Seeing Crimson Education on the front page of the Wall Street Journal is humbling.
I grew up in New Zealand - in a small family, in a small city, in a small country.
The idea of going to Harvard - let along having the privilege to build a big business - was a distant, unreachable opportunity.
But education has the fundamental and unique ability to transform lives and shape futures.
Going to Harvard as a wide-eyed 18 year old Kiwi transformed every facet of my life. At their core, global universities can pluck a student from the corner of the world - regardless of their background - and quickly give them access to career mentors, global faculty, sprawling coursework and inspirational alumni.
I learned that education can create a difference in the trajectory of your life. That's what education did for me: providing me the knowledge, relationships, and opportunity to forge a path upward.
And that's why I love the mission at Crimson Education: to provide the best education support to students across the world, and to bridge them to the best opportunities in the world.
For the past decade, it has been immensely rewarding to play a part in the lives of thousands of Crimson students. Students have the spark, the fire, and the will to compete on the world stage and dare to dream of a brighter future for themselves and their families.
A decade later, our students now work at many of the best companies in the world: OpenAI, Google, Meta, Amazon, Nvidia, Blackstone, Warburg Pincus, Goldman Sachs, BCG, McKinsey, Bain, Tesla, and Waymo - and have raised tens of millions in venture funding in their early twenties. They have secured more than 1000 Ivy League offers and more than 6000 offers to Top 50 US universities, the best result of any company globally by a wide margin.
And we're just getting started!
Story from the The Wall Street Journal's Douglas Belkin.
Sharndré Fangzhou Jiang Janine Manning Arkesh Patel Kimberly Scott