Thursday, 5 June 2014

Online Courses: What is so attractive about them?


Online education is making its presence felt in a big way throughout the world. India is no exception to this worldwide trend. Take the example of Milan Sharma who is a software engineer and works at a travel firm. Though keen to gain new skills in upcoming technologies like big data analytics, his day job prevented him from fulfilling his wish. But that was before he opted for an online course with Edureka. As he says"The beauty of online courses is that it gives you flexibility and easy access to course content.” Lack of qualified teachers, professionals pressed for time and high education fees are all contributing to a rising demand for online learning that is catered to by a number of new startup ventures.

"We have more than 20,000 paid students right from Seoul in South Korea to Azamgarh in Uttar Pradesh," said Lovleen Bhatia, co-founder of Bangalore-based Edureka. According to his expectation his company will earn a revenue to the tune Rs 30 crore in fiscal 2015.  Edureka started its operations in 2012 and offers courses in areas such as development of mobile applications and big data for professionals at fees ranging from 12,000 to 30,000. Edureka along with other online educators like handa ka funda and Jigsaw Academy put into good use a combination of live interactive sessions, animation to explain a concept in addition to flexible schedules and constant feedback.



The cost of online courses is just another incentive for students to sign up for such courses. "A typical course for CAT preparation offline would cost around Rs 30,000 to Rs 45,000 depending on the city. The costliest course we offer through our online platform is priced at Rs 4,000," said Ravi Handa, founder of handa ka funda.com, which had its inception in January 2013.

"We have seen tremendous response to online education," said Jigsaw Academy co-founder Gaurav Vohra, who started the company to offer courses in analytics.

The expectation of the company is to earn a revenue to the tune of Rs 40 crore in the next two years. According to experts courses have a market with tremendous potential with its reach of students from small town to metropolitan cities.




"Education is a lifelong investment, everyone wants the best in class education," said Pragya Singh, assistant vice president for retail at advisory firm Technopak. The lure of online courses isn’t limited to professionals, even school kids are looking forward to online help. One firm which caters to such students is the Bangalore-based Vedantu.com, founded by five childhood friends Anand Prakash, 33, Pulkit Jain, 30, Saurabh Saxena, 31, Vamsi Krishna, 30, and Ujjawal Misra, 30 . Vedantu is the second educational venture for this team of IITians, who sold traditional physical entrance preparation institute Lakshya to MTEducare in 2012.


"Online tutorial is catching up not only in India but globally, and I see potential for great scale," said angel investor VN Ramaswamy, who invested Rs 2 crore in Vedantu.com last year. Having an annual turnover of Rs.30 lakh, its expectations are to earn Rs 1 crore in fiscal 2015. 

Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Study: M.B.A. Now Most Popular Master’s Degree


The MBA has now surpassed Education as the most popular postgraduate degree in the U.S. for the first time in its long and cherished history as statistics from the U.S. Department of Education testify.

In the last year of available data 191,571 people graduated from business schools in the U.S. which amounts to about 25.4% of all the master’s degrees conferred compared with 178,062 students who successfully completed their master’s in education, or 23.6% of all the advanced degrees. Education has long been the dominant field as far as master degrees are concerned partly due to the fact that in some states like Massachusetts it is required to teach. In the 70’s education accounted for a towering 37.2% of all master’s conferred.

What is The growth story of the MBA? Ever wondered?


The growth story of the MBA is largely due to the fact that it has widespread acceptance by employers and the assurance of return on the investment, with a certainty to a considerable extent. Srilata Zaheer, dean of the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota, has seen the transformative power of the degree with her own eyes. “A business degree remains one of the most predictable paths to success and financial stability and can provide the proverbial leg up from relative poverty to great accomplishment and wealth,” she maintains. “In uncertain times, such as we have had since 2008, it tends to draw more students who make this connection.  

We have any number of alumni from our MBA programs who have come from small towns, modest backgrounds, often the first generation in college, going on to become immensely successful entrepreneurs and leaders of global firms.” She gives the example of John Stumpf, chairman and CEO of Wells Fargo. “He grew up in a farm family of 11 children in Pierz, MN, sharing a bedroom with his brothers, and being the first in his family to go to college,” she remembers. Paul Danos, dean of Dartmouth College’s Tuck School of Business and the longest serving leader of a major B-school, is of the opinion that the growth has been driven by schools that have adapted to the changing needs of the companies and organizations that hire MBAs.

It's Time - Change the MBA


The MBA has in the recent past has experienced something of a overhaul with many prospective MBA candidates  voicing their requirement for more focus on entrepreneurship in the course over a curriculum that pays more attention towards finance and consulting. Growth has also been observed in programs that focus on the not for profit sector and social entrepreneurship.


According to Danos “Businesses have grown enormously in complexity and scope, and more than ever, they need ethical, skilled, well-educated, creative leaders who are global in outlook,” “Business education in general and the great MBA programs in particular have adapted as these demands have grown, perhaps better than any other form of advanced education.” As he continues “Top business schools have continuously changed in response to the ever-changing demands of business; and this can be seen in how crucial issues such as: ethics, sustainability, leadership, technology, globalization and much more have been mainstreamed into MBA programs along with the classic core topics of business management.”