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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