On
April 11 Kaplan announced plans to buy Sagemont Virtual, the firm
operating University of Miami's online high schools and course
developer Virtual Sage. Earlier in the year, online higher education
provider Apollo Group acquired Insight Schools based in Portland,
Oregon for $15 million. Insight has roughly 600 students, Virtual
Sage doesn't say.
The question is
whether online high school education - now a highly fragmented market
with a mix of for-profit, nonprofit and government providers drawing
content from a wide variety of sources, is scalable nationally, subject
to a roll up of some kind, or structurally balkanized. Kaplan and
Apollo are prepared to put a few million in the game to find out
(Insight's price was $15 million.) They are not "betting the farm," they
are testing the waters and creating options for future growth. There is
nothing earth shattering about the announcements, unlike say Pearson's
May, 2006 purchases of PowerSchool and Chancery in the student information management segment.
Your editor
feels reasonably confident that the online high school market is
structurally fragmented. Entry costs are relatively low. Tiny market
shares yield substantial profits, discouraging small providers from
selling out. Local content developers are
relatively cheap. (Your editor's experience with the human capital
costs of product development at New American Schools eight independent
design teams and their subcontractors suggests that very high quality
k-12 expertise is not much more expensive than mediocre talent, and far
cheaper than comparable professional support in most other
fields.) Content itself is broadly available - Virtual Sage's
Connections Academy lists eighteen content partners whose products and
services are widely available to any other potential virtual provider.
Demonstrating alignment to 50 sets of state standards and high stakes
exit exams, across four
grades in math, literacy, science - not just of materials, but in staff
expertise - is tougher. Nonprofit providers have access to philanthropy
and are not concerned about providing investors with a financial
return. Government providers have access to the treasury and only have
to show they are less expensive than brick and mortar schools. And
"brand" probably doesnt matter as much as in the consumer sales markets
Kaplan and Apollo dominate.
The only potential distinguishing factor among firms is delivery of the
online experience. Because teaching and learning is not like serving
and eating fast food, this means both mass customization for students
and strong local relationships with state educators. Your editor can see large
local, state and even multi-state providers, but the only national firm
will be a congolmerate, and the economics here don't seem to offer a
great competitive advantage. Diseconomies seem more likely as
headquarters tries to homogenize and field units try to remain
distinct.
Along with many
firms, Kaplan and Apollo are likely
to develop profitable businesses, but not enough to change their
revenue trajectories in a way likely to excite Wall Street. Both are
more likely to spin them
off or sell them to management than build them into something like
their positions in online higher education or test preparation -
where in
most cases one standardized product can serve a national market. Indeed, Kaplan
may have bought Sagemont with an eye towards shifting its online course
production capacity to web-based higher education, a point intimated in its press
release and underlined by the new unit's operation under Kaplan's Higher Education
Division.
Advanced
Placement is perhaps the sole example of a national online market. Yet
even Seattle-based Apex Learning which closed a $4 million in equity
finance last November, serving 30,000 students, is only the largest of
several competitors offering AP services. Still, if Kaplan and Apollo are looking for an
online high school business close to their core business models, Apex
would be the right target.
See Alison Damast, Business Week, April 19.
Kaplan Press Release, April 11.
Apollo Press Release, January 10.
Rhea R. Borja, Education Week, March 30.
Apex Learning Press Release, November 29, 2006.
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