensible  navy  blazer  and  black  slacks,        by September.      well-intentioned  world  of  edtech,  Guild  is
                                                                        Since then the
              she  hasn’t  bothered  with  makeup.  Since  7:30        stock has slipped   one of only a few startups whose values have
              that morning she’s been huddling with teams               to about $16.45.   soared, says Daniel Pianko, a New York-based
                                                                       The decline looks
              of Walmart brass, going over options to train                                edtech investor with no stake in the company.
                                                                       like an excellent
              workers for those new jobs. They range from a            longer-term buy-       “I can see a path for Guild to be a $100 bil-
              one-year pharmacy technician certificate pro-             ing opportunity.   lion  company,”  says  Paul  Freedman,  CEO  of
              gram offered by a for-profit online outfit called         Jon D. Markman     San Francisco venture firm Entangled Group,
                                                                         is president of
              Penn Foster to an online bachelor’s degree in            Markman Capital     who has known Carlson since she was in busi-
              healthcare administration at nonprofit South-               Insight and      ness  school  and  was  one  of  Guild’s  earliest
              ern New Hampshire University.                                author of         investors.
                                                                         Fast Forward
                 Carlson’s  groundbreaking  idea  when  she               Investing.          When asked to detail Guild’s inner workings,
              launched  Guild  four  years  ago:  help  compa-                             like its strategy for soliciting custom courses,
              nies  offer  education  benefits  that  employ-                              Carlson  eschews  specifics  and  delivers  what
              ees will actually use. Many big employers will                               sounds  like  a  political  stump  speech:  “The
              pay for their workers to go to school (it’s a tax                            economy's moving so fast,” she says. “We can't
              break), but hardly any workers take advantage                                let higher education dictate the skills and com-
              of the opportunity. Applying and signing up for                              petencies that we need five to ten years from
              courses  can  be  cumbersome,  and  in  most  in-                            now.”
              stances employees have to front the tuition and                                 There’s  a  reason  she  talks  this  way.  Her
              wait to be reimbursed. Meanwhile, many col-                                  grandfather  Roy  Romer  was  a  three-term
              leges  are  desperate  for  students  because  they                          (1987–1999)  Democratic  governor  of  Colora-            PATRICK WELSH FOR FORBES
              have small—or nonexistent—endowments and                                     do before spending six years as superintendent
              are  financially  dependent  on  tuition.  Many                              of Los Angeles’ public schools. Carlson started


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