Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF

Commoditisation and differentiation in the language travel industry

Jean-Marc Alberola is the president of Bridge, a dynamic US-based provider whose six divisions span a wide range of language, teacher training, pathway, exchange, corporate training, and online programmes. Mr Alberola joined a special industry panel last fall at the ICEF Berlin Workshop to look at some of the most significant strategic issues facing schools and agencies today. We are pleased to present three video segments below from a wide-ranging discussion that we had with him during his visit to Berlin. Mr Alberola is a 25-year veteran of the industry. Now based in Denver, he has extensive experience in Brazil, Chile, and Argentina and an impressive track record of innovation and expansion in international education. We began our conversation by talking about some of the most significant drivers of change in the education sector, including the ever-growing importance of the Internet for both marketing and programme delivery, the regulatory environment (particularly accreditation requirements in the US), and major demographic trends. Our second interview segment below focuses on the importance of adaptability, diversification, and differentiation as key strategies for managing risk and responding to the sometimes-dramatic shifts in the marketplace. Mr Alberola highlights, for example, the importance of Bridge’s extensive teacher training programmes, both those for individuals as well as courses undertaken as in the context of large-scale professional development programmes offered in partnership with foreign institutions or governments. BridgeTEFL, the company’s teacher training unit, is a leading provider of English language teacher training courses in the US. The division prepares over 4,000 trainees annually to teach English as a second language at home and abroad. In our third and final interview segment below, the conversation shifts to the question of commoditisation in language travel. In an earlier post on the subject, we introduced commoditisation as “the movement toward undifferentiated competition.” We suggested at the time that commoditisation in the language school sector is occurring as a result of two important market characteristics:

  • A large field of undifferentiated competitors;
  • The emergence of online booking/rating services that allow customers to very easily compare language schools according to the features they value most, including location, availability, and price.

The issue is a potentially significant one for the industry as it both changes the competitive dynamic in the marketplace and tends to exert a notable downward pressure on price. Mr Alberola concludes, as do many in the industry, that some level of commoditisation is now underway. However, he adds an important qualifier as well. “If you look at the spectrum of services in our industry, I think there are certain programmes that lend themselves to commodification and others that don’t.” Undifferentiated, general English programmes, for example, might be more easily treated as a commodity. Junior programmes or pathway programmes, on the other hand, are more likely to be resistant to the trend. Many observers, Mr Alberola included, also see new opportunities in commodification - for example, to the extent that it opens up new options for online booking and global booking systems in particular. Many also see the trend as one that remains a very gradual process and, as such, as a market factor that can be a stimulus for new efforts toward differentiation and innovation. For additional background on trends in commoditisation, please see our earlier post on the subject. It reflects on an April 2014 panel discussion from the IALC conference in Brisbane which, coincidentally, was moderated by Mr Alberola.

Most Recent

  • Study finds strong agent interest in partnering with Japanese universities Read More
  • Canada’s language training sector reinvents pathway programme model in response to policy settings Read More
  • Study highlights poor outcomes for graduates of Indian higher education Read More

Most Popular

  • Which countries will contribute the most to global student mobility in 2030? Read More
  • Research shows link between study abroad and poverty alleviation  Read More
  • Beyond the Big Four: How demand for study abroad is shifting to destinations in Asia and Europe Read More

Because you found this article interesting

Study finds strong agent interest in partnering with Japanese universities For many years, institutions in the Big Four (Australia, Canada, UK, and US) have partnered with educational agents...
Read more
Canada’s language training sector reinvents pathway programme model in response to policy settings In 2019, pathway programmes – joint offerings that link language study with academic programmes – accounted for nearly...
Read more
Study highlights poor outcomes for graduates of Indian higher education Across economies advanced and developing, young degree-holders are finding it more difficult than in the past to secure...
Read more
Beyond enrolment: The marketing signals education leaders should watch The following is a guest post contributed by Guus Goorts, a Netherlands-based education marketing coach who helps universities...
Read more
Canada: Government audit finds impact of international student cap far greater than expected The Office of the Auditor General of Canada (OAG) has released a report that analyses the effect of...
Read more
ICEF Podcast: Are you using the right digital channels to reach international students? Listen in as ICEF’s Craig Riggs and Martijn van de Veen recap some of the latest developments in...
Read more
Australia: Latest enrolment data challenges the government’s assertion of stability for international education this year On 20 March, Australia’s Assistant Minister for International Education, Julian Hill, published a statement entitled Continuity and change:...
Read more
Narrowing bands of compliance: How the UK’s new RAG system will impact international student recruitment The UK Home Office has circulated draft guidance to expand on forthcoming changes to the Basic Compliance Assessment...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links