Leap Academy with Ilana Golan - How Shai Reshef Is Empowering Refugees and Underserved Students with Free College Education
Episode Date: April 15, 2025Growing up, Shai Reshef wasn’t the most enthusiastic student, but after earning a master’s degree in Chinese politics, he discovered the transformative power of education. Inspired by a UNESCO rep...ort predicting the future lack of access to higher education, Shai decided to act. He sold two businesses, leveraged open-source technology, and partnered with volunteer professors to create University of the People, the world’s first tuition-free, accredited online university. In this episode, Shai joins Ilana to share how the university is empowering over 150,000 students from marginalized communities and offers valuable advice for those seeking to make a meaningful impact. Shai Reshef is the founder and president of University of the People, a nonprofit, tuition-free, accredited online university dedicated to providing accessible higher education to underserved populations across 206 countries. In this episode, Ilana and Shai will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:52) The Power of Education in Nation-Building (04:41) Founding the First Online University in Europe (09:08) Creating a Global, Tuition-Free University (16:05) Overcoming Accreditation Challenges (19:34) The Global Impact of the University of the People (26:41) Building a Sustainable Model for Free Education (30:59) How University of the People Screens Students (34:18) Keys to Launching a Meaningful Project (38:18) Balancing Leadership Stress with Team Dynamics (40:33) Success Stories from University of the People (43:41) The Power of Philanthropy and Nonprofits Shai Reshef is the founder and president of University of the People, a nonprofit, tuition-free, accredited online university dedicated to providing accessible higher education to underserved populations across 206 countries. Previously, he led Kidum Group, Israel’s largest for-profit educational services company, and chaired KIT eLearning, the first online university in Europe. Recognized for his impact on education, Shai also serves as an adviser to the UN’s Global Alliance for ICT and Development. Connect with Shai: Shai’s LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/shaireshef Resources Mentioned: University of the People’s Website: www.uopeople.edu Leap Academy: Ready to make the LEAP in your career? There is a NEW way for professionals to Advance Their Careers & Make 5-6 figures of EXTRA INCOME in Record Time. Check out our free training today at leapacademy.com/training
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wow, this show is going to be incredible.
So buckle up and I'm sure you're going to enjoy it.
But before we get started, I want to ask you for a favor.
See, it's really, really important for me to help millions of people elevate their career,
fast-track to leadership, land dream roles, jump to entrepreneurship or create portfolio careers.
And this podcast is all about enabling this for millions of people
to see a map of what it actually
takes for big leaders to reach success.
So subscribe and download so you never miss it.
Plus, it really, really helps me continue to bring amazing guests.
Okay?
So let's dive in.
When you educate one person, you can change their life.
But if you educate many, you can change the world.
Shai Resef, the founder of University of the People,
he created the first tuition-free,
accredited online university.
He has provided access to higher learning
for over 153,000 students worldwide.
I read a UNESCO statement that in 2025,
there will be 100 million students
without universities to serve them.
So I felt that it's my turn to give back.
University of the People is for the people
who have no other alternatives.
We are tuition free.
We have more refugees than any university in the world.
We have 19,000 refugees.
We have 4,300 Afghan women hiding at home, studying with us because they
are not allowed to study under the Taliban rule. These are the people that we started
the university for. The two hardest things for me is first of all. Shai Rasef, today is going to be one of the more inspiring stories you heard on this podcast.
The founder of University of the People.
They're transforming global education.
He created the first tuition-free,
listen to this, accredited online university has provided access to higher learning for
over 153,000 students worldwide. Tuition-free, accredited. How many stories do we get that
people are just that good? Shai, thank you for being on the show.
Thank you for inviting me.
How does somebody grow up and eventually change the world and change education in this level? So
tell us a little bit about you as a younger kid. What was it like? Were you entrepreneurial? Did you like education?
Like, who are you?
It's interesting because I grew up in a modest family
and I went to school.
I was not the best school in class.
I had other things that were more interesting than studying.
I worked from very early age,
kind of like supplement the study that I did,
the school with some work. But I think that after completing my bachelor degree, I went to
Michigan to do my master level in Chinese politics in the University of Michigan. And then I became exposed to,
through studying China,
on the importance of education.
Because what happened in China is that Mao and
the Communist Party tried to
change the culture of a nation,
largely by educating the kids.
And I was fascinated by it.
But before that, why masters in Chinese politics?
What would get somebody to decide, I'm not from China, but I'm fascinated by that specific topic?
I read about China and I learned about what happened in the last hundred few years
from being an amazing empire empire how it collapsed because it was not ready for the developed world and was not ready to accept the inferior.
And at the same time the communist party came and said well we are going to change it.
change it. And they created a mass movement, took over China and said, we are going to create a different country and a different culture and different nation. And I was, really?
How do you do that? And you know, we're not talking about a country of 100,000 or a million
people, right? This is the biggest country in the world. And I start following what's
going on and I was shocked. It took me to get into
it to understand that it didn't really work all the way as they wanted. And then when
we see, we look at China today, it's clear that it didn't work. But also I realized that
no doubt that China will become the largest and the strongest power on earth, which we're
experiencing happening. We're seeing it.
We're seeing it.
And I said, okay, not a lot of people know China.
And I decided too that I will be one of the few
who really know.
Wow.
Incredible.
So right after that, instead of continuing
in Chinese politics, you decide to go to education.
So tell me a little bit about that path
that people think you're crazy. How did that go? So I studied Chinese politics
and through my PhD studies, I also realized that while I love China, I'm not
academics and I'm not going to be a professor and I'm not going to spend my
life doing research, which I highly
appreciate.
And I think it's extremely important, except that I don't think it is me.
So I learned about a test prep company, SAT test prep company, and I became involved.
And I became the CEO of the company and it became an international company
with tens of programs in education with hundreds of thousands of students.
And among other things, we learned about actually University of Phoenix and other universities
who started offering online education, which was really new.
And we decided that we are going to do the same outside of the US.
And we were the first online university in Europe
through partnership with the University of Liverpool.
So we were the first university to have white,
we were white labeling University of Liverpool
offering their online master degrees from Europe. We operated it from Amsterdam.
And that's where I learned how powerful online learning can be.
What year was that, roughly?
Well, starting in 2000.
Amazing. So right when everything is starting,
you're already understanding the power of online,
which is incredible because people were still trying to understand this internet thing,
and you already understand that this can actually be huge for education.
So you work with Kit in Europe and build that.
How did people adapt to that?
Was it weird for people?
Did they trust it?
How was it?
The growth was very, very small for two reasons.
First of all, it was for profit at the time.
The University of the People is non-profit, but that was for profit and it cost money,
significant amount of money.
In the U.S., people used to pay, always paid for higher education, not in the amount that
they pay right now, but they still paid for higher education.
Outside of the U.S., people they still paid for higher education outside of the US.
People did not pay for higher education. So the concept of paying for higher education was new.
Second, online was new. Look, even now, we're talking about over 20 years from that, still people say online learning is that good? Is that serious? Is it doable? Is it real? So then people look at us
like what is it? So we had our time. We had our time with that company. It was successful. For me,
the major thing that I got out of it is to learn that there is a tool to educate people wherever
they are. So we had students, let's say from Singapore.
We operated from Amsterdam, but they stayed home,
kept their job, stayed with their family,
and still get University of Liverpool online degree.
So it was an amazing tool, except that I also realized
that most people cannot afford it.
I still wanna go for a second because you led Qidum to transforming it to one of the
largest private education companies.
What are some of these challenges that you faced?
I mean, some of it is definitely the money and the fact that it's cost.
But what are some of the things that you faced when you grow an education company to this
level?
And how did you overcome some of these?
I think it was true then and it is true now
when University of the People
experiencing exponential growth.
You never know what's next.
So I think that I always spend my time
trying to realize what is not going to work well.
What should we keep fixing?
What might go wrong?
And if it doesn't go wrong, we're lucky.
If it goes wrong, you're ready for it.
But yeah, but I think that growing,
it's everything from marketing to finance to operation
to human resources to culture, it's everything.
And I assume you've taken all of this obviously to University of the People,
but let me take you for a second to that idea of,
I'm going to do something incredibly hard.
Let me just create the same thing, but for free and accredited and for a lot of people.
Tell me about that moment when you're deciding to do this but for free and accredited and for a lot of people.
Tell me about that moment when you're deciding to do this and how the people around you react
to that because it does sound crazy, Shai.
Let's be real.
So here it is.
KIT was a great company.
We decided to sell it to Laureate.
Their name was not Laureate at the time. It
was Sylvan Learning. Then they changed their name. I went to New York semi-retired, but
very fast I realized, and my family realized that I'm not the retired person.
The retired person.
Yeah. I'm too hyper. I felt that I want to continue, but it was also clear to me that I don't want to
do more of the same.
I sold two businesses.
I felt that it's my turn to give back.
And for me to give back was, and that's my personality, I want to do it in a way that
will have an impact on the world.
And having impact on the world is obviously education, because when you think about it,
when you educate one person, you can change their life.
But if you educate many, you can change the world.
So I start looking around, and I wasn't sure how to do it and what exactly I want to do. But then through a friend, I met a company that wanted me to become involved.
And I met them, two young kids, not that young, but you know, in their early 20s, young.
And they said, what do you do?
And they said, you know, we have a website, obviously in education, where students come every day
with their homework online and professors come online
and offer them help to help them with their homework.
And they said, and what do the professor do?
They said, well, they get nothing.
They get karma points, which worth nothing.
It's just a prestige. I said, listen,
I know the world and I know education and I understand a little bit psychology. If you
help the students with their homework, you're a tutor. If you're a tutor, why won't you
take money? I said, well, you don't understand the internet. I said, okay, I'm willing to
learn. And I came to their website and I realized
that every time students come online, there are hundreds of professors who are willing to help
them for free. What they get in return is karma points, which worth nothing. And I said, wait a
second, by now, if you look at what makes higher education, you need content.
But there was already open educational resources, which means content that professors put online
for free.
There is open source technology, free technology.
And if there are professors that are willing to teach for free, actually, this is what
you need for a university.
All I had to do is to put it together and create tuition free university.
So that's where the idea came from.
From that moment still to pull the trigger and say, let me try to do this crazy thing
that will only rely on donors and volunteers and oh my God, Shai, yes, how did you get there?
I said, okay, it was open source technology, open educational resources and volunteers.
I said, this is a university.
All I have to do, as I said, is to put it together.
So I went to a conference in Munich and I announced that I'm going to start a tuition
free university.
And by the way, I should have said that when
I was in KIT, I realized that the main problem is that so many people need education, but
they can't afford it. And when I was thinking about creating University of the People, I
realized I read a UNESCO statement on that year in 2009 that in 2025, right now, there will be 100 million
students without universities to serve them.
So I said, okay, I announced the university in Munich.
The next day, the New York Times wrote a page about it.
And the following day, I already had hundreds of emails
from professors who said, wow, we want to help.
And they built the university.
So let's dive into that, Chai.
It's amazing that you got already the press to see it,
and that really helps.
And again, I can see why they would be drawn
to something so beautiful. But tell us about the early days, because the early days still need capital to some extent.
Even if a lot of people are volunteers, there's still operations and there's technology and
there's infrastructure and there's marketing or travel. Like there's still things. So how do you
start rolling this? When I announced the University of the
People, I knew what it takes to build a university because I had a university in
Europe and they knew what it takes, which was a great plus because otherwise what
do you need in order to create a university? Second, from the very beginning
I had amazing people who came to help from our provost, who came from Columbia University
and the vice provost, from deans who came from NYU and Princeton.
And those people taught me what I need in order to build a university, and they built
it.
So most of the manpower was volunteers, which saves millions of dollars along the years.
We did need capital.
I invested some money originally,
but we worked extremely fast because the idea was
we are not going to become a regular university.
We are going to give the students what they need
in order to succeed, do it in the most efficient way that it can be done, and the fastest way.
So I announced the university on the 27th of January. By April, we start enrolling students.
By September, we already started teaching. It was extremely fast. We build the courses while teaching. All were built by volunteers. And
technology, we use open source technology. So it was very, very fast and efficient. And
luckily, I had amazing people on my side who did it.
Tell us a little bit also about getting it accredited because there's a different, like
I'm sure it came with some skepticism and you know, I mean, this is online, how can
be accredited?
What challenges did you run into in the beginning?
Well, the first time I met the accreditation agency, I felt like it's really easy because
what they said, look, here are the standards, just follow the standards and you can get accredited. Sure. Okay. Sounds very easy. I remember going
out calling to my co-CEO at KIT and say, wow, you know how easy it is to get accredited.
You're just following the standards. It was a long road. We received our initial accreditation in 2014 by the DEC, stands for Distance Education Accreditation Commission, which is a national accreditation.
A lot of the institutions are like ourselves with distance.
And you need to meet a lot of standards because in order to get accredited, all your courses need to be evaluated, that they meet the standards.
They need to see that you have all the procedures to accept the students, to serve the students,
and to verify that they meet the standards. Then they check the learning outcomes. So it really
checks every single element of your operation. It took us actually, you know, from 2010 or 11 when we started until 2014 when we got initially accredited,
which was a huge thing for us.
We had about 500 students when we had our initial accreditation.
Now we have 153,000 10 years later.
So it was a long road. While having the DAC, which is
a great accreditation, we get a lot of push from our students or request from our students
to get regional accreditation as well because in the US system, there are national and regional. And regional, they are older, they are more traditional,
and they are perceived by many as better accreditation. And, you know, we're there not for ourselves,
we're there for our students, and if the students want, we need to do it. One of the challenges
that we had with our initial accreditation is that, for example, Canada do not accept
our accreditation for master level.
So there was a need for another accreditation.
So for the last five years, we worked on another accreditation, and two weeks ago, we got it.
It's WASC, stands for Western Accreditation Secondary secondary commission which is a regional accreditation and now we have the same accreditation is stand for the berkeley and you see any higher academic accreditation.
This is a major milestone for us.
for us that actually puts us in line with the best universities in the world, which is important because again, being online, well, I don't think that there is a single
university in the US, they do not offer at least one course online, still people are
not 100% sure that that's the right thing and the real thing.
So you need legitimacy and you need credibility
and that's exactly what accreditation gives us.
And I wanna talk a little bit about the impact of this
because what it disenabled is ability to serve
150 plus students from what, 200 countries
and including, I think you have incredible stories
of helping refugees and can you have incredible stories of helping refugees.
And can you share a couple of stories just so people understand the magnitude of this?
University of the People is for the people who have no other alternatives. We do not
want to have the people who can get into Harvard or Stanford, Yale and others. We want to open
the gates for those who have no other opportunities.
By definition, we have people in the US that are homeless, stay home, immigrants. We have
survivors of the genocide in Rwanda, the earthquake in Haiti, people who sell fruits on the streets.
So we're opening the gates to those who have, nobody else is willing
to accept them. Among them, we have refugees. As a university, we have more refugees than
any university in the world. We have 19,000 refugees. We have 4,300 Afghan women who are
studying, hiding at home, studying with us because they're not allowed to study under the Taliban rule.
Moreover, what we just learned is that they start graduating and 60% of our graduates in Afghanistan
work remotely as programmers with international companies. It's amazing stories and like these are the people that we started the
university for and we have in 2012 we start witnessing tens of thousands of
Syrian knocking on our doors trying to study but could not make it because of
the language. You know the war in Syria and all the universities were closed
they were knocking on our door. They couldn't make it.
So we said, OK, let's develop a program in Arabic.
We develop a program in Arabic.
Now we have 30,000 students studying in Arabic, and many of them are refugees.
So we are there for these people.
And actually, our next project
is to develop your people in Spanish,
again, for Venezuelan refugees,
because there are millions of them
that do not have opportunities and we can,
and we should open the gates to them.
And that's what we do.
Incredible.
And I believe you also have people from Gaza.
You have people from all over when
they can't go anywhere else, they come to you.
We have students from 209 countries, you're right. We have students in Gaza, what we learn,
and we are a year and a half after when the war started in October, we had 17 students in Gaza, nine of them are still studying even now.
We had 11 professors from Gaza, the professors are volunteers as you know, five of them are
still teaching with us, which means that they are daily in the class.
So we decided and we raised, we got scholarships for students from Gaza, and now we are enabling Gazan students
to study with us again because all the universities are closed and we are the opportunity to continue
those studies.
That's our mission, to open the gates.
I would say another thing.
We are tuition free.
We are not free.
We expect the students to pay $140 per each end-of-course assessment.
So a full BA would cost $5,600 for as long as it takes the students, and we let the students
actually up to 10 years to complete a bachelor degree, but they have to pay $140 by the end
of each course.
Those who cannot afford it, we offer them scholarships.
So over half of the students pay nothing whatsoever
in order to study with us, because this is our mission.
Give them the chance, and that's what we do.
This is absolutely amazing.
And if somebody's watching me on YouTube,
I'm like literally crying here.
But tell me for a second, Chai, even to sponsor so many people,
do you need to constantly go look for donations?
Seriously, how do you run this operation?
And what are some hard moments even for you?
Like, this mission can't stop, but donations sometimes are hard.
What is it like for you?
The two hardest things for me is first of all, to spread the word.
Because even though we have 150,000 students
and our students are amazing ambassadors to our mission
and they're really doing a lot online,
most people who need us don't know that we exist.
So how do you spread the word?
And being tuition free means that we don't have
a big budget to spread the marketing. Yeah, marketing budget. But when they come to study and when
they hear about us and they want to study, we need the money to make sure that we can
take them. And this is a challenge. Both things will challenge from day one. And, you know,
we have 150,000 students.
We are very proud of it, but the demand out there
is way larger than that, but we can take all of them.
You know, I'm very proud to have 4,300 Afghan women
studying with us, but we have over 20,000 applicants
in Afghanistan, and we simply cannot accommodate
all of them.
So yes, I'm actually from day one,
raising donations to enable us,
we are from almost after very few years,
we became financially sustainable, the operation.
So we don't need donations in order to operate,
but we do need the donations in order to get more students.
So it goes for scholarships or for new programs, etc.
And from day one, I'm raising the money.
Coming from the for-profit world, I did not understand what fundraising is and actually
how hard it is.
And when I started the university, I said, well, it's such an amazing idea.
The money will flow in.
Obviously, I mean, we will never have any problem raising money.
Well, it took me some time to realize
that it doesn't really work this way.
And raising money is a profession.
And knowing how to build a philanthropic community is hard.
So we're doing it and I do it a large part of my time
and we have now a great team that is working on it. But it is true that we are not doing as well as
we should and we don't raise as much as we should because, you know, I mentioned scholarships, but
if we had enough money, we can turn half of the university to operate with AI.
And if we operate with AI, we can serve even more students.
But again, you need money for that.
So yeah, there are challenges out there.
Whoa, I hope you enjoyed this conversation as much as I did.
If you did, please share it with friends.
This really helps us continue to bring amazing guests.
Also, if you are feeling stuck or simply want more from your own career, watch this 30-minute
training.
I know it's going to help.
It's leapacademy.com slash training.
That's leapacademy.com slash training.
And I will see you in the next episode of the Leap Academy with Ilana Golancho.
I see a lot of beautiful people in Leap Academy
that have all these brilliant ideas,
but pulling it and making this happen,
definitely the magnitude that you did,
but even just launching it,
being able to get the first donations,
that's not easy and sustaining it.
There is, you know, a donation fatigue
and people donate to a thousand things. So
that's not easy to maintain. First of all, how did you become sustainable? Because I
think that's key.
We need help spreading the word, as I said, in any way that anyone can help us either
spread because they have a lot of followers or they no others of the no organization that can partner with us all of it is more than welcome moreover
we are also working on a project in africa.
The challenge in africa is that in every single country in africa there aren't enough seats in the university to accommodate the demand.
So take nigeria it's the largest, but still 10 and a half million students graduate
high school every year.
A million and a half out of them take and pass the university entrance exams, which
means qualified for higher education.
But there are seats available for half a million.
So by definition, a million qualified students will stay out.
And what we're saying, use our model, because in online you can take
any number of students and there is no shortage of seats. So we are looking for a government
in Africa to work together with us to solve the shortage of our face seats and to show
the other countries that solution is there and to be like the cell phone did
to the landline instead of having more and more lines, they just jumped to cell phones
and the same with universities. Instead of building more and more and more physical universities,
go online and you can serve everyone. So our project right now, we identify seven countries where they are relatively politically stable and
have strong international companies presence.
And we want the companies to team up with us.
And the idea is to work with the government and with the companies to identify what education
the companies need in order to hire local people, we are going to offer this
education to educated people and together we are going to educate the people, offer them job and
show how we educate many people. So if your companies operate in Africa and if you want to
do good to Africa and to yourself there because you will hire people. We are more than open
to talk to you. And obviously, anyone who wants to help us sponsor any type of students
that need help, sure, come in. Your other question was about sustainability and about
how you continue doing it, even though it's getting hard sometimes and settled. I believe from day one that any NGO should be sustainable from its, try to be sustainable
from its revenues rather than from donations.
Because if you depend on donations, one day and you are gone.
I mean, look at what happened right now.
Trump cutting a lot of the and
and quite a few NGOs will close down.
Well, I felt that we should charge
minimum from the students from those who can pay
and this amount should enable us operate,
be sustainable operationally,
which means that if we don't get donations,
maybe we won't be able to serve as many students, but we will continue working.
Now your third question was about how do you continue doing it?
And the answer there is actually, I think it's partially personality.
I never give up.
I'm like, you know, the Energizer Bunny. You know?
But more than that, I guess that it's the belief
in the mission and the belief that if you will continue
doing it will eventually work and it does.
It's amazing that you don't let that fear take you down.
But let me ask you also a different question.
And one of the things that we noticed in Leap Academy,
and again, we can't compare this, this is very much a for-profit,
it's for a different set of education, etc.
But what we noticed a little bit is that when people don't pay, they don't pay attention.
So there's a lot of self-help books, there's YouTube channels,
there's a lot of free education that people won't do anything and then
once they pay, suddenly their back is against the wall and it fuels them. It
could be that it's just a different set of audience that just doesn't have as
much starvation to content, but I would love to... Did you ever feel like that
actually because it's free they're not as committed. Do you see any of that?
It's yes and no, and let me explain.
First of all, if you compare our degree students,
refugees are those, refugees are all free, totally free.
They do better than the other students.
So the fact that they don't pay does not mean
that they are not serious.
However, that's after they became degree seeking.
When we started, and we evolved a long time, at the beginning we let everyone in and we
didn't even ask them for their English, which was really stupid because if you can't speak
English you can't study without.
So we evolved and we put bars and we put actually, but one of the things that we did,
we introduce two foundation courses.
So when you come to us, as long as you speak English and you have a high school diploma,
you're welcome to start.
And when you start with us, we ask you to take two courses.
It's two academic courses.
One course is online strategies, which teach you
how you study online, how to write an essay, etc. The second one is the field of your choice, and we
only teach business administration, computer science, and health science undergraduate, as well as MBA,
master in education, and master in IT, MA level. So you come to us and we say take two courses.
Master in IT, MA level. So you come to us and we say, take two courses.
See if you like it, see if you have the motivation,
see if you like our pedagogy, if you have the discipline,
if you have all these, continue.
Show us that you meet our standards, you pass the courses,
you get credit for them and continue with us.
You don't pass the courses, sorry you can't continue with us.
But we lose over half of the students in these two courses for the very reason that you mentioned
because a lot of students say, oh, it's tuition free.
I'll come in and get a degree by mail.
Or we tell the students every single course that you take requires 20 hours a week.
And the human nature is to say, well, 20 hours for a week is for him.
I can do it in an hour a week.
Well, one hour goes by and you're gone.
You can do it in one hour a week.
And then, you know, it's the discipline of spending every night.
You're sitting in front of the computer and you are by yourself.
It's not that you sit with your peers.
Nobody's bossing you.
So it's really hard. So a
lot of people simply cannot make it. So it's a screening that only the serious students come
after they come and after they pass with amazing results and they continue and graduate. But yeah.
So we have a lot of the listeners again, they're like thinking, oh my God, like I have
huge plans that I want to change
either within the company that I'm in
or I want to create some big change
and I want to do something with meaning
and I want to do something that matters.
What are some of the tips that you give somebody like this
to say, what is it and how do I actually
lift it off the ground?
What are some of the skills? What are some of the skills?
What are some of the mindset
that you needed to develop to continue?
I think that you shouldn't start any project
if you don't understand the subject matter
or you have someone who understands it.
Because if you want to produce a new car
and you have no idea what it means to produce a car, most
likely you're going to fail unless you have people around you that will help you.
So this is one very important thing.
Second, you need pretty much to know the process and plan for it, what it takes, what are the
stages, how much money you need in order to do it.
So you need to know all the details before you launch it.
I think that you must have experts on your side, unless you know it, experts on your
side in every aspect.
I'm not a financial person.
I will never be one.
But I always had great financial people next to me to tell me don't do that you don't have the money to do it or you need to do it this way or the other way.
You need to think about what other parts you need that you don't have such as a marketing do you know how to market.
I need to know how much it will cost you to market because otherwise it won't work so So I think that it takes a lot of learning before
you go into it. Then you need to try to test your product as soon as you can. Get feedback all the
time. Get feedback what you do. You know, when we started the university, we thought that we are
going to develop our learning management system by ourselves.
Even though I had a university and we never developed it by ourselves.
You bought one, you rent one actually.
And it took me a few months that a friend of mine who is actually understand much more
than I am in technology and in universities, technology, you said you're crazy. You will never be able to make it this way because it's so costly. That's
not your business.
It's not your main thing.
Yeah. So to understand what you do and what you buy and what you rent and what are you
focusing on. And last but not least, and probably the most important thing is never giving up, I think that you
should be ready to make mistakes.
You can't succeed without making mistakes.
But accept them and learn from them and change.
I'll give you an example, actually with KIT.
The concept of KIT was B2B.
We are going to test centers and convince them, take test centers, when you want certification
etc., you go and take the exams, and to convince the people who are coming there to get academic
degree. Which sounds great, except the people who sell this product sell days in a center.
They don't sell degrees.
And this is a different product
which they did not know how to sell
and they were not interested.
So it was a totally failure.
So pretty much the entire concept
of that university collapsed.
And then we said, okay, but there is another market,
the private market, let's go for the private market.
And we switch 180 percent degrees the way we operate.
And we went to a different market and it worked.
So be open, see if it doesn't work.
Is there another way?
And how are you as a leader, Shai, don't take that stress,
if you will,
from financial stress or pivot need, et cetera.
How do you not take it down on your team
or how do you balance between involving the team
and being all alone on everything?
How do you balance that?
Well, first of all, I take the stress on myself,
not necessarily on my team.
And I like being under stress.
I don't think that I'm the easiest person to work with.
I want everything to be done yesterday.
I'm really, really pushing hard and always deadlines and always, okay, why do you think
it will take you a month?
Why can't you do it in a week?
You know, and I'm always pushing people to the limit,
which I think makes it hard to work with me.
On the other hand, I think that people appreciate,
first of all, I don't do it for the sake
of making their life miserable.
There is a reason for that.
And second, I'm the first person to accept mistakes.
I'll give you an example from, again, history.
We had a marketing, VP marketing, when we were three people, one of them was already
VP marketing because I am a strong believer in marketing.
And he was a kid like myself. And one day I see a truck coming to our office and download doggy bags, just bags, thousands
of them.
And I said, did you order that?
He said, why?
We're a test company, entity?
No, what I still don't remember. Probably said something, but
it wasn't good enough for me to remember what he said. But I said, you know, he's an amazing
VP marketing and he's doing amazing things and he made a mistake. That's okay. We all
were human being and you accept the mistakes. And I think that people appreciate it. So it goes both ways.
Yeah, I think we're both, we want everything yesterday.
So, and I don't know if that's something
that you can talk about.
Are there any special folks that were kind of more,
I would say famous or people that our audience
might recognize their name that actually finished
the University of the People,
or is that something that you don't reveal?
I won't say names because I wouldn't give any name
without their permission, but I'll tell you a few stories.
Sure.
Well, it's a story of a young woman
that at the age of 14 became homeless.
At the age of 16, she was homeless with a kid, single mom with
a kid. At the age of 18, single mom, homeless with two kids. And she said, my only way to
get out of it is through education. So she went to a college, graduated after four years
with tens of thousands of debt and couldn't find a job.
And she said, I'm not giving up.
I'm going to mustard when she came to us.
And she did her MBA.
And when I met her, she said,
I'm now a manager at Amazon.
I have my own home.
I have my own pool.
I have my vintage car. I'm the own pool. I have my vintage car.
I'm the American dream, and it's all because of European.
So this is one story.
Another story, which is actually, you know, it goes to a different direction, but it's
very important.
I met one of our students who started studying also.
He grew up in a family who came from Mexico Mexico and he grew up in a poor neighborhood
and he couldn't afford going to college until he found us,
started studying computer science with us
and after nine months got a job with IBM
while studying with us.
And again, you know, these are people that we help
even if they don't complete the degree.
So we have hundreds of thousands of stories like this.
We have graduated to work with Amazon and Google and IBM and Microsoft and JP Morgan
and World Bank.
Most of our students actually work while studying with us, the population, a lot of them are
working adults, but 70% of them say that they got promotion while
studying with us.
So we are really giving them a better future.
And it is important when you help someone to get a better job and a better future, you
don't help only them.
It's everything.
You help them, their families, their communities.
And if it's a lot of them, it's their countries.
And if many of them, it's the countries and if many of them, it's the
world.
I love that.
And this is part of something that we share.
Like for me, the biggest moments and I love that you shared the stories because I think
at the end of the day, the biggest moments for me is that email, you changed my life
or that post on LinkedIn.
Like I wouldn't be here without Milana or Leap Academy or the coaches or and I think this is what keeps
you going because you know it's still going to be a roller coaster but it's that conviction and that
belief in the mission that actually keeps you getting up back in the morning and you know
plowing through. Exactly. No I love these stories Jay. What would be an advice that you would tell
your younger self maybe based on everything that you've seen would be an advice that you would tell your younger self maybe
based on everything that you've seen? Is there something that you would wish you knew earlier
on?
It's interesting because I think that if I've started nonprofit earlier, I could have done
more. However, the fact that I came there when I can afford doing that and I'm not depending
on a salary or anyone to let me do that is a great benefit.
So from that perspective, I feel that maybe I could have done more, but on the other hand,
I'm very happy that I started it where I started.
I feel that the world should appreciate philanthropy in general more.
I hope the world would have been more philanthropic.
I think that I would love more people to go into NGOs because the world needs NGOs.
I think that I myself, I wish that I would be able to contribute to the realization how
online is powerful.
So more people will take the opportunity for their own benefit, obviously.
But I'm very happy with where I am and I would just wish to continue doing what I do.
Of course.
And it sounds like you guys are just scratching the surface.
Like you just got even better accredited now and now let's go.
Like the sky's the limit.
Yeah, we are just at the beginning.
That's true.
I hope.
Amazing.
Incredibly inspiring, Shai.
Thank you so much for, first of all, everything that you're doing,
but also for coming and sharing it with us.
And just incredible to watch projects like this.
And hey, if you heard this, if this makes you excited,
go spread the word.
That's the least we can do.
And also if you can contribute,
if you have an organization that can contribute, let's hope.
Like I think this is just such a beautiful mission
and you're moving the needle on so many people that it literally makes
the world a better place. So it's not about what we make, it's what we make possible and what you're
making possible, Shai, is out of this world and all of us listeners can contribute.
Thank you for inviting me. It was a great conversation and thanks for doing it.
Of course, thank you.
I hope you enjoyed this as much as I did.
If you did, please share it with friends.
Now, also, if you're feeling stuck or simply want more from your own career, watch this 30-minute free training at leapacademy.com training.
That's leapacademy.com training. See you in the next episode of the Leap Academy
with Ilana Golanchuk.