My First Million - #117 Austen Allred - Lambda School's Founder Brings His Best Ideas
Episode Date: October 7, 2020Sam Parr (@theSamParr) and Shaan Puri (@ShaanVP) are joined by Austen Allred (@Austen) on the pod today. Austen is the founder of Lambda School (@LambdaSchool). In today’s episode you’ll hear: Aus...ten gives background on Lambda School and explains the challenges and opportunities in the education space (1:05) Shaan asks Austen to explain his rise from sleeping in a car in San Francisco to running Lambda School (14:00), Austen talks about how his Mormon mission prepared him for a life in business (20:28), Austen breaks down how colleges make money off of application fees (28:35), The guys talk about the big business of college entrance exams (36:35) Austen pitches his idea of increasing productivity at companies by reducing the slack from employees (47:20), the guys discuss the pros and cons of employee tracking software in the age of COVID and mass remote work (50:33), Shaan asks Austen to predict ways different “Lambda School’s for X” are going to grow into the future (58:00). Thank you to our sponsor Square! Square makes it easy for your business to accept payment, and so much more! Check out this week's sponsor at square.com/go/hustle! Joined our private FB group yet? It's a page where people share each others million dollar ideas or what they're already working on: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ourfirstmillion. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Uh-huh.
I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all in it like no days off.
On a road, let's travel, never looking back.
Okay, so Austin Allred.
Is that the way you said your last name?
Yeah, so Austin Allred's here.
He's the founder of Lambda School, which I've just been shamelessly pimping on the podcast for like a year.
So you probably already know about that.
He's an interesting dude.
And I don't know which Austin we're going to get.
There was controversial Twitter, Austin, that was around for, I don't know, like a year.
And then, like, cleaned it up a little bit, you know, tightened it up as the company was growing.
So I don't know.
Are we going to get tightened up, Austin, or we're going to get Lucy Goosey?
You can request.
Oh, Lucy Goosey for sure.
My problem's team isn't listening right now, so we're good.
Right.
Dude, I'm in it for the clicks and the listen.
So, you know, the more controversial and interesting things you say, the better.
So can you give Sean and Austin, can you get background?
What is, his business is called Lambda School.
What is that?
Yeah, so we train people to be software engineers and data scientists in live online classes,
but we don't charge anything until you're making more than $50,000 a year after the program.
So the idea is if we can de-risk education for people,
then you can kind of go for the education that you ought to.
And incentives are aligned between the school and the student.
So we don't get paid unless we don't make money unless you're successful.
And that's kind of how we think it should be.
So like a free school and you get a percentage of the revenue that the student,
a percentage of the salary that student makes to a certain point and that's how you get paid back.
Yep, that's right.
So basically we get 17% of salary if and only if you're making more than 50K a year.
And then once you've hit $30,000 or 24 payments, monthly payments, whatever comes first,
it's done. So it's either two years or 30 grand, whatever comes first. And if you don't get hired
making more than that amount, then we never make anything. And give people a sense of the sort of
scale, because it's been pretty wildly successful so far and kind of just getting started,
but give people a sense of, you know, how Lambda School has grown over the last few years.
Yeah, I mean, we started, what was it, three years ago with our first 20 students. And now, you know,
we enroll 300 or 400 students a month.
So, you know, we're talking in the realm of, we're like, that's a lot of software engineers,
actually, you know, it's not the biggest university by any stretch, but, you know, we're,
we're placing more software engineers and we're, think about like the UC system, right?
All the UC schools, we're about, we're a little bit bigger than that as far as software
engineering goes.
Then all the UC schools combined?
Correct.
Wow.
That's kind of awesome.
Wow.
So the math is if you're adding 300 a month, that's $3,600 a year, if it just stays the same,
and you can earn $36,000, I think you said, $36,000 off of that.
So that means you're adding $130 million of revenue or a potential revenue, lifetime revenue.
Sam, you're just flexing that mental math right now.
Yeah.
I mean, I wish it were that simple.
Okay.
But yeah, I mean, so let's say our average student gets hired making 70K, right?
So that student will pay back just less than 25K, but we'll round it to 25 for sake of simplicity.
So if we're getting 4,000 students a year hired, then that's 100 million a year, kind of overtime run rate.
But you have to finance those ISAs.
So we basically borrow against them and we pay a lot for that.
And then every student that either drops out or doesn't get hired, we don't get paid for.
So those cuts are, you know, that's a difficult thing, right?
And so you think about like a, you know, a university that had like a 75% graduation rate and a 75% hiring rate.
Those are pretty good numbers.
But really quickly, you're at, you know, 50% of the students who enroll.
were successful.
So those multipliers eat in really quickly.
And that's the name of the game is making it so that as many of the students who you can
possibly make successful are successful.
That's why the incentive align matters, right?
Because traditional school, you enroll and, you know, whether you get a high paying job or not,
you know, of course they'd like you to get a high paying job, but they don't need you to get
a high paying job.
They got their money either way.
And so for you guys,
It's not that you're nicer people than everybody.
It's that the business model actually depends on you successfully getting people high-paying jobs, which is what they want to.
And so like when everybody gets excited about Lamb's School, they always talk about ISAs, which is like, you know, this mechanism, it's income share agreement.
But that's kind of missing the point.
It's more about the fact that your success is tied to the success of the student in a way that a normal university is not.
And that's why your product is going to be better.
That's why you're going to train them better.
That's why you're going to hustle harder to get them jobs.
that's why you're going to filter candidates better because you need that to work for your business to work.
And that's not the case for a traditional school.
Totally.
Yeah, there already been a few points where we've kind of looked around the room at my executive team.
And, you know, our executives are like they're the best in the world at what they do, you know.
And you look around and say, you know, we are at a point right now where we're doing a pretty damn good job.
And if our only incentive was to like, you know, we produce a report at the end of all this or something, like we would be patting ourselves on the back.
But we're looking at our business model and saying, oh, my gosh, no, we need to drive so much harder.
We need to do so much better to get to where we want to be.
So, yeah, I think you're right.
The ISA is cool.
But the ISA itself isn't that interesting.
I mean, it's nice to, you know, it's a more flexible financial instrument for students.
But the incentive alignment really is the key.
And we'll dump millions and millions of dollars into getting our hiring rate up a couple of points if the math works like that.
How old are you, Austin?
I'm 30.
You're only 30.
Wow.
Okay.
How much money has a company raised?
Just over $120 million.
And so you guys have only been around for three years?
How the hell does that happen so fast?
When I first talked to Austin, I remember you had, you know, we were talking.
like, I want to invest in this company. At the time, I remember you had in total graduated
80 students. There was 80 students total in the pipeline, including graduated and not graduated yet.
And I remember that same math you just did where you got to like four that takes about
4,000 students to get to about 100 million in revenue. That was the math I did. I think I got all of
the variables wrong. Like the wrong, I had the wrong like assumption of how much you keep.
I had the wrong assumption of whatever. But I also got to 4,000. I was like, oh, he's going to get to 4,000,
for sure and you've you know you're you're on your way now um but anyway sorry that's that's how
great that wasn't that long ago when it was like 80 was the total number of students who had even
experienced the goddamn thing dude austin being 20 wasn't that long ago like
austin losing his virginity wasn't that long ago and that's really what everybody needs to know
now they're talking like in the hundred million dollar range business well i mean to be clear
that's like $100 million of like, you know, I almost think about it like GMV, right?
Like we don't, it's cute to say, look, if we get 4,000 students hired, then we'll eventually get that.
A, we're not getting 4,000 students here hired.
We're a fraction of that.
B, the financing mechanism is probably the most important and most misunderstood aspect of Lambda School.
Because the cost, it would, you know, if we could raise half a billion dollars,
and then just sit there and wait for that $100 million to come in, we could do that.
But that's not how it works, right?
So our equity investors do not want to put in a bunch of money to buy ISAs.
They want to build a technology company.
And so we have different pools of capital that are for basically borrowing against the ISAs.
And you have to, so you kind of take what is the expected revenue per student at, you know, early on in the program.
and then you discount that a little, and we can borrow against that.
And then after that, it starts to trickle in over time.
How big will this get, you think?
I mean, multi-billion dollar year business?
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, so I think in terms of students, right?
I mean, it's not going to be easy to get there by any stretch, right?
Like, there's a reason no one's done this before, and that's because it's just really freaking hard.
But from a kind of macroeconomic standpoint, right, think about how many people there are in the United States who are making $30,000 or less, who could be making $50,000 or more.
And you can move those numbers to 40 and 70 or 30 and 50 or whatever, right?
Like the number is outrageous.
And think about how many companies would hire those people if they had the right skills.
That number is outrageous too.
So the difficult thing is you have to close that full loop.
So you have to take someone from having never heard of you to hired and repaying,
which is like three different businesses baked in there.
And then you have to have that right match, right?
So it's not too dissimilar from a two-sided marketplace in some instances where you have to find the right person.
You have to find the right company.
You have to train the person.
Then you have to get the person there.
And there are different mechanisms of doing that.
But it's, so it's really difficult to do.
But if it works, it's really, really powerful.
And last question for me on this.
How many people work there?
Right now, 170 and change.
Damn, that's just a lot of stuff to do in three years.
Sam, you know, well, that's when we were getting, that's full time.
We have full time or part-time kind of TAs.
We've got about 300 or 400 of those.
So it's a big organization for sure.
What were you saying, Sean?
When we were going through the acquisition process,
I was like, oh, it's either going to be this big company, this big tech company, that big tech company or this big tech company.
And I was like, damn, where would I actually want to work?
And I was like, the only company I'd want to go work at to earn out of any deal would be Lambda school.
That was like the most exciting.
It was like top of my list.
So I emailed Austin.
I was like, hey, you want to buy my company?
It has nothing to do with what you guys do.
But we've done some live video stuff and we're pretty smart.
And he's like, all right.
We looked at it.
Yeah, he looked at it.
And then I was like, you know, we'll take, you know, 7% of Lambda school.
And he was like, yeah, no, report.
why. But I was like that would have been, you know, I think every kind of five years is like a
handful of companies that are really interesting to work for. When I moved to Silicon Valley,
those were like Stripe and Angel List. I thought were the two most interesting companies to work at.
They were small at the time, but I thought they might get big. And right now I would put Lambda
School in that bucket with, I don't know what else I would put. What do you think, awesome?
What are the other like? I'm super curious who else you're going to name.
Let me think.
Like I think about who like the hot companies are.
I think Flexport's kind of interesting.
Dude, I don't want to hear that anymore.
That's been there, done that.
We all know.
We all know that's badass.
Four years ago, it would have been the one.
Like Airbnb and Uber at, you know, in the 2009 range, 2010, 11, whatever, that was like the time when those were really exciting.
Yeah, I think, I mean, when I was starting land of school, so, you know, a couple years ago, the ones that I was like, oh my gosh, these are going to be incredible companies.
Air table. I was just like, oh, that's, that's going to be a winner. You could already tell.
Same with Notion for, I mean, for different purposes, superhuman. I was just like, oh,
finally someone's making a great product in this super, super obvious space. I'm in love with Rome
Research. I don't know how big the business gets, but I think it's super interesting. It's still
super early. I don't want to hear about Rome Research. I can't stand this shit, man. Because, like,
It's like, I'm sure the creator seem cool.
The product seemed cool.
It just doesn't make sense to me how a note-taking app can.
So I'm a small-time.
I'm a part-owner in a small note-taking app.
And it does 80K a month in revenue, which is probably what Rome does.
And I'm like, wait, what?
How does this company raise at a multi-hundred million-dollar valuation?
I don't get it.
I don't get how you could do that with a $5-month thing.
Well, companies that VC, companies that VCs understand in general get,
like a 30% premium on everything, you know, because they can explain it better to each other.
And so they all get it.
But, but yeah, Sam, this is good.
The more you, it's like when you insulted Gen Z and they all came for you and they all
discovered our podcast, this is the same.
Insult the Rome research cult and they'll all be here to defend themselves up in arms.
It's crazy, man.
I don't get it.
Like here's what you're competing against by pen and paper.
I don't get it, but whatever.
Awesome.
You should tell people about, I,
know you probably told the story a bunch, but frankly, it's kind of, it's kind of a great story,
which is you're like, I was sleeping in a car before I, before I, you know, started Lambda
school type of thing. So explain, explain that story. So you, you come to San Francisco, you want to
live the dream and you, how the hell, why were you sleeping in a car? Yeah. So, I mean,
going back a little bit further, I was going to college. I was at BYU in Provo, Utah. And I was just kind of, like,
I always knew I wanted to do something
entrepreneurial and I'd always love technology
and for some reason it didn't click
until I was like 20
that that was like a thing that you could just
like go run tech companies. I was like
oh my gosh, that's awesome.
And there's this place called Silicon Valley
and so I would, you know,
and the provo scene like the Utah
startup scene is, you know, it's
getting there now, but at the time there had been
kind of omnature and there was word perfect,
but it was a very sales driven culture.
for a variety of more many reasons.
But I found that like everybody was just like,
hey, let's build a marginally better crappy product
and let's just go sell it like crazy.
And they, I mean, that works, right?
Like that totally works.
But I wanted, like, I had a real love for product and design
and like the way things worked and like, you know,
changing the world in a way that you can't just like,
You know, let's make a new SaaS app for dentists and like, let's sell it like crazy.
So I was pretty frustrated that I couldn't find that there.
And I wanted to be a part of that.
So it was even more than just Silicon Valley.
It's like, I want to be in somewhere where they make great products.
They make great stuff.
And, you know, the culture in Utah was like, yeah, we'll find a developer off the shelf and they can like build the thing so that we can go sell it.
And like, that was where the excitement was.
but I didn't have any money.
I didn't really have a job.
I didn't really have any super tangible skills.
And I saw on like Hacker News there was some guy who'd like reworked his Honda Civic to live in it.
And I was like, oh my gosh, I have that same two-seater Honda Civic.
And crazy as it sounds, like I started looking at like rent in the Bay Area and it was like 800 bucks a month.
And I was like, who can afford 800 bucks a month?
That's ridiculous.
for one.
Yeah.
So I just put an air mattress in my car and drove out there and said I'll figure it out.
And eventually did.
And it worked out.
What was your job before Lambda?
I did like some marketing agency stuff, like some SEO stuff when that was a thing that people,
like that was a career path for a while was like you could do SEO.
In San Francisco?
No, just freelance.
Like there's actually a company.
that I got connected into randomly
that they needed like
SEO copywriting, right?
So it wasn't like real SEO.
It was just like,
hey,
we need content about this thing.
And we don't even care what it says.
So we just need like,
we just need a monkey to pound out some words.
And I'll pay you like $5 for every 500 words that you pump out.
We need 2,000 words and 25% of them need to say the word email.
Totally.
When I,
I, yeah,
I was working with a buddy on it.
and he probably had the better methodology.
He would get super high and just, like, crank stuff out like crazy while he was tripping.
And nobody cared because it said the right amount of words and the right, you know, phrasing.
But I never.
But then you, like, you, like thought of this idea and then you went through a white combinator.
And that's kind of how you got to.
Was there an in-between?
So you go to San Francisco.
You're in your car.
What happens between there and Lambda School?
Yeah.
So actually, I started another company between there and Lambda School.
So that was a weird saying, hey, social media is all over the place, but it's not fact-checked.
And we're still relying on these reporters who are at the end of the day just like random people on social media,
trying to like figure out what's going on.
So we built like a crowdsourced newsroom, kind of a Wikipedia for journalism, basically,
where you can go in and the product would let you like pull in sources and fact-check them and kind of try to do that in real time.
It was semi-working, but it didn't.
I mean, it was so far from actually working.
We had a bunch of users, but far from a revenue model, which turns out you want to be close to a revenue model.
So it raised a little, like half a million dollars burned through that and there's a long story and it ended up going to zero.
And then went to work at a company called Lendup, which was a kind of YC company in San Francisco.
So that was basically me moving from, hey, I'm like 10 steps away from.
money changing hands. I want to get as close to the money as I can. And so I kind of went down the
fintechy route, which is a lot of why Lambda School worked because I was always thinking about
risk in capital markets and how you can move money from one place to another and what the
IRA needs to be to make that happen and how securizations happen and stuff like that.
And then when Lambda School was just getting started, I was like, wait, there's got to be a
different way that you could, you know, think about this risk and shift it around and pull it.
and that kind of thing.
And you're Mormon, right?
Yeah.
I just went and lived in Utah for, I mean, I lived in San Francisco.
I gave up my place.
Now I just live on Airbnb's, and I picked Utah because the Mormons fascinate the shit out of me.
You know, Sean and I are a friend, sometimes when I'm out or Sean's out,
he's our friend named Stu subs in for one of us, and he converted to Mormonism,
which is weird because no one in his family is Mormon.
Like, I've never heard of that.
And so he kind of like taught me about it.
And then I also had a friend of a friend with Josh James, the guy who started amateur.
And he like would tell.
And so I'm like crazy fascinated with Mormons.
And the culture there was so unique and interesting.
What is it that makes this so this high penetration of interesting startup entrepreneurs?
Yeah.
I mean, it's a few things.
Like the, for me, the most formative period of my life and by a lot was serving a mission.
So for those you that don't know, Mormons, it used to be when they're 19, when they're 18 now, you basically put in your papers and you say, hey, send me somewhere and I'll go teach people about Jesus and do service all day, basically.
So I put in my papers when I was 18.
And then what they called a mission call.
So basically, the letter comes and you gather around with all your family that says, you've been called to serve in this area.
So for me, it was Donyetsk, Ukraine.
So Eastern Ukraine kind of up against the border of Russia.
So you spend a little while trying to learn the language and kind of getting your feet wet.
And then you're basically just shipped out and you have to figure it out.
So I had to learn to speak Russian.
I went on my mission in like 2000.
Isn't that kind of a crazy ask to be like, yo, just learn to speak Russian.
You only have two years on the mission anyways, right?
So it's like, what do you?
It's not that crazy.
Dude, what happens when your family immigrated here?
Like, that's just what you do, right?
I mean, so many people have to do that.
Well, it's one thing to do it, like, kind of on your own choice and your own accord.
Like, I want to go to America.
That's why, you know, and I speak a little bit of English, I'll improve it.
Versus like, you're told, hey, an organization.
Ukraine, it is for you.
Start brushing up, you know, you want to, even if you wanted to spread the gospel,
you literally have to first learn a language, which takes months.
So what did you even do the first few months when you don't know how to speak Russian?
Yeah.
So you go to the missionary training center, and that's like, like, Lamb's School is kind of modeled after that, actually.
So it's like you show up on day one, and by the end of the day, you're like, you should know the alphabet and you should be praying in Russian, right?
And obviously it's terrible.
And you don't understand cases.
You don't understand the grammar.
So what's the Lambda school equivalent of day one?
You just start.
What do you know, day one of Lambda?
I mean, day one, you should be submitting your first poll request, right?
And I don't think that's actually day one anymore.
But like, yeah, you're going to build your first website using HTML and CSS.
Like you're going to go.
And the pace is intense.
And it's very much like you're going to get thrown into the deep end and figure it out
because that's the only way anybody learns anyway.
I mean, like I, so I, you know, I came back, you know, spoke Russian fluently and went
and took a couple of college classes.
and they had a way that you can like test out based on what your level of Russian was.
I think I got like three years of full, like I got like a hundred credits of Russian.
And you know, you still go into the Russian classes of the people who weren't living in the country.
And they're like, you know, trying to figure it out.
And like, oh my gosh, there's no way.
There's no way.
So there's definitely something to immersion and just like getting thrown in.
Mormon question.
Do you keep track of how many people you convert?
like do you know how many people you know sort of heard the message and and actually like sort of went down the path?
Yeah. What's your quota?
Yeah. So it depends a lot, right? If you're in South America or Africa, it's very different than Eastern Ukraine.
So in my mission, if you converted anybody like over the course of two years, that was a win.
Right. Like one is a win. Yeah. And like my friends in South America like, you know, two or three on a weekend is normal.
So it just totally depends.
The Ukrainians don't need Jesus.
They're just not into it.
I mean, take 25 years of government forced atheism and then layer on, hey, where this
American church you should join.
There's not product market fit there, to say the least.
And that's how you got good at sales.
Yeah, stop drinking and smoking and only have sex with your partner who you're married to.
Like, this is not interesting to the average Ukrainian.
It's like boring.
So what was your approach?
How did you go about it?
What's the sales funnel?
Yeah, it's a really good question.
There are a couple ways.
First is English classes.
So I taught an insane amount of English.
And for a couple of reasons.
First, that tends to bring out people who are a little bit more open-minded about,
like, if you're like hardcore Russian Orthodox,
you wish you could go back to the Soviet Union,
like you're not going to come to an English class.
And a lot of people, I mean, it's just a different culture, right?
Like people thought we were spies.
People did not like Americans.
They did not trust Americans.
They were kind of bummed that capitalism was a thing
because their version of capitalism is basically run by the mafia.
So it's just super, super different, right?
Then the other one is just sheer brute force numbers.
So, you know, there were probably six months at a time where I would spend 12 hours a day knocking on doors or approaching people in the street.
And your top of the funnel is huge.
And it doesn't, you know, your funnel is not very efficient.
And if you have a sales funnel like that, at most companies, you would get fired.
But that's just what you did.
So were you like extremely motivated every morning when you woke up?
Like, I'm going to do this or was it like, well, I'm going to enjoy the Ukraine and I'm going to do a little bit of this?
No, it's super sucked. And there are times like months at a time when I was kind of depressed, honestly. And you know, that's not unique to me. I think that's just like when you, so you keep a really intense calendar and you follow the calendar to the letter. We call them planners. And you set goals every week and you report on those goals. So, you know, everybody in the mission reports their numbers up to the mission president. And so you're keeping really, you know,
I mean, Stephen Covey was...
This is business school.
Yeah, I mean, Stephen Covey, like,
it basically took the Mormon missionary planner system
and turned it into seven habits like that.
This is like, you know,
when I hear somebody's time in the military,
and I'm like, wow, that's an incredible amount of adversity,
resilience, and sort of like,
you really developed yourself during that time.
But this is that with, you know, less of some things,
but more of other things,
which is like sales, human psychology, marketing.
You know, you have to develop those skills in order to be successful here.
So I may only work with Mormons going forward.
Yeah.
Well, I think McKinsey or Bain, they used to have a joke where it was like military,
what was it?
No, military, McKinsey, or Mormons?
Yeah, I think that's where they wanted to hire.
I think that's Harvard, actually.
Was it Harvard?
Harvard Business School is military, McKinsey.
and Mormons. Yeah.
Yeah, that's now my school also.
That's how I now believe.
So is that okay if we just jump right into some ideas?
Because you tweeted something.
There's two ideas that I want to bring up to you.
The first is levels, because I see you're wearing it.
And Sean and I were beta testers for it, and it was cool.
The second is college applications.
You tweeted out something today that was crazy fascinating.
You said that colleges earn close to $500 million.
a year, I think, from college applications.
What's that?
What's that about?
You had such a strong buildup.
Just like you gave up at the air.
Say things.
Like, what's that about?
So, here's like the $40 application I fill out that there's $500 million worth of it.
Yeah.
I mean, do the math on that, right?
And you actually look at it broken down by like school.
And it's like, you know, UCLA will have 100,000 people apply and they'll all pay 80,000,
bucks, right?
Like, that starts to get crazy money.
So isn't there like a common application?
Yeah.
So there is something called the common application, which, I mean, the interesting thing is
if you're UCLA, like, you don't want to use a common application because then...
Where's that $8 million?
Yeah, you do and you don't.
So the common application, you can basically like set a trigger and be like, yeah, I will accept
applications from the common application.
The problem with it is everybody who's using the common application is just
spray and praying to everywhere.
It's like Indy.com.
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
Or like the LinkedIn, like one click apply, unless LinkedIn is a sponsor and then it's
a different.
No, they're not.
You're either a sponsor or an enemy as far as I'm concerned.
Yeah, unless they want to pay us $5,000.
And then in that case, yeah, we'll talk about it.
Yeah, but it's like, so the way you use the common application is to get your acceptance rate down.
Because you're going to get 100,000 applications of people that aren't really interested in going to your school.
They're just going to check everybody and hit submit.
And now you have a 2% acceptance rate because 100,000 people who are never going to go to your school applied.
And for some messed up reason, that's like the main metric that the school rankings use.
like the U.S. weekly school ranking, like the first thing it looks at is the acceptance rate,
which is a weird set of incentives to be like the school that turns down the most people
must be the best school. But that's, yeah, that's the other game that people play.
So there is no business down this path is what you're saying.
I don't know. Like the incentives are just messed up, right? So you have to like,
you have to work backwards from the incentives of like, what does the school want?
The school wants a ton of applications.
It wants those applications to be as expensive as possible.
And it wants to be able to broadcast as low of an application percentage acceptance as possible.
So maybe they're, like, that's who you really need to serve at the end of the day.
Like, you can serve the would-be applicant in that world.
But like the schools have the quasi-monopoly.
So if you don't please the school's sign.
Somehow, there's nothing there.
So the business that I saw that was in this space, I've talked about this before.
This was the company I could have invested in it at the seed.
It's now a billion-dollar-plus company.
And it's called a plyboard.
And what they do is they went to the colleges and they basically realized there's one insight,
which is colleges make three times more from international students than domestic students.
Oh, that's a killer business.
And so they went to the schools and they said, hey, you know, if I'm sitting in Malaysia right now or in the Philippines and I want to apply.
You know, what do I even, I don't even know that Brown is a university.
I think it's a color.
So, hey, Brian, why don't you pay me $3,000 for every student that you admit that's international?
And I'll just up your international volume for you.
And the school's like, all right, sure, it's success fee based, right?
I'm making $30K off this person.
I'll give you three.
And so then they went and signed all these deals with all the universities.
And then they went to the students in Malaysia and the Philippines who wanted to come to the U.S.
And they're like, hey, we will make it super easy to apply.
Right. You do a common app here. I will send that common app everywhere. And it's like this international student like, you know, what are those like human trafficking things? It's like that. But with a, you know, with less evil. And that business is amazing. With like Ivy Leaguers. Yeah. That's super smart. Yeah. I mean, the thing that makes money more than anything else in higher education is international students. And that's one of the reasons that so many universities are struggling right now is, I mean, A,
Yeah, the desire to come to America to go to college is lower than it has been in a while.
But they're, I mean, not even because of COVID, the Trump administration is basically, I think, at times intentionally being like, hey, if we, you know, stop this revenue flow, then all the universities hurt and all with those guys, basically.
Just fuck them.
So, by the way, why do schools charge three times more for international?
Like, what is their shitty justification for that?
It can.
I mean...
That's crazy.
It's like, yeah, you guys want to come here so much more than we want you here.
So you're paying full freight.
For like an in-state student, we're going to cut our tuition in third or whatever.
Like, basically, it's international students subsidizing local students.
So I think there's probably an opportunity there to cater to international students who would like to not pay the 3x rate.
And so maybe there's an opportunity to either.
as a university differentiate by not doing that or like come up with some shitty system that like
you apply as a domestic you create like a body double that sort of like gets them in at the
domestic rates.
I've always been kind of fascinated by this.
But like, I mean, you hear about in the old olden days, people would get into all sorts
of colleges and like, I mean, I've heard the number of stories of people applying under a fake name
or like, I mean, now I'm sure they've locked it down, but for a while you could just tell
a school you had like a perfect SAT and they'd be like, oh, awesome.
Like, please come here and they never check.
Like, that's crazy.
Anyway, I actually think there's something to schools moving away from the SAT and ACT.
It's going to be really interesting.
So a new SAT, a new ACT?
Yeah, I don't totally know what the right angle is.
But basically, if you look at the UC is one of the, they're kind of like the same way California from a regulatory standpoint, whatever California does, a lot of other states tend to follow.
The UC is kind of that for colleges.
So the UC kind of sets expectations.
And they're moving away from the SAT and ACT entirely.
And basically what they're saying is, hey, these tests are racist because different populations perform differently.
So we need to find a different measure that, you know, matches that.
And they, so they went back and they did a study.
And the study came back and said, okay, yes, that's true.
But it's also a leveling feature because if you're a poor student who's really smart,
there's no way in hell you're going to have the same extracurriculars as someone who came for money.
So your only shot is these standardized tests.
So net net, you know, it's going to hurt diversity, but the pushback against SAT was so strong that they killed it anyway.
And so now there's like this, there's this black hole of like, what is the right way to evaluate, you know, who should become a student?
And, you know, one of the main reasons, in my opinion, that employers are, like, it's really easy to hire a Stanford grad because you know they're going to have a high ACT score.
They're going to have a high AQ.
they're going to come from wealth.
All the risks are gone, generally speaking.
Wow.
So check this out.
Okay, so I'm just Googling this while we're talking.
You know all about this, I imagine.
So is this how it works?
The college board owns the SAT.
Is that correct?
Yes.
The company is called the college board.
And then educational testing service, that's the one who administers the test.
Is that right?
I don't know what that means, administers.
What's the difference between administer and?
I think they run like the brick and mortar.
like procturing of the test.
Yeah, the college board like creates the test.
And then you show up at like, for me, it was like you go to a high school and
there's people there making sure you don't cheat and like handing out your scantrons
and stuff.
Okay.
So the, uh, so educational testing service.
That's the name of the company, ETS, right?
That, wow.
They did $2.1 billion in revenue last year.
And then the company, the college board, it's a, um, nonprofit.
So this is all public.
In 2018, they did north of a billion in sales and something like $200 million in profit.
Fucking crazy.
And all they do is make the test.
That's nuts.
I mean, that's a lot, but that's pretty crazy.
I mean, what they really did is got all of the universities to agree that that was the thing, right?
Like, if you have that, then, you know, you can do whatever you want on the other side.
And the revenue has almost doubled in 10 years.
Yeah.
I mean, it's...
And they kind of started this meme that, like, the reason some kids aren't getting into good schools is because they never take it.
So they kind of, they're trying for, like, a bill that, like, government would fund taking the SAT or the ACT.
So, like, any high school student just signs up and they get a check from the government.
Now they kind of force it into, like, a school district, you should really find a way to pool.
money and like guarantee that every student takes it. So it's, that's good business.
Is there a world where, is there a world where somebody, and by the way, I didn't even look
up the ACT. I have no idea how that big is. It looks like it's a little bit smaller, but in the same
but in the same ballpark maybe. What about, is there a world where this, where a new standardized
test could exist? Well, so I think the pushback against standardized test is going to be big enough
and broad enough that I don't know if that's the angle you can take.
I mean, there are companies like Criteria Corp has a test called the CCAT,
the criteria cognitive aptitude tests.
It's basically think SAT for adults, right, for adults entering the workforce.
And there are enormous companies with hundreds of thousands of employees that will use
that as one of their criteria for deciding whether or not to employ you.
Now, there are some legal footwork that you need to do because in the U.S., for basically everybody other than the military, it's illegal to hire based on IQ alone for obvious reasons.
For some reason, the military just does what it wants.
So you can't really get into the military with an IQ of below 85, and the military tests that rigorously, and it's fine.
And everywhere else, you know, the argument is made that IQ is a suboptimal measure, which I agree with.
But it's also a really easy way for employers to, you know, rule people out or to, you know, find the diamond in the rough or whatever.
So there's, I know, there's still something around how do you test and how do you find the right type of talent that is interesting?
I don't know what it is.
So I have a half-baked idea here.
When I was in the seventh grade, I took this test.
I don't know if you guys took it, but it was called the TIP, the talent identification program.
Did you guys ever do this?
We did something similar.
Ours was called the Iowa.
I took the Iowa stand.
Yeah.
So the one I took was actually, it was called the Duke Tip program.
And it was basically Duke University's endowment had created this thing called the talent identification program.
They did it for seventh graders, which is kind of like earlier in the funnel before you even take your PSATs, that sort of thing.
and they created this and it was their own little test.
And if you took it, you basically got this like certificate that was like, congratulations.
You're like in the program just for taking it.
And your parents were all happy because like, oh, this university says you're talented potentially.
And then if you did good, if you were like in the top 20% or 10% or whatever, you would get this like special thing, which was like, we have identified you as a talented person that we would love to have you someday come to this school.
And it was their way of just getting a whole bunch of people to know about Duke and then apply to it.
That's kind of what I.
Jen. And it worked on me. Like I literally went to Duke. And I remember getting like recognized in this thing back in seventh grade. And it planted a seed. And so I wonder if you could create a new tip program. And maybe you do it like for, you know, minority students or in lower socioeconomic classes where you go to certain neighborhoods and you basically host these free things that you can come take. And then that's your leads for colleges will actually potentially pay to have access to these leads and to market to these students because they want to, you know,
hit their quotas, have diversity, but be able to surface out who are the most talented
students in these groups. It's like your farm system. Yeah, that totally work. That totally work.
Here, here are all of the minority kids who test really well on this thing that you probably
want to come to your school. You're going to pay me 500 bucks a lead to start marketing to them now.
Exactly. I mean, I don't know what the pricing is. You can pay me 25,000. I'll do the marketing
for you even better, right? And you basically just create this like this engine that just functions
for the universities. Now, I don't know, some people are going to probably think that's, you know,
a little predatory or whatnot, but I think, you know, I'm just throwing out of ideas here.
Do you want to hear something crazy that I, that I've, I had a, I knew guys who ran GMAT quiz companies,
like GMAT study supply, you know what I mean, teaches you how to do well on the GMAT. Yeah.
And they would tell me that a qualified lead, like someone who is X smart or, you know, like,
whatever, I don't know how they qualify the lead, but like they would charge or they would
pay Harvard and many other schools, something like $2,000 or $3,000 per lead. Is that accurate,
Austin? For what? Like, what was the...
Like an MBA school lead? Like someone to get on the phone with you about why you should
apply to Harvard. For a while, there was like the education like hot swap market. So like
if you could get someone who is on the phone who is willing to like sign up for a student loan to go to university of Phoenix like yeah easily couple grand right and like there's some schools if your tuition is 45,000 dollars a year and you're like an online school you have a $15,000 cack per student and not care which is like messed up right um but the reality is I mean the it is I mean it's just math yeah but like the value that's a giving person.
Yeah, the willingness of people to sign up for $45,000 of student loans after a phone call is what's messed up, right?
Like, that's, that shouldn't be true.
The reason it works is because these guys, like University of Phoenix, they were able to tap into the government financial aid.
So if I had to give you $45,000, I wouldn't do it.
But if I just get to go to school and I'm going to take out this loan and it kind of feels like this later problem that I don't have to worry about.
and that you don't deliver on giving me a diploma that helps me get a good job,
then that's, you know, fucked up.
Yeah, I mean, there are, so this kind of caused this environment where for a long time,
there are a bunch of schools that had like higher student loan default rates than graduation rates,
right?
So like 40% of the people who are taking out loans to go to your school are defaulting and 20%
of them are graduating.
And that's just like, oh my gosh, that's, that's a travesty.
But yeah, I mean, the reality is if you can, we've created this weird world where it doesn't
phase people, the thought of paying $40,000 a year in tuition.
And the fact that that, like, people definitely don't understand the interest on that, right?
Like if you're, you know, if you go to NYU and you have $100,000 in student debt and you're
paying off a thousand bucks a month, you can pay that for the rest of your life and you won't
even touch the principal.
And that just like doesn't, that doesn't sink in.
with people. So that's
the tough part.
Austin, this whole idea of these
tests I find to be just like crazy
fascinating. Another test that I
was obsessed with for a little while, and
I just consider you probably
know a lot about this is
Strength finder. Strength finders.
Is it strengths? You know what I'm talking about? Strength finder.
It's owned by Gallup,
which is most famous for the polling,
but they own this thing. Do you know anything about
that? Yeah, and there are a few
different versions of it.
Basically, to the listener, it's like a $50 test, right?
It's a personality test.
It's a $50 personality test, and it's famous for the book, Strengths Finders.
But sorry, go ahead.
Yeah, and there are a few different versions of this.
And there are some, you know, like every ATS has their own little version, right?
So Hired has their own version and LinkedIn has their own version.
And it's just like, if you as an employer think that you can get a person,
to take the test and that it will make you n% better at hiring, then, yeah, what's a $50
test? Who cares? But then you do the math on the other side of that. I'm like, oh, my gosh,
for doing nothing, you have to develop the test, and that might cost you $100,000.
But then anything on top of like 2,000 people taking it is just gravy. That's a great business
to be in. How big do you think that's Strengths Finder thing is? I've been trying to figure that
out. They're privately owned. If you told me that that one $50 test,
makes $200 million a year, I wouldn't be surprised.
I guess it's in that.
Let's see, Strings finder.
What's the name?
I guess it's Gallup.
It's owned by Gallup.
It's like, it's like, it's like,
yeah, usually you can like try to back into it by a number of employees or something.
I've been trying.
I've been trying to figure this out.
I've used web archive.
I've used everything.
On their website, they'll say like, this many people took it.
And I'm like, okay, I guess that's the only guess estimation that I have.
What's that number?
How many people?
over 100 million people have tried it it says oh it's got to be i guess 200 to 500 million a year
business i have no idea i'm totally guessing but like that would be nuts because they do it one time
so austin i'm curious uh before you came on the podcast i don't know if you had any time to think
about one or two ideas that are interesting to you uh that you think that you know us or the
audience might be interested in or just you know half-baked startup ideas that you can't pursue because
you're running Lambda school.
Give us some ideas that are cool to you.
Yeah, there's one that I, like, I've been thinking around the edges of it.
And I can't quite like, so it came partially from my experience running Lambda school,
partially from, if you read the blog posts of Frank Slutman, who is the CEO of Snowflake
that just went public.
You know, he talks a lot about how much, like, activity at companies is wasted.
Yep.
And then, you know, there's a whole kind of lean thinking and lean methodology and lean manufacturing and all this stuff.
And I've been reading a bunch of books about that because I'm, you know, I want to run a very efficient organization at Lambda School.
So I've been trying to figure out, like, is there a way that you could parse out, like, how much.
And, you know, again, everybody that works at Lamb's School, I'm sure is working on really hard stuff.
and they're working really hard.
But I'm not sure that if I knew what everybody was working on at any given time
and I were playing God,
that I would be focusing that amount of time and effort on that thing.
So I'm trying to figure out, I mean,
I know some companies will use like Asana in a way that will like figure out
what everybody's working on and make sure the prioritization makes sense.
But I feel like there's a missing product there,
especially in a remote world where everyone's just kind of
doing their own thing and everyone's working long hours.
But I guess something like 90% of the effort is just unnecessary.
It's like finding a way to channel that.
Right.
How do you find all the slack in the system?
That's not laziness.
It's, uh, you know, some combination of like, uh, laziness plus, you know, just not
being focused on the high priority things or chasing down the wrong, going down the wrong rabbit
holes.
This idea that I'm going to say is definitely extreme and I might get roasted for bringing it up.
but let's just play it out and listen to what it is,
which is there's this guy named Joe Lamont.
You know who Joe Lamont is?
Yeah, really well.
You heard of him?
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, I don't know.
Pressover.
Okay, so then it sounds like you have some type of experience with them,
but you can talk about it if you want it.
But basically, Joe Mont, some billionaire guy who has this company,
software company, he buys software companies and outsources the jobs to India.
And then he got in trouble because he would install this keystroke software
into the Indian employees' computers
so you could see their screen
and where they type at all times.
And like that sounds evil,
sounds crazy.
But like,
I mean,
obviously it would work, right?
Like,
that's when,
and I've seen there's a,
there's a company,
I think this is in YC called Squiggle or something
where it would basically like,
the idea was,
hey,
you want to like,
it's trying to find the non-invasive,
way of doing that. And I think they ended up like they would take like pictures of your screen and a
picture of you and like share it with everybody else at random periods. But like and I think they were
legitimately trying. Yeah, they're legitimately trying to do like you're working remotely with a group
of people. Video conferencing is really high bandwidth. What's like a lower bandwidth solution to that
thing? I don't think that's the right solution necessarily. But there's,
There's something there, right?
Like the coordination problem,
and, you know, the crossover thing, you can debate whether or not you would want to work
with a company that puts a key logger on your computer.
And I think you'd have...
Well, the answer is no, you would not want to, but like, I would want to objectively see
the results to the experiment.
I would not be surprised if they are phenomenal.
I would not be surprised one bit.
I know a tiny bit about crossover.
And Joe...
So then you'd have to...
ask yourself why and like is there a way where this is you feel more comfortable doing this that
is something similar right so there's two questions right first is is joe or is crossover just willing
to pay people that wouldn't have that job any other way and like i mean they're being open to
everybody who will take a programming test to decide if you'll be a programmer and then paying them
like 30 bucks an hour like yeah you're going to find people that do not love the idea of that
software being installed on their computer but for 30 bucks an hour all right you're
do whatever you want because I'm in Bangladesh and I will live like a king if you pay me that.
And just because I know someone's going to take that out context.
I'm not talking about Bangladesh.
I'm not like the fact of the matter is there are places with lower cost of living and lower
salary expectations and you can pay those people more.
So now that I've dodged that bullet, the other.
Our trick is we just step in so many muddy, you know, puddles.
that people can't pick which one.
We paralyze people who want to cancel us by saying so many things that, you know, off the cuff,
that it just becomes a safe space, actually.
Austin, do you know what WAP is?
Last episode, we put the lyrics of WAP into the GPT3 thing, the AI thing.
It had it write more songs.
I did it today.
It came up with a great new song called Walk the Plank.
I'll tell you what it's about.
I don't know what that's a euphemism for, but okay.
So anyway, the other way is you could find a way to get the same, like,
effect for the employer or the organizer without being quite so, like, you know,
like key logger in the U.S. would not work.
But is there something that's a little lighter way?
I think Sam Lessen was working on a company that was doing something like that for
operations heavy companies, where the idea was,
you have people who are like doing very
roat regimented operations heavy stuff
all the time but they don't think like a programmer
so they can't be like okay here's exactly how you should automate it
so the idea was you know the software will watch you do the thing
and then we'll kind of spit out the instructions or the playbook
or what that is and then you can have a programmer running in behind them
and automating it
which is a lot but I mean companies like Flexport
There's a whole lot of that happening, right?
There's this company called CS Grocers.
It's based in somewhere up here where I am in New York.
It's maybe the third or fourth or fifth largest privately health company in America.
And it's a grocery.
They wholesale groceries to stores.
And they made a change in the 80s where they started paying their workers by their warehouse workers.
They would give them a small hourly rate, but then they had to hit a quota for boxes.
packed. Oh, I need a read about this. It's fascinating. I wrote all about it on my Twitter thing.
I'll share it to you. But if you Google CS Grocer warehouse workers incentives or something,
it's a pretty famous case study, I believe. But they like built all this great technology to try
to automate a lot of stuff. And then for the workers, they just changed how they paid them.
And like revenue like went through the roof. They're like, all right, we're not like, this is just fair,
guys. We're not just going to like people just start packing like so many more boxes.
I mean, that's the old like Charlie Munger like. And,
of when he you know he's there's a guy who's working for FedEx and they're trying to like get these
airplanes packed on time and every night they're failing they're trying all these different things
and finally it said you know what we're going to show up on Friday or whatever and as soon as
this plane is packed everybody can go home and it was like okay two hours they're out of there
incentives I mean that's that's supposed to be his analogy yeah about the importance of incentives
But I'm trying to figure out if there's a way to do that within Lambda school that's not draconian.
I haven't found it yet, but I'm super interested in that.
I've told this story before, but I worked at this place with this kind of crazy billionaire guy.
I worked under him in Indonesia.
And he bought this software from Boeing, that Boeing used, either is Boeing software or the same software Boeing used.
And they used it to like manage their factory.
So the same sort of thing.
Whenever you have this like kind of assembly line process, you can kind of just measure inputs and output
It's quite, you know, it doesn't feel like, it's like a human question.
It's like, you know, how much are you inputting and how much are you outputting?
And he used it in our office with people on their computers.
And basically, like, everybody on a giant wall, next to everybody was this huge projection.
And everybody got one, every square represented one person in the company.
And it would just have this like color and like this like meter, basically.
See, like green and red based on how productive being.
On how productive being.
And nobody really even understood what is measuring and how it all works.
you just knew as something's installed on your laptop.
And you were just like furiously trying to do shit because you just didn't want your shit to go red.
And so like it was like placebo productivity in a way.
But you know, he could do it because he was, you know, pretty crazy.
He had all kinds of crazy.
Like if you got pregnant, he was like, the woman needs to be at home.
So you no longer have a job here.
Like he was like pretty wild and is now actually in jail for, you know, different frauds he committed.
But it was a very interesting work experience nonetheless.
I have two more quick ones.
And obviously you guys.
want to be Lambda School for many things, all the valuable ones and let everybody chase
all the not valuable ones.
So, look, what do you think when you just see a new Lambda School for X come out?
And what do you think are the ones that you guys are going to pursue?
And what do you think is something you're not going to do that other people should?
I mean, my first answer is always like, oh, good luck.
Like, for a while, it was just like, oh, landa school, that's like, I ran the math on that.
That's easy.
I'm going to do that.
And a year later, they're like, oh, my gosh.
I have to get five things working and none of them are going to work.
So this sucks.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Could I told you that?
Has anyone successfully done it?
I haven't seen anybody make the model work yet, which is saying something because
there have been, I don't know how many.
I mean, the one model that does work is like, hey, you're going to owe us 10% of your income
for five years and hear a bunch of videos.
Like, it's hard not to make that work, but it's not like.
Like, it's not going to get big either.
What does it cost you all to educate somebody?
For us, like north of 15K.
15K, right.
So you have to basically make sure that you're able to recoup that.
Whereas if you put the videos up on a website, okay, your cost of educated.
Yeah.
And then you might, you know, your average successful student might pay you $30,000.
You might make $2,000 a student.
But if your cost for $500 a student, who cares?
That's just a very different business than the one that we're running.
And I don't think it would grow very well because eventually you're going to find a different way to do that.
Yeah, the intensive, expensive, high quality one is pretty difficult to make work.
I had a guy pitch me one this morning.
Give me your instant reaction to it.
So he said, it's Lambda School for mortgage loan officers or something like that.
It's basically like the loan officer who issues mortgages.
And what he was saying was that, you know, there's the.
this large, you know, same thing as software engineers.
Like there's more capacity for hiring folks who can do this than we have folks who are trained
to do it.
The current model for how it's done is like kind of broken.
It's like run through a bank.
You have to like get certified in this like slow process by the bank or something like that.
And basically it was like, you know, in two months you can get trained and certified to be issuing
these.
The people who are high volume at this are making like 300K a year at the bottom end.
they're making like 70 to 100k a year.
And with interest rates being so low, there's just a high demand for people to be mortgage lending professionals.
So what's the Austin Allred official quick take on that?
I mean, my first response is just a lot of nervousness around macroeconomic environment.
Like, I mean, that's, that feels like a short-term arbitrage that might work for a little bit and then go away.
Part of that is because I don't believe, I mean, I don't believe that,
mortgage officers add like an insane amount of value versus like a quasi automated process.
So I'm nervous about the long term.
And the short term, you could probably, I don't know enough about the industry.
You could probably spin it out, spin it up and get some cash spitting off.
Like the interesting thing about that is like you can't like fail at becoming a mortgage officer very easily, right?
Like the reason land in school is so difficult and so powerful is because you can, it's really hard.
to become a software engineer, but when you are, you get paid really well.
And so that's just a different end of the market.
What's the likelihood that you guys are going to just fail miserably?
I mean, is this a company that like, if this works, it's going to be the biggest thing ever
and it's going to be massive?
Or is there a likelihood that you just go to zero?
I mean, you know what I mean?
There always is a probability.
What do you pay your probability failure at?
50%.
That's a pretty good...
