“Overseas Education Agents” following “Computer Training Institutes”

As I was driving to my place of work this morning, Green and Orange posters announcing Overseas Education Fairs of two companies (both holding it on the same day) jostled for my attention. It is not the posters per se that is causing me to pen my thoughts but certainly it reminded me of the era when I also put up posters for my computer institutes. Two years ago, we would have all frowned on such posters being put up on the streets and would possibly have thought of it is crass commercialization. I am guilty of putting these posters up too. Times have changed and we have changed with time. Albeit lowering our own set parameters of standards. There was a time when we did not advertise in the classified columns of the newspapers in our industry but today that seems to be the most sought after spot.

What I was reminded of was the phase through mid-nineties when similar promotions were carried out by computer training institutes. In those days, I had franchises of a national brand in multiple locations and the computer training industry was the industry to watch. Brands such as NIIT, APTECH and BRILLIANTS commanded huge franchise fees and were the attractive business propositions for people such as myself and my friends.

There are many parallels between the two industries.

  • What the Computer Institutes did in 1990s, it seems that Overseas Education Consultants are doing today. Mass promotions using posters, danglers, kiosks, bill boards… and classified advertising.
  • Franchising was the way for the computer institutes to set up shop around the country and Franchising has and is being used by many amongst us to expand. The logic being that if Coke and Pepsi and McDonald and KFC can franchise, why we can not… Why indeed not?
  • Computer Institutes promised jobs and Overseas Education consultants promise part time jobs and some even go on to assure migration.
  • Fairs and Exhibitions were/are used by both to lure students and sell dreams.
  • Both had the ultimate seller as: post study jobs overseas.
  • Scholarships being used as bait are often advertised by both the computer institutes and overseas agents.

I can go on and on listing the similarities and now that the point is made, would move on to share my fear…

  • Computer training institutes shut shop when the end users realized that for their day to day computing they did not need to be taught the programming languages and in the Overseas Education Industry too we are seeing many students moving away from agents when they feel that there are certain steps that they can do on their own without any hand holding.

Maybe I do need to be reminded that specialized and focused computer training institutes of that era have continued to survive through continuous adaptations and only the fringe ones have close shop. This is true indeed and possibly overseas education counselors will survive too with certain adaptations.

I would hope that all the like minds will meet and set some basic parameters that we all adhere to so that the quality and standards of the service are maintained. Amongst them will be issues related to the correctness of advertising. There have been adverts with agents listing over 60 institutions across several countries at an exhibition and students attending such fairs return with comments that they were surprised to see as few as 5-10 stalls and the agent pointing to a disclaimer in the advert that the ad is a general one and that not all the advertised institutions will attend the event. This is clear misrepresentation and I may say even cheating of the students and shows the agent in a poor light over his or her own standards. This blog is not about naming or giving examples but believe me, more than one agent is guilty of this conduct. I am willing to even stop putting up the street-side posters if we all can agree that it lowers the standards of the game that we play.

Talking of exhibitions, I do think that all of us give an impression that ours is the best and the biggest of the fairs. The person getting confused is the student and there is a fatigue setting in his/her mindset. And he stops attending any of the events. The same institutions get sold by all and sometimes on the same day. The days of huge turnouts in exhibitions are now over and most of us go back happy if we have 100-200 at our events. Come on guys, we can do better. We can lift our game for sure.  There are ways out. Why should we try and compete with exhibitions organized by British Councils and/or Austrade as they are not agents and hence why can we not avoid placing our dates around these two fairs. Why have deceptive adverts such as one that I saw that did not even list the name of the organizing agent and used a similar-sounding email and web-link that gave an impression of the event being organized by the Canadian government. To be honest, sometimes I can understand the zeal to get that extra business.

I guess I am now drifting from the topic of the blog and must put it to an end before I am seen to be tearing into my competitors. Honestly, I am equally guilty and want to share an artwork (from a gallery in Berlin) that was exhibited at the recently held Art Summit in Delhi where one of my company’s poster is seen prominently on the streets of Kolkata. The artist, I am informed is acclaimed Suhasini Kejriwal and the work is priced at around Euro 10000. The point being made is simple: lets lift our game and lets work together to ensure that the overseas education consultants don’t end up like the computer training institutes. Let’s continue to think and develop standards that apply to all including me.

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9 Comments

  1. Dear Ravi,

    Thanks for thoughts provoking article. You are 100% right while predicting and comparing industries, looking at last 3 to 4 years trends. Business dynamism is changing and we need to adopt changes while seeing correlation. Earlier, better. I think we all need to take collective lead, responsibilities and try to set standards. Ravi, move on, I am with you.

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  2. Hi Ravi,

    I work for a private college in Canada called BTH Education Group, and we are currently looking to expand our international student base with students from India. I happened to come across your blog today, so I thought I might ask if you’d be interested in partnering with us as an educational agent.

    If so, please feel free to check out our website http://www.btheducation.ca and kindly send us your contact details so that we may send you further information.

    Have a lovely day!
    Christy

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  3. Hi Ravi, I have been following your posts with a keen interest. I do appreciate your thoughts on the scammers.
    I personally think there should be government laws about mis-representation or false advertising. not set by controlling bodies. I have issues with private enterprises being “controlled in various ways” by industry bodies especially government bodies. I applaud your success and appreciate you saying you were marketing in the area you now critical of. I believe this method of advertising has had its day but it has in part got you were you are today. Shall we critical? yes, its cheap…so is holding a sign around your neck advertising pizzas. I believe in the future, so will be marketing on-line. Websites on the whole are a bit tacky “really”. But these methods still do work!Our mutual market is getting smarter. I’ve just learned to find everything you’ve personally written online and all i do is open my mail to find your words, quotes and business interests. Who should control what we do? our audience. 100-200 people at an expo says to me…don’t waste my time. I’d be better off with a poster on a wall. What I am trying to say is.. Lets meet, sure! discuss things that work, don’t work or could be done better. But who should decide where we fit in the market? Our audience. Is this the end export education as we know it? Are agents going to disappear? (another really cool topic). What comes next? it will be decided by the next up and coming Ravi Lochan Singh. The guy that listened to the market and responded.

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    1. Your comments are very interesting. We all are in a phase of introspection. Have done my bit of homework on online marketing and find that it has several pluses but doesnot replace the current options. Maybe in future it will. I am not talking of regulating of the industry by government agencies. Infact they end up doing a muck of things. Instead if all the leading names agree to a form of self-regulation and abiding by certain standards, it will be good for all. Pizza and Education have to be treated differently in terms of promotions, I guess. Do continue to comment and if you have time, browse through the other posts and post comments.

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  4. Hi Ravi, I agree to your thoughts to certain extent but I would certainly want to have more discussion on why this is happening and what is the need in the industry to happen. The other thing we must point out is cheap road side advertisement which is really causing lot of damage to environment. I would point out leaflets being stuck on the walls and distributed at improper places. Time to think about environment seriously as well.

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